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- <text id=89TT0042>
- <title>
- Jan. 02, 1989: What On Earth Are We Doing?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Jan. 02, 1989 Planet Of The Year:Endangered Earth
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 24
- COVER STORIES: What on EARTH Are We Doing?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Thomas A. Sancton
- </p>
- <p> One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh:
- but the earth abideth forever.
- </p>
- <p> -- Ecclesiastes
- </p>
- <p> No, not forever. At the outside limit, the earth will
- probably last another 4 billion to 5 billion years. By that
- time, scientists predict, the sun will have burned up so much of
- its own hydrogen fuel that it will expand and incinerate the
- surrounding planets, including the earth. A nuclear cataclysm,
- on the other hand, could destroy the earth tomorrow. Somewhere
- within those extremes lies the life expectancy of this
- wondrous, swirling globe. How long it endures and the quality
- of life it can support do not depend alone on the immutable laws
- of physics. For man has reached a point in his evolution where
- he has the power to affect, for better or worse, the present
- and future state of the planet.
- </p>
- <p> Through most of his 2 million years or so of existence, man
- has thrived in earth's environment -- perhaps too well. By 1800
- there were 1 billion human beings bestriding the planet. That
- number had doubled by 1930 and doubled again by 1975. If current
- birthrates hold, the world's present population of 5.1 billion
- will double again in 40 more years. The frightening irony is
- that this exponential growth in the human population -- the very
- sign of homo sapiens' success as an organism -- could doom the
- earth as a human habitat.
- </p>
- <p> The reason is not so much the sheer numbers, though 40,000
- babies die of starvation each day in Third World countries, but
- the reckless way in which humanity has treated its planetary
- host. Like the evil genies that flew from Pandora's box,
- technological advances have provided the means of upsetting
- nature's equilibrium, that intricate set of biological,
- physical and chemical interactions that make up the web of life.
- Starting at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, smokestacks
- have disgorged noxious gases into the atmosphere, factories
- have dumped toxic wastes into rivers and streams, automobiles
- have guzzled irreplaceable fossil fuels and fouled the air with
- their detritus. In the name of progress, forests have been
- denuded, lakes poisoned with pesticides, underground aquifers
- pumped dry. For decades, scientists have warned of the possible
- consequences of all this profligacy. No one paid much attention.
- </p>
- <p> This year the earth spoke, like God warning Noah of the
- deluge. Its message was loud and clear, and suddenly people
- began to listen, to ponder what portents the message held. In
- the U.S., a three-month drought baked the soil from California
- to Georgia, reducing the country's grain harvest by 31% and
- killing thousands of head of livestock. A stubborn seven-week
- heat wave drove temperatures above 100 degrees F across much of
- the country, raising fears that the dreaded "greenhouse effect"
- -- global warming as a result of the buildup of carbon dioxide
- and other gases in the atmosphere -- might already be under
- way. Parched by the lack of rain, the Western forests of the
- U.S., including Yellowstone National Park, went up in flames,
- also igniting a bitter conservationist controversy. And on many
- of the country's beaches, garbage, raw sewage and medical
- wastes washed up to spoil the fun of bathers and confront them
- personally with the growing despoliation of the oceans.
- </p>
- <p> Similar pollution closed beaches on the Mediterranean, the
- North Sea and the English Channel. Killer hurricanes ripped
- through the Caribbean and floods devastated Bangladesh,
- reminders of nature's raw power. In Soviet Armenia a monstrous
- earthquake killed some 55,000 people. That too was a natural
- disaster, but its high casualty count, owing largely to the
- construction of cheap high-rise apartment blocks over a
- well-known fault area, illustrated the carelessness that has
- become humanity's habit in dealing with nature.
- </p>
- <p> There were other forebodings of environmental disaster. In
- the U.S. it was revealed that federal weapons-making plants had
- recklessly and secretly littered large areas with radioactive
- waste. The further depletion of the atmosphere's ozone layer,
- which helps block cancer-causing ultraviolet rays, testified to
- the continued overuse of atmosphere-destroying
- chlorofluorocarbons emanating from such sources as spray cans
- and air-conditioners. Perhaps most ominous of all, the
- destruction of the tropical forests, home to at least half the
- earth's plant and animal species, continued at a rate equal to
- one football field a second.
- </p>
- <p> Most of these evils had been going on for a long time, and
- some of the worst disasters apparently had nothing to do with
- human behavior. Yet this year's bout of freakish weather and
- environmental horror stories seemed to act as a powerful
- catalyst for worldwide public opinion. Everyone suddenly sensed
- that this gyrating globe, this precious repository of all the
- life that we know of, was in danger. No single individual, no
- event, no movement captured imaginations or dominated headlines
- more than the clump of rock and soil and water and air that is
- our common home. Thus in a rare but not unprecedented departure
- from its tradition of naming a Man of the Year, TIME has
- designated Endangered Earth as Planet of the Year for 1988.
- </p>
- <p> To help focus its coverage, TIME invited 33 scientists,
- administrators and political leaders from ten countries to a
- three-day conference in Boulder in November. The group included
- experts in climate change, population, waste disposal and the
- preservation of species. In addition to explaining the
- complexities of these interlocking problems, the specialists
- advanced a wide range of practical ideas and suggestions that
- TIME has fashioned into an agenda for environmental action.
- That agenda, accompanied by stories on each of the major
- environmental problems, appears throughout the following pages.
- </p>
- <p> What would happen if nothing were done about the earth's
- imperiled state? According to computer projections, the
- accumulation of CO2 in the atmosphere could drive up the
- planet's average temperature 3 degrees F to 9 degrees F by the
- middle of the next century. That could cause the oceans to rise
- by several feet, flooding coastal areas and ruining huge tracts
- of farmland through salinization. Changing weather patterns
- could make huge areas infertile or uninhabitable, touching off
- refugee movements unprecedented in history.
- </p>
- <p> Toxic waste and radioactive contamination could lead to
- shortages of safe drinking water, the sine qua non of human
- existence. And in a world that could house between 8 billion and
- 14 billion people by the mid-21st century, there is a strong
- likelihood of mass starvation. It is even possible to envision
- the world so wryly and chillingly prophesied by the typewriting
- cockroach in Donald Marquis' archy and mehitabel: "man is making
- deserts of the earth/ it wont be long now/ before man will have
- it used up/ so that nothing but ants/ and centipedes and
- scorpions/ can find a living on it."
- </p>
- <p> There are those who believe the worst scenarios are alarmist
- and ill founded. Some scientists contest the global-warming
- theory or predict that natural processes will counter its
- effects. Kenneth E.F. Watt, professor of environmental studies
- at the University of California at Davis, has gone so far as to
- call the greenhouse effect "the laugh of the century." S. Fred
- Singer, a geophysicist working for the U.S. Department of
- Transportation, predicts that any greenhouse warming will be
- balanced by an increase in heat-reflecting clouds. The skeptics
- could be right, but it is far too risky to do nothing while
- awaiting absolute proof of disaster.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the validity of this or that theory, the earth will
- not remain as it is now. From its beginnings as a chunk of
- molten rock and gas some 4.5 billion years ago, the planet has
- seen continents form, move together and drift apart like
- jigsaw-puzzle pieces. Successive ice ages have sent glaciers
- creeping down from the polar caps. Mountain ranges have jutted
- up from ocean beds, and landmasses have disappeared beneath the
- waves.
- </p>
- <p> Previous shifts in the earth's climate or topology have been
- accompanied by waves of extinctions. The most spectacular
- example is the dying off of the great dinosaurs during the
- Cretaceous period (136 million to 65 million years ago). No one
- knows exactly what killed the dinosaurs, although a radical
- change in environmental conditions seems a likely answer. One
- popular theory is that a huge meteor crashed to earth and
- kicked up such vast clouds of dust that sunlight was obscured
- and plants destroyed. Result: the dinosaurs starved to death.
- </p>
- <p> Whether or not that theory is correct, an event of no less
- magnitude is taking place at this very moment, but this time its
- agent is man. The wholesale burning and cutting of forests in
- Brazil and other countries, as one major example, are destroying
- irreplaceable species every day. Says Harvard biologist E.O.
- Wilson: "The extinctions ongoing worldwide promise to be at
- least as great as the mass extinction that occurred at the end
- of the age of dinosaurs."
- </p>
- <p> Humanity's current predatory relationship with nature
- reflects a man-centered world view that has evolved over the
- ages. Almost every society has had its myths about the earth
- and its origins. The ancient Chinese depicted Chaos as an
- enormous egg whose parts separated into earth and sky, yin and
- yang. The Greeks believed Gaia, the earth, was created
- immediately after Chaos and gave birth to the gods. In many
- pagan societies, the earth was seen as a mother, a fertile giver
- of life. Nature -- the soil, forest, sea -- was endowed with
- divinity, and mortals were subordinate to it.
- </p>
- <p> The Judeo-Christian tradition introduced a radically
- different concept. The earth was the creation of a monotheistic
- God, who, after shaping it, ordered its inhabitants, in the
- words of Genesis: "Be fruitful and multiply, and replenish the
- earth and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea
- and over the fowl of the air and over every living thing that
- moveth upon the earth." The idea of dominion could be
- interpreted as an invitation to use nature as a convenience.
- Thus the spread of Christianity, which is generally considered
- to have paved the way for the development of technology, may at
- the same time have carried the seeds of the wanton exploitation
- of nature that often accompanied technical progress.
- </p>
- <p> Those tendencies were compounded by the Enlightenment notion
- of a mechanistic universe that man could shape to his own ends
- through science. The exuberant optimism of that world view was
- behind some of the greatest achievements of modern times: the
- invention of laborsaving machines, the discovery of anesthetics
- and vaccines, the development of efficient transportation and
- communication systems. But, increasingly, technology has come
- up against the law of unexpected consequences. Advances in
- health care have lengthened life-spans, lowered infant-mortality
- rates and, thus, aggravated the population problem. The use of
- pesticides has increased crop yields but polluted water
- supplies. The invention of automobiles and jet planes has
- revolutionized travel but sullied the atmosphere.
- </p>
- <p> Yet the advance of technology has never destroyed man's
- wonder and awe at the beauty of the earth. The coming of
- England's Industrial Revolution, with its "dark Satanic mills,"
- coincided with the extraordinary flowering of Romantic poetry,
- much of it about the glory of nature. Many people in this
- century voiced the same tender feelings on seeing the first
- images of the earth as viewed from the moon. The sight of that
- shimmering, luminescent ball set against the black void
- inspired even normally prosaic astronauts to flights of
- eloquence. Edgar Mitchell, who flew to the moon aboard Apollo
- 14 in 1971, described the planet as "a sparkling blue-and-white
- jewel . . . laced with slowly swirling veils of white . . . like
- a small pearl in a thick sea of black mystery." Photos of the
- earth from space prompted geologist Preston Cloud to write,
- "Mother Earth will never seem the same again. No more can
- thinking people take this little planet . . . as an infinite
- theater of action and provider of resources for man, yielding
- new largesse to every demand without limit." That conclusion
- seems all the more imperative in the wake of the environmental
- shocks of 1988.
- </p>
- <p> Let there be no illusions. Taking effective action to halt
- the massive injury to the earth's environment will require a
- mobilization of political will, international cooperation and
- sacrifice unknown except in wartime. Yet humanity is in a war
- right now, and it is not too Draconian to call it a war for
- survival. It is a war in which all nations must be allies. Both
- the causes and effects of the problems that threaten the earth
- are global, and they must be attacked globally. "All nations
- are tied together as to their common fate," observes Peter
- Raven, director of the Missouri Botanical Garden. "We are all
- facing a common problem, which is, How are we going to keep this
- single resource we have, namely the world, viable?"
- </p>
- <p> As man heads into the last decade of the 20th century, he
- finds himself at a crucial turning point: the actions of those
- now living will determine the future, and possibly the very
- survival, of the species. "We do not have generations, we only
- have years, in which to attempt to turn things around," warns
- Lester Brown, president of the Washington-based Worldwatch
- Institute. Every individual on the planet must be made aware of
- its vulnerability and of the urgent need to preserve it. No
- attempt to protect the environment will be successful in the
- long run unless ordinary people -- the California housewife,
- the Mexican peasant, the Soviet factory worker, the Chinese
- farmer -- are willing to adjust their life-styles. Our
- wasteful, careless ways must become a thing of the past. We must
- recycle more, procreate less, turn off lights, use mass transit,
- do a thousand things differently in our everyday lives. We owe
- this not only to ourselves and our children but also to the
- unborn generations who will one day inherit the earth.
- </p>
- <p> Mobilizing that sort of mass commitment will take
- extraordinary leadership, of the kind that has appeared before
- in times of crisis: Churchill's eloquence galvanizing his
- embattled countrymen to live "their finest hour," F.D.R.'s
- pragmatic idealism giving hope and jobs to Depression-ridden
- Americans. Now, more than ever, the world needs leaders who can
- inspire their fellow citizens with a fiery sense of mission,
- not a nationalistic or military campaign but a universal crusade
- to save the planet. Unless mankind embraces that cause totally,
- and without delay, it may have no alternative to the bang of
- nuclear holocaust or the whimper of slow extinction.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-