- Jun 23, 2004
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Even before the now decade-long drought began punishing Las Vegas, people used more than 75 percent of the water in northern Africa and western Asia that they could get their hands on in 2000, according to the United Nations.
In 2002, 8 percent of the world suffered chronic shortages. By 2050, 40 percent of the projected world population, or about 4 billion people, will lack adequate water as entire regions turn dry, the UN predicts.
?We can no longer assume that cheap water is available,? says Peter Gleick, editor of The World?s Water 2008-2009 (Island Press, 2009). ?We have to start living within our means.?
What I believe this article is dealing with, is the simple fact that the earth is overpopulated. Proof of concept is a lack of resources, and the single most important resource we need to utilize is water.
I?ve created a poll to gauge how serious we take this matter, and if you believe in my diagnosis. I mean, the first question is a no brainer so it is only a matter of when this happens, not if it happens. So then I wonder how we will respond to it, and if we will succeed at all?
Our current efforts are, at best, paltry. Parlor tricks compared to the very real problems we face. The reservoirs and aquifers we tap into are being drained dry. We have already gone past their rate of replenishment, now it?s only a question of how long it takes to suck this resource dry. All the while our population, and thus demand, continues to grow.
Civilization has saved many lives, compared to how humans lived thousands of years ago. Yet all this peace and prosperity has created a population boom. This increase in population leads to an increase in consumption. Thus, our peace and prosperity by itself is inevitably going to lead to a lack of resources, and a collapse of society.
What say you? Please read, or at least skim through most of the article above.