3.global Environment Picture, Current Challanges
3.global Environment Picture, Current Challanges
Pollution of air, water and soil requires millions of years to recoup. Industry
and motor vehicle exhaust are the number one pollutants. Heavy metals,
nitrates and plastic are toxins responsible for pollution.
While water pollution is caused by oil spill, acid rain, urban runoff, air pollution
is caused by various gases and toxins released by industries and factories
and combustion of fossil fuels; soil pollution is majorly caused by industrial
waste that deprives soil from essential nutrients.
2. Soil Degradation
Globally, food security depends on whether or not soils are in good condition
to produce crops. According to UN estimates, about 12 million hectares of
farmland a year get seriously degraded.
Soils get damaged due to many reasons. Such reasons include erosion,
overgrazing, overexposure to pollutants, monoculture planting, soil
compaction, land-use conversion and many more.
Nowadays, a wide range of techniques of soil conservation and restoration
exist, from no-till agriculture to crop rotation to water-retention through
terrace-building.
3. Global Warming
Climate changes like global warming are the result of human practices like the
emission of greenhouse gases. Global warming leads to rising temperatures
of the oceans and the earth’ surface causing natural disasters that include
flooding, melting of polar ice caps, rise in sea levels and also unnatural
patterns of precipitation such as flash floods, hurricanes, wildfires, drought,
excessive snow or desertification.
4. Overpopulation
The population of the planet is reaching unsustainable levels as it faces a
shortage of resources like water, fuel and food. Population explosion in less
developed and developing countries is straining the already scarce resources.
This will further increase in the future due to massive industrialization in Asian
countries like India and China. Increased use of natural resources leads to a
number of other environmental issues, such as industrialization, population
growth and air pollution.
Over time, natural resource depletion will lead to an energy crisis. The
chemicals emitted from many natural resources contribute to climate change.
Fossil fuel consumption results in the emission of greenhouse gases, which is
primarily responsible for global warming and climate change.
Globally, people are making efforts to shift to renewable sources of energy like
solar, wind, biogas and geothermal energy. As such, the cost of installing the
infrastructure and maintaining these sources has plummeted in recent years.
7. Waste Disposal
The overconsumption of resources and the creation of plastics are creating a
global crisis of waste disposal. Developed countries are notorious for
producing an excessive amount of waste or garbage and dumping their waste
in the oceans and less developed countries.
Nuclear waste disposal has tremendous health hazards associated with it.
Plastic, fast food, packaging and cheap electronic wastes threaten the well
being of humans. Waste disposal is, therefore, one of the urgent current
environmental problems.
8. Deforestation
Our forests are natural sinks of carbon dioxide and produce fresh oxygen, as
well as help in regulating temperature and rainfall. At present, forests cover
30% of the land, but every year tree cover is lost, amounting to the country of
Panama due to the growing population demand for more food, shelter and
cloth. Deforestation simply means clearing of green cover and making that
land available for residential, industrial or commercial purposes.
There is enough evidence that shows sea levels are rising, and the melting of
Arctic ice caps is a major contributor. Over time, the melting of polar ice caps
could lead to extensive flooding, contamination of drinking water and major
changes in ecosystems.
Climate change has various harmful effects but not limited to the melting of
polar ice, change in seasons, occurrence of new diseases, frequent
occurrence of floods and change in overall weather scenario.
CFCs are banned in many industries and consumer products. The ozone
layer is valuable because it prevents harmful UV radiation from reaching the
earth. This is one of the most important current environmental problems.
Acid rain is a known environmental problem that can have a serious effect on
human health, wildlife and aquatic species.
The need for change in our daily lives and the movements of our government
is growing. Since so many different factors come into play, such as voting,
governmental issues, the desire to stick to a routine, many people don’t
consider that what they do will affect future generations.
If humans continue moving forward in such a harmful way towards the future,
then there will be no future to consider. Although it’s a fact that we cannot
physically stop our ozone layer from thinning (and scientists are still having
trouble figuring out what is causing it exactly), there are still so many things
we can do to try and put a dent in what we already know.
By raising awareness in your local community and within your families about
these issues, you can help contribute to a more environmentally conscious
and friendly place for you and your future generations to live.