We have in excess of
seven billion people on the planet at the same time, and that number is
expected to reach 9.7 billion by 2050, and 11.2 billion by 2100. While that
probably won't seem like a terrible thing, we live on a planet that can just
support about 10 billion souls, which means we're less than a century away from
overpopulation turning into a serious and even life-threatening issue. As the
total populace rises, the amount of resources accessible for survival
decreases. Actually, the populace has grown to an unsustainable level.
Human overpopulation is
among the most important environmental issues, quietly irritating the forces
behind global warming, environmental pollution, habitat loss, intensive farming
and the utilization of limited natural resources for example, clean fresh
water, arable land and petroleum products, at speed quicker than their rate of
recovery. However, biological issues are only the start.
The more individuals
there are on the planet, the more they discharge carbon dioxide and different
gasses into the air. The growing population comes with the expense of
greenhouse gasses and environmental change. Until people understand that they
directly affect these pressing environmental issues, their conduct won't change.
Resources aren’t in every case sustainable sourced, however without those
resources, the population won't survive. Ideally, we don't understand this
short of what was expected.
Luckily, renewable energy
sources are an incredible method to battle carbon emission. By rising the
measure of sustainable energy, such as wind power and solar power, the
resources required can be sustainable sourced reducing carbon emission. You
can't change the population; however you can change what the populace emits
into the earth.
Written by: Ali Sarmad
Kazmi
over population is not an issue. just the bad usage of resources matters a lot.
ReplyDeleteI agree on that
ReplyDeleteagree
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