Environment
By: Andrew • Essay • 484 Words • April 26, 2010 • 911 Views
Environment
I do not believe that there isn't an environmental, population, or resource crisis, in all aspects. I think that there is. And I don't believe that the situation is becoming better as the author suggests. But there are some problems facing the world today that we must deal with. Such as the over population situation facing many third world countries.
Referring to the figure1-13, I think that the endangered species is the least of our problems out of the degradation of the environment, over population and the vanishing bio-diversity. Although the animals are important to many aspects of life as well as many different cultures, it isn't the most vital statistic that we must work on. In many countries anywhere from 30%-70% of forest and crop land is being destroyed or lost. Such as in Congo where the rain forest is being slated for clearing. We need those areas to sustain human and animal life. The pollution facing countries like Poland and Russia is horrible. The substances that cause this is industrial and radio active waste. One problem that is very large is over population. The following countries are some that have this problem: Mali, Burkina, Faso, Niger, Togo, and Benin. The reason for this is because they have poor funding for birth control and not have much funding for medical care.
In the figure 1-16, the following are discussed, air pollution, water pollution, waste production, food supply problems, and bio-diversity depletion. All of these are major problems facing the world today. And I believe that they are all problems that are not becoming any better. The pollution that is in the air is much worse, I think, than 300 years ago, along