Article 6GR0Q ‘A biodiversity catastrophe’: how the world could look in 2050 – unless we act now

‘A biodiversity catastrophe’: how the world could look in 2050 – unless we act now

by
Patrick Greenfield, Phoebe Weston and Ajit Niranja
from Science | The Guardian on (#6GR0Q)

The climate crisis, invasive species, overexploitation of resources and pollution could break down crucial ecosystems. We asked experts to lay out the risks and offer some solutions

The continued destruction of nature across the planet will result in major shocks to food supplies and safe water, the disappearance of unique species and the loss of landscapes central to human culture and leisure by the middle of this century, experts have warned.

By 2050, if humanity does not follow through on commitments to tackle the five main drivers of nature loss critical natural systems could break down just as the human population is projected to peak.

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