Droughts and flooding have become so common in some of the poorest places on Earth that the land can no longer sustain crops, the director of the World Food Programme’s global office has said.
Martin Frick told the BBC that some of the most deprived areas had now reached a tipping point of having “zero” harvests left, as extreme weather was pushing already degraded land beyond use.
He said that as a result, parts of Africa, the Middle East and Latin America were now dependent on humanitarian aid.
Sadly, it won’t be too long before most of the land in wealthier nations is degraded too.
According to an article that was posted by the BBC last week, it is being projected that “95% of the world’s land could become degraded by 2050″…
When soil degrades, the organic matter that binds it together dies off. This means that it is less able to support plant life – reducing crop yields – and absorb carbon from the atmosphere.
So what happens when 95 percent of all global land is degraded?
We are done.
According to the chief science officer of environmental group Save Soil, when we get to that point “it’s going to be like Mad Max”…
“It’s going to be disaster for human beings,” Praveena Sridhar, chief science officer of environmental group Save Soil, said. “It’s going to be like Mad Max.”
She added: “There will be no humanity. There will be no charity. There will be no fairness… The only thing that lets you be will be survival.”
She is right.
I have been trying to warn about this for years, but when I write about soil it doesn’t tend to get much attention.
If you want to get an idea of what our future will be like, just look at what is happening in Sudan right now. It is being estimated that 5 percent of the entire population of the country could starve to death by the end of 2024…
“We’ve seen mortality projections estimating that in excess of 2.5 million people, about 15% of the population in Darfur and Kordofan – the hardest hit regions – could die by the end of September,” the ambassador said.
“This is the largest humanitarian crisis on the face of the planet. And yet, somehow, it threatens to get worse,” she added.
On top of everything else, the major global wars that are coming will greatly disrupt food production and food distribution all over the planet.
So what is the bottom line?
The bottom line is that global famines are already here, and they are going to get far worse during the years ahead.
Enormous numbers of people are going to die from starvation, and those that are wise will prepare while they still have an opportunity to do so.
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