Climate Change and Environmental Degradation

Even setting aside the question of the supply of fossil fuels, their use has led to serious environmental problems. Burning oil and coal releases massive amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere, the leading cause of climate change, or global warming. While the future effects of climate change are difficult to predict, climatologists generally agree that global warming is proceeding dramatically faster than previously predicted and that some climatic disruption is now unavoidable. Rising average temperatures were playing havoc with familiar weather patterns, melting glaciers and polar ice packs, and drying up freshwater resources around the world. Moreover, in the next fifty years, rising sea levels may well flood low-lying coastal areas.

Since the 1990s, the EU has spearheaded efforts to control energy consumption and contain climate change. EU leaders have imposed tight restrictions on CO2 emissions, and Germany, the Netherlands, and Denmark have become world leaders in harnessing alternative energy sources such as solar and wind power.

Environmental degradation encompasses a number of problems beyond climate change. Overfishing and toxic waste threaten the world’s oceans and freshwater lakes, which once seemed to be inexhaustible sources of food and drinking water. Deforestation, land degradation, soil erosion, and overfertilization; species extinction related to habitat loss; the accumulation of toxins in the air, land, and water; the disposal of poisonous nuclear waste — all will continue to pose serious problems in the twenty-first century.

Though North American and European governments, NGOs, and citizens have taken a number of steps to limit environmental degradation and regulate energy use, the overall effort to control energy consumption has been an especially difficult endeavor, underscoring the interconnectedness of the contemporary world. Industrializing countries such as India and China have had a difficult time balancing environmental concerns and the energy use necessary for economic growth.11

Can international agreements and good intentions make a difference? In December 2013, representatives of 189 nations met at the annual United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Warsaw, Poland. They set ambitious goals for the reduction of CO2 emissions by 2020 and promised to help developing countries manage the effects of climate change. Such changes would require substantial modifications in the planet’s consumption of energy derived from fossil fuels, however, and the ultimate success of ambitious plans to limit the human impact on the environment remains uncertain.