There’s no hiding the fact that humans are having a large effect on our planet. However, even in the face of massive mounting evidence, it has become clear that most people are largely indifferent to the changes taking place around them.
They say that a picture is worth a thousand words, and in this slideshow, we’ve gathered 45 of the most shocking images that show what humanity is really doing to planet Earth. Many of these were gathered from The Foundation For Deep Ecology’s recent book Overdevelopment, Overpopulation, Overshoot. Has humanity reached peak indifference? Or is there still more ground to be lost (both literally and figuratively)?
Unprecedented population growth is creating megacities that sprawl across the countryside and increase in size daily. This photo is of Mexico City where almost nine million people currently live. It is one of the largest cities in the Western Hemisphere.
Los Angeles lights up at night. Part of the reason for this is the massive amount of people driving around. The city is famous for having more cars than people in it depending on the time of day. All the jobs are located in the city and people commute for hours from surrounding areas every day to work there.
Old tires are very hard to dispose of and most of them just end up in giant tire heaps like the one seen in this image. This photo was taken in Nevada where thousands of used tires stretch for miles across the otherwise beautiful desert.
This image of a man surfing through a wave of trash was taken in a remote bay in Java, Indonesia. The local residents do not have the infrastructure necessary for proper waste disposal. Instead, everything gets tossed directly into the rivers and oceans.
This is an electronic waste dump in Accra, Ghana. The locals dig through the waste heap every day and break apart the electronics or burn them while searching for the rare minerals that some electronics contain.
Consumerism has a lot of indirect negative consequences for the planet. The lengths people will go to get new products is mind-blowing. Here is an image of Black Friday shoppers rushing a store in an attempt to get the best deals and acquire more “things” on special.
Much of the world’s clothing and other goods are manufactured in Bangladesh where this photo was captured. Many people just want to buy products and don’t really think about where they came from or the consequences of the manufacturing plants required to make them.
Landfills in the Indian city of New Delhi are reaching a breaking point. Soon, there will be nowhere left to hide the trash. Currently, around 25 million people live in the city and surrounding Delhi area.
The stench of the Yellow River in China has gotten so bad that this man covers his nose and turns away in disgust. Healthy rivers would never exhibit problems like this. However, pollution is often an unavoidable consequence of human expansion into natural areas.
Plumes of smoke and giant factories dot the landscape in Alberta, Canada, where companies all compete to extract petroleum from the tar sands. The only value the earth has to many oil and profit-hungry people is based upon what can be extracted from it.
The search for that sweet oil isn’t just limited to the far north. Here thousands of oil pumps can be seen strewn across the landscape in the Kern River oil field in California. They run pretty much 24/7.
12. Industrial agriculture
Long gone are the days when small, family-owned farms were the norm. Now, everything is done on a giant industrial scale. This agriculture operation in Almeria, Spain stretches for as far as the eye can see.
13. Destruction of habitats
The stumps in this photo used to be part of an old growth forest in the Willamette National Forest in Oregon. All the trees were cut down as part of a reservoir development project. All that is left now is devastation.
Vancouver Island in Canada used to be made of up very dense woodlands. However, several large areas have been completely stripped by the timber industry over the years. Logging is destroying whole forests.
This is a photo of a coal power plant in the United Kingdom. Creating electricity through the burning of coal creates a lot of pollution. The middle tower is from the plant itself and the surrounding stacks are cooling towers.
In North East Land, Svalbard, Norway, rising global temperatures are completely altering the landscape. Giant ice sheets like these are melting off at record rates, and soon, there won’t be any left. The ecology of the earth is being fundamentally changed.
Here we have another photo shows the massive effects on the environment caused by pit mining in the tar sands of Alberta, Canada. The changes are so immense and across such a vast area that the mines can actually be seen from outer space. This area will never be the same.
Diamonds are one of the most in-demand gemstones. The lengths humans will go to mine the rare mineral are incredible, as evidenced by the sheer scale of some mining operations. This is a photo of the world’s largest diamond mine, located in Russia.
Wildlife populations worldwide are in decline as habitats change and get destroyed. This polar bear in Norway was seeking its preferred hunting ground — giant ice sheets. When it couldn’t find any, it continued walking north until it eventually collapsed from hunger and exhaustion.
Every day, large areas of the Amazon jungle are burned off to make new grazing pastures for cattle or to create new fields for farming. This photo was taken in Brazil. Sadly, sites like this have become extremely commonplace in recent decades as populations continue to expand.
A 2011 tsunami in Japan caused a nuclear power plant to have a massive meltdown. Ships can be seen trying to mitigate the aftermath of the disaster by spraying large amounts of water on the burning power plant. The environmental problems caused by disasters such as these are not good.
As temperatures increase and sea levels continue to rise, the first places to be severely affected will be island nations. The Maldive Islands are one of the most at-risk places in the world. Just a few inches of sea level rise would be completely devastating for them.
Trash is causing all kinds of problems for wildlife and the various ecosystems across the globe. Nowhere is left untouched. This albatross washed up on the shores of Midway Island, one of the most remote places in the world. The bird died from ingesting plastics.
Everyone knows how devastating Hurricane Katrina was. Storms and hurricanes are now more powerful than ever. It seems as though the frequency of these events is also increasing. This satellite image shows Hurricane Katrina right as it was about to hit land back in 2005.
Another consequence of our money hungry societies is poaching. There is big money to be made in illegally hunting wild animals. In this photo, basketball player Yao Ming can be seen standing over an elephant in Northern Kenya that was killed for its ivory tusks.
Wildfires are another type of natural disaster which we are seeing more of thanks to our warming planet. Giant swaths of forest in the American west and midwest are literally burning down. This photo was taken in Colorado.
The aviation industry leads to a lot of pollution, as evidenced by the jet contrails in this photo. Global air transport is a big cause of greenhouse gas emissions, yet, at the same time, everyone loves to travel. Where should we draw the line?
Exotic animals like tigers are constantly threatened by poachers and unscrupulous individuals who capture them to sell them off to zoos and private buyers. The exotic animal trade is a very lucrative business.
Pollution of the oceans with trash is a big issue. This crab was photographed trapped in a milk tea cup in Batangas City, Philippines — traditionally one of the world’s epicenters of marine biodiversity. It is estimated that over 163 million sachets are currently floating in the waters of the region.
30. Time to make a change?
Here is another illustrative photo showing how bad the floating garbage problem in the Verde Island Passage of the Philippines has gotten. A spaghetti sauce packet produced by Del Monte casually floats along in the turquoise blue waters. The sad part is that sites like this are not uncommon.
31. More wildfire devastation
Devastating wildfires in Colorado are more proof that climate change is very real indeed. Every year, hundreds of homes are destroyed and countless acres are completely devastated by out-of-control wildfires.
32. Deepwater Horizon explosion
“In 2010, Mexico was left with a devastating oil explosion resulting in 16 workers injured and 11 workers never being found, this was known as the “Deepwater Drilling Rig Explosion”. The explosion was considered the largest accidental marine oil spill in the world, and caused the Deepwater Horizon to sink and burn, later resulting in a massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico,” says
LOL WOT.
Palm oil production is on the rise and it’s destruction is absolutely devastating. The Indonesian government has promised to up palm oil production to 40 million tons by 2020. Rainforests all over Borneo and Indonesia will be cut down to make palm oil plantations.
This bucket-wheel excavator can remove 200 tons of earth in a matter of seconds. They’re used for surface mining to remove waste rock to reach the desired mineral. Once again, destroying our planet all in the name of mining interests.
The Ganges River in India is one of the most important rivers to the Indian people and the Hindu religion. When people die, their bodies are burned and sent floating down the river, and the river is also used for bathing, despite extremely high pollution levels.
“Overpopulation is becoming a large concern in some places around the world. In just 50 years, the population has doubled; from 3.5 billion to 7 billion. If this isn’t a cause for concern, then I’m not sure what is. The effects of too many people living in such small cities or crowded areas can lead diseases, outbreaks, poverty, and more,” says
lolwot.
37. Center-pivot irrigation
A popular way of watering crops with sprinklers is called center-pivot irrigation. Hundreds of them dot the agricultural fields in Kansas. Today, many of them are propelled by electric motors.
“A slum is characterized as a heavily populated urban informal settlement. While these do homes for people to live in, it relates back to overpopulation. The population is expanding at such a rate where there is a need for ‘
informal’ settlements, since proper settlements can’t be erected quick enough,” says
lolwot.
Thanks to consumers all around the world, shipping and cargo is big business. Here, in Singapore, there are thousands of shipping containers either ending or beginning their journey. It’s the busiest transshipment port in the world and the second busiest in total shipping tonnage.
“Tar-sands-related tailings ponds in the Athabasca Oil Sands area are among the largest collections of toxic materials on Earth and lie in unlined dikes feet from the Athabasca River. Indigenous communities downstream are fearful of being poisoned by toxic seepage into the food chain,” reports
Business Insider.
41. A landscape of crop production
You won’t find any bits of nature left in this countryside in China. Since there’s a shortage of land suitable for farming, every single square inch is used to use it to its full advantage.
“This central area of Barcelona, Spain, has a population 5 million and a density 16,000 people per square mile, making it one of the most densely populated places in the world,” says
Business Insider.
A shocking aerial view above New Delhi, India shows how densely packed they are. In this city, there are 30,000 people per square mile. Humans are basically living on top of one another.
A 400-foot-long trawler pulls in a giant haul of fish in their massive nets. The demand for fish protein across the world is high – and growing fast. The ocean’s fish population is being depleted at an alarming rate because of it.
45. Humans taking over nature
This view from above of the landscape outside Miami, Florida, shows 13 golf courses amongst tract homes on the edge of the Everglades. The area has suffered from depleting water resources, as well as a surge in people moving to the area and developing the land,”
Business Insider.
Humanity as a whole is largely indifferent to the major issues currently affecting our environment, but that doesn’t mean we all have to be.
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