(Climate change has done its worst, and now just 500 million humans
remain on lifeboats in the north. How do they survive?)
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| Looking down on our dystopian world. |
I stare out the window from my tiny flat on the 300th
floor, hermetically sealed in a soaring, climate-controlled high-rise,
honeycombed with hundreds of dwellings just like mine, and survey the
breathtaking vistas from my lofty perch more than half a mile above ground: the
craftsman cottages with their well-tended lawns, the emerald green golf
courses, the sun-washed aquamarine swimming pools and the multimillion-dollar
mansions that hug the sweeping sands from Malibu to Palos Verdes. These images
evoke feelings of deep nostalgia for a Los Angeles that doesn’t exist anymore,
back in the halcyon days before my great-grandparents were born, when
procreation wasn’t strictly regulated and billions of people roamed freely on
Earth.
There are only about 500 million of us left, after the
convulsive transformations caused by climate change severely diminished the
planet’s carrying capacity, which is the maximum population size that the environment
can sustain. Most of us now live in what the British scientist James Lovelock
has called ‘lifeboats’ at the far reaches of the northern hemisphere, in places
that were once Canada, China, Russia and the Scandinavian countries, shoehorned
into cities created virtually overnight to accommodate the millions of
desperate refugees where the climate remains marginally tolerable.
Read the essay on Aeon by Linda Marsa “Scorched Earth, 2200AD.”

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