Climate Change, Featured - Written by JD Rucker on Sunday, September 7, 2008 17:20 - 17 Comments
9 Global Devastation Hotspots, Before and After
The world is changing. It has gone beyond the perceptions of the skeptics who say it’s “a cycle” and demonstrated beyond any reasonable doubt that humans are having a dramatic and negative impact on the world.
Yesterday, we covered UNEP and their Atlas of Our Changing Environment. Today, we took a look at nearly 200 of the hotspots listed and found the 11 most compelling image sets that depict the world through satellite images the way that it was and the way that it is now. Some of these images were extremely dramatic with major changes apparent in a very short period of time.
Here are the images that portray the greatest human impact on the environment:
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Almeria, Spain
This pair of satellite images shows the impact of massive and rapid agricultural development in Almeria Province along Spain’s southern coast.
In the earlier image, the landscape reflects rather typical rural agricultural land use. In the 2000 image, much of the same region-an area covering roughly 20 000 hectares (49 421 acres) - has been converted to intensive greenhouse agriculture for the mass production of market produce.
Greenhouse-dominated land appears as whitish gray patches.
In order to address increasingly complex water needs throughout Spain, the government adopted the Spanish National Hydrological Plan (SNHP) in 2001.
Initially, this water redistribution plan involved the construction of 118 dams and 22 water transfer projects that would move water from parts of the country where it was relatively abundant to more arid regions.
In 2004, the Spanish government announced it would begin exploring more environmentally friendly water-saving technologies, such as wastewater recycling and seawater desalinization.
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Beira Fire Scars, Mozambique
During Mozambique’s dry season—May to October—fires leave burn scars on the landscape. Over a third of the country is affected by fire each year. NASA’s Earth Observatory recorded an especially large number of fires in August 2006.
The widespread nature of the fires suggests that they may have been intentionally set. Population growth in Mozambique has drastically intensified the need for agricultural land as well as for forestry and wildlife products, thus putting increased pressure on limited resources. Fires have become a primary means of clearing land for cultivation.
The 21 May 2006 satellite image was acquired at the beginning of the 2006 dry season, before many fires had left their mark.
The 9 August 2006 image shows the same area roughly 2.5 months later. Pink, dark red, and black fire scars cover much of the landscape.
Many plants in Mozambique are adapted to periodic fire. However, the increasing frequency of fires affects the natural regeneration of vegetation and is believed to be reducing species diversity in Mozambique’s forests.
Frequent fires can also increase soil erosion and negatively impact hydrology.
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Aral Sea, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
“Diverting Rivers for Cotton Production”
The name “Aral Sea” comes from the word “aral” meaning island. The sea’s name reflects the fact that it is a vast basin that lies as an island among waterless deserts.
The Aral Sea was once the world’s fourth largest inland sea. Its problems began in the 1960s and 1970s with the diversion of the main rivers that feed it to provide for cotton cultivation in arid Soviet Central Asia.
The surface of the Aral Sea once measured 66 100 km² (25 521 square miles).
By 1987, about 60 per cent of the Aral Sea’s volume had been lost, its depth had declined by 14 m (45 feet), and its salt concentration had doubled, killing the commercial fishing trade.
Wind storms became toxic, carrying fine grains of clay and salts deposited on exposed sea floor.
“Re-engineering will leave the South Aral Sea completely dry, perhaps within 15 years.”
Life expectancies in the districts near the sea are significantly lower than in the surrounding areas.
The sea is now a quarter of the size it was 50 years ago and has broken into two parts, the North Aral Sea and the South Aral Sea.
Re-engineering along the Syr Darya River delta in the north will retain water in the North Aral Sea, thereby drying the South Aral Sea completely, perhaps within 15 years.
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Santa Cruz, Bolivia
“Where People Go, Nature Dies”
Santa Cruz is situated in Bolivia’s rich, fertile lowlands, a region highly suitable for agriculture.
In the 1975 satellite image, the region’s forested landscape appears as a dense, essentially unbroken expanse of deep green that extends to the Rio Grande (Guapay) River. It was beautiful from the sky and on the ground.
By 1986 roads had been built that linked the region to other population centers.
As a result, large numbers of people migrated to the area.
A large agricultural development effort (the Tierras Baja project) led to widespread deforestation as forests were clear-cut and converted to pastures and cropland.
By 2003, almost the entire region had been converted to agricultural lands, including the area east of La Esperanza across the river.
In the area north and west of Los Cafes (upper left), notice the grid of squares on the landscape, each with an internal star-shaped pattern.
At the center of each square is a small community.
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Nangbeto Reservoir, Togo
A feasibility study in the 1960s identified the Nangbéto region as the best location for hydroelectric power development in Togo.
The site - 160 km upstream from the coast – is the only place where a dam of sufficient volume to regulate the flow of the Mono River was possible.
As demand for electricity grew, the decision was made in the 1980s to proceed with the Nangbéto Hydroelectric Dam.
Satellite images from 1986 and 2001 show the region before and after the dam’s construction.
The completed dam created a reservoir with a surface area of approximately 180 km2 and a volume of 1,465 million m3.
In addition to generating electricity for domestic and commercial use, the dam also provides water for agricultural irrigation and is a source of commercial fishing and tourism. However, these benefits have been offset by environmental costs.
Construction of the dam, creation of the reservoir, and installation of transmission lines resulted in the loss of nearly 150 km2 of savannahs and gallery forests that provided habitat for rare local fauna.
The reservoir submerged 1,285 households and 5,500 hectares of agricultural land. Loss of the natural vegetation in the region has altered the climate enough to have had a negative impact on nearly 350 hectares of banana plantations. The creation of the reservoir has also increased the population of two species of aquatic snails that serve as intermediate hosts of the parasite that causes the disease bilharzia.
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Shume Magamba, United Republic of Tanzania
Shume Magamba forest reserve is located in the West Usambara Mountains. It is one of the thirteen blocks forming the Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania and Kenya, along the Albertine Rift.
It is comprised of 12 000 ha of moist montane forest, which is a gazetted forest reserve, with 2 500 ha under exotic plantation.
The Eastern Arc is one of the most biologically rich regions in the world, with a large number of endemic animal and plant species. It is regarded as one of the world’s top 25 global biodiversity hotspots and is increasingly being managed for biodiversity conservation.
The forest is threatened by timber harvesting (pit sawing) and agricultural encroachment.
Part of the Shume-Magamba Forest on the West Usambara Mountains was degazetted from a Forest Reserve soon after independence in 1961 and was then converted to agriculture by land-hungry residents.
Other major threats to the forests in the West Usambaras include fire spreading from surrounding farmlands and gold mining. In the former case, the enhanced burning regime is believed to have been the main cause of the replacement of Afromontane forests with grassland and scrub-grassland across large areas.
The sharp boundaries at the edges of the forest indicate areas where forest has been converted to farmland. The 2005 image shows these boundaries pushing further into the forest in several places. The high resolution image (see photos panel below) shows detail of the area highlighted by the yellow box in the above images. In addition to crops, areas of forest plantation are displacing natural forest. Areas of trees with parallel lines cut through them are generally tree farms.
Tanzania had the sixth largest annual net loss in forest area between 2000 and 2005 in the world of about 412 000 ha/yr; second largest in Africa after Zambia. In total, between 1990 and 2005, United Republic of Tanzania lost 14.9 per cent of its forest cover. Currently, 39.9 per cent of the country is forested. Apparently, a number of mountains have lost at least 80 per cent of their original forest cover, including Taita, Ukaguru, Mahenge, and West Usambara.
The energy economy in Tanzania is largely focused on collecting, distributing, and consuming wood fuels (wood and charcoal) to satisfy household demands for cooking. As much as 90 per cent of all primary energy consumed in Tanzania is biomass based.
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Lake Hamoun, Afghanistan and Iran
Iran’s Lake Hamoun is fed primarily by water catchments in neighboring Afghanistan.
In 1976, when rivers in Afghanistan were flowing regularly, the lake’s water level was relatively high.
Between 1999 and 2001, however, the lake all but dried up and disappeared, as can be seen in the 2001 satellite image above.
The “dry phase” of Lake Hamoun is a striking example of how competition for scarce water resources can transform a landscape.
When droughts occur in Afghanistan, or when water in watersheds that support Lake Hamoun are drawn down for other natural or human-induced reasons, the end result is a dry lakebed in Iran.
In addition, when the lake is dry, seasonal winds blow fine sands off the exposed lakebed.
The sand is swirled into huge dunes that may cover a hundred or more fishing villages along the former lakeshore.
Wildlife around the lake is negatively impacted and fisheries are brought to a halt. Changes in water policies and substantial rains in the region saw a return of much of the water in Lake Hamoun by 2003 (see image series under photos).
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Huang He Delta, China
Sometimes, it isn’t what humans do, but rather what we don’t do that have a dramatic effect on the environment. As you can see by the images, there is a large protrusion of land that is sticking out that wasn’t there before.
The Huang He (Yellow River) is the muddiest river on Earth and is China’s second longest river, running 5 475 km (3 395 miles) from eastern Tibet to the Bohai Sea.
The Huang He’s yellow color is caused by its tremendous load of sediment, composed primarily of mica, quartz, and feldspar particles.
The sediment enters the water as the river carves its way through the highly erodable loess plateau in north-central China (Loessial soil is called huang tu, or “yellow earth,” in Chinese).
Centuries of sediment deposition and dike building along the river’s course has caused it to flow above the surrounding farmland in some places, making flooding a critically dangerous problem.
Where the Huang He flows into the ocean, sediments are continuously deposited in the river delta, where they gradually build up over time.
Between 1979 and 2000 - as these satellite images show - the delta of the Huang He river expanded dramatically. Several hundred square kilometres of newly formed land were added to China’s coast during this period.
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Sakhalin, Russian Federation
“People Increase Risk of Fire”
Mixed deciduous and evergreen needle-leaf trees dominate the boreal forests of Sakhalin Island, just off the eastern coast of Russia.
The tremendous natural reserves of the boreal forests serve as “carbon sinks” that help to regulate global climate. They are among the most important natural “CO2 blockers” in the world today. Boreal forests are also home to a unique collection of plants and animals, including rare and endangered species such as the Amur Tiger.
“Roughly 300 intensely hot fires burned an area nearly the size of Luxembourg.”
Fire is a natural and often vital component in maintaining the health of boreal forests. But since the 1950s, the frequency of fires has increased on Sakhalin Island as its forests have been subjected to rapid exploitation and disturbance in the acquisition of lumber, oil, coal, and peat.
As people moved into the region in greater numbers, the risk of fires started by trains, cars, trash fires, and wood stoves increased greatly. These satellite images show the impact of forest fires on Sakhalin Island.
In 1998, roughly 300 intensely hot fires burned an area nearly the size of Luxembourg. Three people died and nearly 600 were made homeless by a very rapidly moving crown fire that consumed the town of Gorki within a few hours. The 1999 image very clearly shows the extent of the fire damage to the island’s forests near the end of that year.
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For a complete list of nearly 200 of the world’s eco-hotspots and satellite imagery of each, check out the UNEP’s Atlas of Our Changing Environment. Also, visit this environmental blog often for more news on climate change.
17 Comments
11 Satellite Images: Eco-Hotspots, Before and After
KayakCountry - All things Kayak » 9 Global Devastation Hotspots, Before and After
[...] Kenya Online Journalists Association. wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerptThe Huang He (Yellow River) is the muddiest river on Earth and is China’s second longest river, running 5 475 km (3 395 miles) from eastern Tibet to the Bohai Sea. The Huang He’s yellow color is caused by its tremendous load of sediment … [...]
Geraldo Franco
Brazilian (and neighbors’) Amazonian devastation is an example that encompasses all the above. Numbers and detailed information can be found in IBGE and INPE-Brazil, inter alia.
Deforestation becomes a weird business to all, mankind included.
This should be subject of further studies, but the area is so large that a sample here and there does not suffice. The degrees and variations are quite the same but widespread.
Of recent a series of hydroelectric generation dams, in the Xingu River area, are in the process of being licensed and the results will likely be against local rivers marginal populations.
Most Brazilian press does not seem to care a bit about it. There is hardly any serious complaints anywhere to protect environment as it should.
Officials are prone to take measures that may remedy locally for a few years but no major future development plans exist, envisaging 20, 50 or 100 years from now, like those of Japan for instance: they simply were never thought of adequately by any authorities, whatsoever.
Experiences from elsewhere, like those above, seem to be diregarded or simply ignored.
The results seem to be quite clear against humanity’s survival by and large in the area, such as:
1. Calcutization of major large, mid-size and small cities, with consequent loss of life quality everywhere;
2. Destruction of main water sources: currently the largest known-to-mankind Acquifer Guarany is under the risk of having its sources and reservoirs poluted with chemicals draining from large plantations;
3. Destruction of human integrity through single mothers’ under 15 yrs old birth generation widespread in populated inland areas, consequent prostitution of a whole generation of young females;
4. In some areas air becomes charged with CO2, smoke and particulates, to a point that most people suffer from near-asphixiation and diverse upper aerial tract diseases ensue.
I guess I could go on indefinitely with a list of evils to mankind, but banks must get richer and richer.
So I end it here.
Good luck humans…
Sasikanth Malladi
We are like locusts: breeding limitlessly and destroying everything in our path.
The only solution is strict population control and old fashioned thrift in the way we consume. The former is politically infeasible (at this point) and the latter is almost impossible, given human nature.
Result: inevitable destruction of nature wherever man treads.
Looks promising. Nice idea. I highly recommend you reveal more about the authors to give the site more credibility.
stellares last blog post..Miniature Cryosphere
Peixe
How old is our planet?
For how long have we been consuming the natural resources?
Do we really consume them or do we transform them (Lavoisier Law)?
I think Earth has cycles. We are just one more “cold” She got.
Soon we will be gone, leaving behind just our frozen pattern. She will not get sick of us again =]
Ben
It is a shame that you see human use of the Earth as a bad thing. Guess what!?!? We NEED to use the Earth to survive. To build houses we HAVE to cut down trees. To feed ourselves, we HAVE to kill animals and plants. You critique the effects of concentrated industrialized living, when it is FAR more efficient than distributing the consumption over larger areas, thus damaging some areas more while preserving most areas. Think before you fear monger. And here is an idea: Humans are more important that plants and animals. Keep that in mind while you spread your pseudo science.
Syona
Agent Smith was right. Humans are a disease.
larry
So why dont we put screens in orbit to reduce ground temperature??
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[...] Never Join the Dark Side of the Moon” Fumeur sans tête Comment upgrader son Mac Mini Dévastation sur Terre (avant/après) Catégorie: Au jour le jour | Ajoutez votre commentaire Nom [...]
Mark
The real scary part of the Aral sea problem is the abandoned (but not decomissioned) bio-weapons facility the Soviets build on the island in the middle. Guess what, there’s no more island there (it’s a penninsula), and those “toxic wind storms” might just be carrying weapons-grade anthrax or plague too.
Eco Buying » Before and After Images of Global Devastation Hotspots
[...] about human impact on the environment? WeHeartWorld has taken UNEP’s Atlas of our Changing Environment, which shows hotspots of human destruction [...]
Andrew
Regarding ‘It is a shame that you see human use of the Earth as a bad thing.’, Ben is wrong. Humans are NOT more important than the rest of the plants and animals.
By the way, I’m leaving the successful tech company I founded to spend more time working for the environment. You should consider doing the same.
was recently looking at acquiring Linksys | Long Range Wireless Technology
[...] 9 Global Devastation Hotspots, Before and After [...]
plantation farming…
Many blogs have stopped using trackbacks because dealing with spam became too burdensome. The term is used colloquially for any kind…
The PHA : links for 2008-09-27
[...] 9 Global Devastation Hotspots, Before and After | WeHeartWorld (tags: green environment article) [...]
Very good article, thank you!
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