210th Podcast: Stanford's Paul Ehrlich Discusses the On-Going (and Accelerating) Sixth Mass Extinction (July 23rd)
www.thehealthcarepolicypodcast.com
Listen Now Our planet is currently experiencing its sixth mass extinction. Over the past 450 million years the planet has experienced five previous mass extinctions. Each of which destroyed or extinguished between 70% and 95% of all plants, animals and micro-organisms. While these five previous extinctions were moreover the result of volcanization, the current extinction crisis is human caused. According to the UN's Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (or the IPBES), the five main causes of the current mass extinction are, in descending order, man-made changes in land and sea use; man's direct exploitation of animals and plants; man-made or anthropocentric global warming, i.e., the climate catastrophe, and man-made pollution. It should go without saying policy makers cannot coherently address human health without simultaneously recognizing or accounting for the state of the biosphere. Nevertheless, federal policy makers refuse to discuss the ongoing extinction of life on earth. For example, the House Select Climate Crisis Committee recently released report (I've cited in a previous post) fails to make any mention of the ongoing mass extinction or the loss of biodiversty nor did the committee discuss the issue during any of its hearings this Congressional session.
210th Podcast: Stanford's Paul Ehrlich Discusses the On-Going (and Accelerating) Sixth Mass Extinction (July 23rd)
210th Podcast: Stanford's Paul Ehrlich…
210th Podcast: Stanford's Paul Ehrlich Discusses the On-Going (and Accelerating) Sixth Mass Extinction (July 23rd)
Listen Now Our planet is currently experiencing its sixth mass extinction. Over the past 450 million years the planet has experienced five previous mass extinctions. Each of which destroyed or extinguished between 70% and 95% of all plants, animals and micro-organisms. While these five previous extinctions were moreover the result of volcanization, the current extinction crisis is human caused. According to the UN's Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (or the IPBES), the five main causes of the current mass extinction are, in descending order, man-made changes in land and sea use; man's direct exploitation of animals and plants; man-made or anthropocentric global warming, i.e., the climate catastrophe, and man-made pollution. It should go without saying policy makers cannot coherently address human health without simultaneously recognizing or accounting for the state of the biosphere. Nevertheless, federal policy makers refuse to discuss the ongoing extinction of life on earth. For example, the House Select Climate Crisis Committee recently released report (I've cited in a previous post) fails to make any mention of the ongoing mass extinction or the loss of biodiversty nor did the committee discuss the issue during any of its hearings this Congressional session.