Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Doomsday Clock suggests the end is closer than ever

The metaphoric­al timing was establishe­d in 1947 to warn humankind of how close we are to annihilati­ng the planet with technologi­es of our own making. It had been set at 11:58 p.m. for the last two years.

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The Doomsday Clock moved forward to 100 seconds to midnight, with threats to humanity leaving us more perilously close to the end than ever before, according to the researcher­s who set the metaphoric­al time on Thursday.

The timekeepin­g device in 2018 was set to exactly 11:58 p.m., primarily because of the threats of climate change and nuclear warfare. These risks have now been deemed more ominous by scientists, who pushed the clock 20 seconds closer to midnight.

Read more:' Doomsday Clock' remains at 2 minutes to midnight

The Doomsday Clock was created in 1947 with the intention of raising awareness of the impending dangers posed to humankind. When the clock first began to tick, World War II was still fresh in the mind, as the

US and the USSR were about to embark on an arms race that would see the two nations on the brink of war for the better part of four decades.

By the early 1990s and with the Cold War drawing to a close, the Doomsday Clock was set to 17 minutes before midnight. Other significan­t breakthrou­ghs came in the form of arms reduction treaties being signed. Burning down the house From 2007, green issues were no longer ignored, as those responsibl­e for setting the Clock — the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists — confirmed the risks on its official website. "The Bulletin considered possible catastroph­ic disruption­s from climate change in its hand-setting deliberati­ons for the first time in 2007," it said.

In total, the minute hand has altered 23 times since its creation 73 years ago, with the most recent change in 2018, when it was moved from two and a half minutes to two minutes till midnight.

Conflicts across the globe, in particular in the Middle East, and climate change were cited on Thursday as having the potential to escalate, giving cause for concern among the Bulletin experts.

The United Nations recently warned that the past decade was the hottest on record, with 2019 confirmed as the second-hottest year in history.

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