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…THERE IS NO PLAN-B OR PLANET-B

- RUDHRAN BARAASU

From cosmic dust to a thriving space that sustains a gazillion forms of life, Mother Earth is being pushed to her inhabitabl­e limits by man’s destructiv­e practices, most of which revolve around the use of plastics. The only way to save her is not to reuse or recycle but completely avoid using plastics, because…

Why? Next time when you waste precious water or burn fossil fuel necessaril­y or unnecessar­ily, or even keep your air-conditione­rs at ‘freezing’ levels, ask yourself this: why is our planet so special among the millions of other planets floating inside this endless Universe?

If Mother Earth had any consciousn­ess of her own during her embryonic time, even she would not have been able to foretell what would become of her 4.5 billion years later. Hers is a story of turbulence and resilience. Yet, we take her for granted.

The Big Bang Theory

The story starts when an ageing distant star collapsed; thus emitting a burst of cosmic waves that heated huge clouds of space dust and gas. The burning and gravity formed a new star, which is our Sun. Remaining dust and gas collided with each other and planets of our solar system, including the earth were formed.

Mother Earth at the stage could not support life as it was a ball of molten magma. Then she cooled down but not fully. For her to support life and us, she needed her sister Theia, another planet the size of present day Mars that was formed on the same orbit as the Earth, to collide and fuse with her.

The result: We have a tilt, many seasons and a moon, all significan­t for life to form and sustain. The Moon slowed down the Earth’s rotation to 24 hours.

Climate of our planet has undergone drastic changes several times and created times of hot and warm climate and cold climate like the ice age. While these changes were induced by natural causes like series of volcanic eruptions, tectonic activities, boom in oxygen levels due to rapid growth of land plants and an impact of an asteroid, the present climate change crisis, which the scientists see as a harbinger for sixth mass extinction, is man-made.

On the time-scale of the Earth, Homosapien­s form a minuscule time. We are one among more than 5 billion species in the earth’s history, of which 99% died out, due to 5 mass extinction events that occurred between 444 million years and 65 million years ago.

We’re feeling it

After the last mass extinction event, the Earth has been enjoying a stable climate, until the industrial age began.

According to recent studies, global average carbon dioxide, the major greenhouse gas, reached 419.3 parts per million (ppm). Atmospheri­c carbon dioxide is now 50% higher than it was before the industrial revolution. Between 8 million years ago and mid-1700, carbon dioxide concentrat­ion never crossed 300 ppm.

While estimation­s warn that between 200 and 2,000 species go extinct every year due to the rapid changes in the climate, humans are also starting to feel the pinch. Recent flooding events in Chennai and South TN are consequenc­es of climate change. Rapidly warming atmosphere will make forecastin­g difficult for weather experts.

While carbon dioxide is the most common greenhouse gas, methane is 25% more potent in trapping heat. A study conducted by the Centre for Climate Change and Disaster Management (CCCDM), Anna University revealed that garbage dumped in Kodungaiyu­r and Perungudi landfills in Chennai alone emits 28,870 tonnes of methane every year.

Chennai alone accounts for 52% of the total methane being emitted by solid waste in urban local bodies across the State.

Flood, draught or sea level rise; all the disasters that directly affect humans and other organisms are because of water. A component that gave life to the planet is threatenin­g to eradicate civilisati­ons. Around 3.8 billion years ago, when the Earth was barren and simmering, cosmic bodies laden with water-ice molecules crashed on to the earth, thanks to Jupiter’s gravity.

For several million years, these were trapped beneath the Earth’s surface until volcanic eruptions gushed them out into the atmosphere. When the Earth began cooling off, it was followed by thousands of years of deluge. Oceans formed but left a large quantity of water trapped inside the Earth.

Aquatic pollution

Now, water in our rivers is not supporting life. A report titled Polluted River Stretches for Restoratio­n of Water Quality, 2022, by the Central

Pollution Control Board said that biological oxygen demand (BOD) in Cooum River from Avadi to Sathya Nagar in Chennai was 345 mg/litre, which is the highest value among 603 rivers in India that were assessed in the study.

Sabarmati river in Gujarat and Bahela in Uttar Pradesh are also the most polluted rivers in India with a BOD of 292 mg/litre and 287 mg/litre respective­ly. Vasishta in Salem has a BOD value of 230 mg/litre. Adyar river – between Tambaram and Nandanam – has a BOD value of 40 mg/litre.

Oceans and wetlands are the greatest carbon sinks, which sequester a large amount of anthropoge­nic carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Studies have establishe­d that the sea-grass captures carbon up to 35 times faster than tropical rainforest­s. Even though it covers only 0.2% of the sea-floor, it absorbs 10% of the ocean’s carbon each year.

Gulf of Mannar in Tamil Nadu is a prominent sea-grass and coral region. The estimated value of blue carbon stored in sea-grass meadows of Gulf of Mannar has been valued at $17,820 and that of Palk Bay at $43,99,682. Moreover, coral cover in the region is also fast depleting. The average coral cover in the 21 Gulf of Mannar islands in 2005 was 37% but in 2021, the average cover decreased to 27.3%.

Plummeting O2 levels

Temperatur­e coming down, a stable atmosphere protected by a magnetic field of molten core, huge oceans, seasons ensured by tilt, a moon to regulate its speed of rotation and safe distance from burning Sun — all fell into place for the Earth to sustain life.

But one thing was still amiss until around 2.5 billion years ago, when cyanobacte­ria, capable of processing sunlight through the process of photosynth­esis, evolved in the oceans. These cyanobacte­ria released oxygen as a by-product of photosynth­esis and filled the earth.

As a by-product, plants still release oxygen and sequester carbon dioxide. The planet had already seen plummeting oxygen levels when a large number of plants died out due to extinction events.

Between 2015 and 2020, India had lost more than 6.68 lakh hectares of forest, an area 4.5 times larger than New Delhi. On the other hand, Brazil, home to Amazon rainforest­s — the lung of the planet — lost more than 16.95 lakh hectares of forest.

Unseasonal seasons

When the planet Theia collided with Earth, the axis of rotation of the former tilted by 23.5 degrees. This paved the way for seasons and for life. Now, seasons are becoming haphazard.

An analysis conducted by the Climate Central revealed that several Indian cities, including Madurai, are losing spring. Meaning: days between winter and summer seasons are reducing, and the summer seasons starts immediatel­y after the end of winter.

Discourses on climate change and its impact are increasing across the world. And, the corporate world is promoting solutions that shift the pollution or emission from one part of the world to another. Such false solutions include biofuels, waste incinerati­on, carbon capture, carbon credit, electric vehicles, hydrogen energy, plastic recycling and even forest management that encourages fast growing trees instead of native trees. The actual solution is to avoid the usage of energy and fossil fuels, increase non-motorised transporta­tion to reduce emission and say no to plastics.

Over 4 billion years of Mother Earth’s history teaches us that she has been evolving continuous­ly. She has created millions of species and obliterate­d them without any traces. When those species went extinct, it was the doing of the planet herself and they died without knowing the reason.

Still hundreds of species are being wiped out from the face of the planet. And, we know the reason. WE are the reason. At this pace, we will kill everything on this planet and die out eventually.

Dust to molten ball; molten ball to barren land; barren land to water world; water world to full of life; full of life to barren land again perhaps. Earth has always had a Plan-B. Do we?

An analysis conducted by the Climate Central revealed that several Indian cities, including Madurai, are losing spring. Meaning: days between winter and summer are reducing and summer starts immediatel­y after the end of winter

 ?? Illustrati­on: Saai ?? Solution Promoting non-motorised transporta­tion and formation of decentrali­sed cities
Solution
Illustrati­on: Saai Solution Promoting non-motorised transporta­tion and formation of decentrali­sed cities Solution

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