Rethinking Capitalism (ReCap) Webinar Series
The Sixth Mass Extinction, the Environmental Crisis and the Future of Humanity
by Gerardo Ceballos (The Breakthrough Institute; UNAM)
Tuesday 8 March 2022, 5pm (CET) - Online (ZOOM) from the University of Milano-Bicocca
References
Webinar Description
In the history of life on Earth, there have been five mass extinctions – episodes where large numbers of species became extinct in a short time. All previous mass extinctions stemmed from natural catastrophes, such as volcanic eruptions, depletion of oxygen in the oceans, and meteorite impact. The ongoing sixth mass extinction is different, as it is caused by human activity. According to a natural, physiological extinction rate, one would expect to lose two species for every 10,000 species present every 100 years. Current figures show that 477 species have become extinct in the last 100 years. Under a natural extinction rate, we would have expected to have only nine extinctions; in other words, there were 468 more extinctions than would be expected in the last century! This evidence is dramatic and tragic. At this pace, we may lose a large proportion of vertebrates, including mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fishes, in the next two to three decades. Losing them has many consequences. Those species are essential to maintain ecosystem services, which are all the benefits that we get for free from the proper function of nature. The combination of the atmosphere's gases, the quality, and quantity of water, soil fertilization, pollination are ecosystem services. By losing species, we are eroding the conditions of Earth that are essential for human well-being. Habitat loss due to agriculture, forestry, mining, urbanization, overfishing and overhunting, pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, and human overpopulation are the leading causes of the ongoing mass extinction. We still have time to avoid the most tragic consequences of the sixth mass extinction: saving endangered animals is the only way humanity has to save itself.
Event Information
Date
Tuesday 8 March 2022, 5pm (CET)
Online
ZOOM streaming from the
University of Milano-Bicocca
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For any information request, please contact us at: cefes@unimib.it
Online Papers
Amaral-Garcia, S., Dalla Pellegrina, L., & Garoupa, N. (2020). Consensus and Ideology in Courts: An Application to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (Working Paper No. 430). University of Milan Bicocca Department of Economics, Management and Statistics. https://ssrn.com/abstract=3536947
Baiardi, D. (2019). Do Sustainable Energy Policies Matter for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions? SSRN Electronic Journal. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3513041
Baiardi, D., & Morana, C. (2020). Climate Change Awareness: Empirical Evidence for the European Union. SSRN Electronic Journal. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3513061
Registration Terms
Please register in advance (via Zoom)
Collaborations
The workshop has been jointly organized and co-funded by:
- Center for European Studies CefES-DEMS
- Joint Research Centre European Commission
- The Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis RCEA-Europe
Event Organizers
Acknowledgements
- Department of Economics, Management and Statistics (DEMS)
- University of Milano - Bicocca
- Bicocca Data Science Lab - datalab