The Ten Worst Man-Made Environmental Disasters

by: Maura O'Connor  |  GlobalPost

The Ten Worst Man-Made Environmental Disasters
Dust Bowl, 1936. (Photo: erjkprunczyk / flickr)

As oil threatens the Gulf Coast, a list of 10 other disasters both forgotten and infamous, from the Dust Bowl to Bhopal.

New York - The oil slick in the Gulf of Mexico is now about the size of Puerto Rico. It's already reached the marshes of Louisiana. Oil-covered wildlife are starting to show up along the shores. Shrimp, fish and oyster harvest areas have been closed. Residents of Mississippi and Alabama are just waiting for the oil to hit.

As environmental calamity for the Gulf Coast appears imminent, GlobalPost looks at 10 other man-made environmental disasters - both forgotten and infamous - that could have been prevented.

The Dust Bowl

The market-driven agricultural practices of U.S. farmers - plowing the virgin topsoil of the Great Plains and monoculture farming - led to one of the most disastrous ecological events in the nation’s history. Between 1930 and 1940, drought conditions and depleted farmland caused severe dust storms, some reaching 10,000 feet in the sky and called “Black Blizzards.” An estimated 2.5 million people were displaced and the catastrophe compounded the Great Depression, creating what some have called the country’s “most hard time.”

Poison in Minamata Bay

From 1932 to 1968, the Chisso Corporation of Japan released industrial wastewater with high levels of mercury into the sea around the city of Minamata. The mercury poisoned the marine food chain and in turn thousands of residents became ill, leading to the discovery of a new neurological condition called Chisso-Minamata Disease. To date, more than 1,700 people have died from the disease, which can cause convulsions, loss of sight and hearing, paralysis, coma and death.

Ecocide in Vietnam

The Rainbow Herbicides showered over the jungles of Southeast Asia included Agent Blue, Purple and Pink, but Orange accounted for more than half of the nearly 20 million gallons of deadly chemicals used by the U.S. military between 1961 and 1971. The cost to human life was horrifying and the large-scale destruction of the region’s environment led to the coinage of the word “ecocide.”

Death in Bhopal

In what is considered the world’s worst industrial catastrophe, 32 tons of deadly chemical gases leaked into the city of Bhopal, India, on Dec. 3, 1984, and an estimated 9,000 people died immediately from the invisible, air-born poison. The final death toll over the ensuing weeks has been estimated at 20,000 and hundreds of thousands of residents suffered permanent injuries. Today, the Union Carbide plant, the site of the disaster, remains a toxic waste site contaminating the groundwater in Bhopal.

Catastrophe at Chernobyl

First there was Windscale in 1957, then Three Mile Island in 1979, but when a nuclear reactor at the Chernobyl Nuclear Plant in Ukraine had a meltdown in 1986, it became the worst nuclear power plant disaster in history. The United Nation’s Chernobyl Forum Report estimated the total number of deaths from cancer caused by the radiation exposure to be 4,000.

The Oil Crisis

Although it is the most infamous oil spill in history, the Exxon Valdez catastrophe that dumped 11 million gallons of oil into the Prince William Sound of Alaska in 1989 is actually far from the largest on record. The Gulf War oil spill in 1991, for example, resulted in at least 160 million gallons of oil entering the Persian Gulf. Nonetheless, Exxon Valdez heightened public awareness of the great environmental costs of oil spills and led Congress to pass the Oil Pollution Act in 1990. Tragically, clean-up efforts such as high-pressure washing of shorelines that followed Exxon Valdez also had detrimental effects on the once pristine ecosystem of the sound.

Dying Oceans

When the cod population crashed in the historically abundant waters off of Newfoundland in 1992, 40,000 people lost their jobs and the effect on the region’s marine ecosystem was devastating. Today, fishing stocks from Iceland to Chile are overfished and suffering. The writing on the wall couldn’t be clearer: The world’s oceans are being pushed to their ecological limits. And, diminishing populations of fish don’t just affect the great predators of the seas, they bring the economies and livelihoods of their human predators down with them.

Perfect Storm Over Lake Victoria

Today, the largest lake in Africa is the center of a perfect storm of environmental crises: chemical and raw sewage pollution; overfishing; a plague of water hyacinth plants; exploding algae blooms that suffocate flora and fauna. Additionally, the lake’s border is shrinking by as much as 150 feet in some places. Forty million Africans in Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania are dependent on Lake Victoria for their livelihoods and sustenance making this one of the worst unfolding environmental disasters.

Rape of the Amazon

Twenty percent of the Amazon rainforest has been lost to logging, soy-farming, cattle ranches and roads in recent decades. The damage to the forest’s biodiversity is inestimable and the release of large amounts of carbon held in the forest’s flora could be accelerating global warming. Some experts now believe the way to mitigate deforestation of the Amazon could be to create better jobs through sustainable development. "It's no good people saying the Amazon has to be the sanctuary of humanity and forget that there are 20 million people living there," said Brazil's President Luiz Lula da Silva.

Our Warming Planet

Jellyfish swarms. Melting glaciers. Lakes turned to desert. Spreading disease. The effects of global warming caused by increased greenhouse gases read like descriptions of the Great Tribulation in The Bible. The first climate change conference was held in 1963 and with increasing urgency, scientists have been raising red flags ever since, warning us that because of unchecked consumption of fossil fuels, the human species is approaching a critical threshold where we will no longer be able to influence the warming climate.

Also: Read about the animal species most at risk from the Gulf oil spill. 

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Greed and desire for

Greed and desire for short-term profits among the wealthy, inertia and desire for comfort among the western middle class, and over-crowding and lack of resources among the poor will continue to accelerate the speed with which we are destroying the only planet on which it appears that humans can thrive. What have you done today to change your life style of consumption of fossil fuel?



It would seem that as a

It would seem that as a species we have passed the baton to a variety of organisms such as squid and jelly fish.

Eons from now, a space ship from some far away civilization will land and attempt to figure out what went happened to the biped known as man.



We're not even trying to

We're not even trying to wean ourselves off of oil. No wind or solar farms. It completely baffles me that we continue to do the very things that we know are destroying us, and most of us with children that we supposedly love.



And to think we have had the

And to think we have had the technology to survive, and well, without the use of petroleum. Someone once said we exist in a small layer of breathable air not more than a mile high. We have sought to import from the earth both oil and uranium to endanger that layer. How stupid an animal is man anyway?



Much stupider than you would

Much stupider than you would think.



How about Katrina and New

How about Katrina and New Orleans? This was not a natural disaster as it is often portrayed, but a man-made one. The canal into the heart of the city and levee failures were long predicted to be likely to fail. And Katrina had very significantly weakened by the time it hit New Orleans.



There is a solution! The

There is a solution!

The root of all these problems is the Monetary System which is the foundation of all nations on this planet.

To use the environment as an example:
In the monetary system, in order for industry to exist, it must remain profitable. This leads to symptoms such waste, neglect and pollution, as companies are forced to adopt unethical and immoral practices in order to survive in a competitive market. All the environmental legislation in the world is useless if a company can continue to pollute, pay fines, lobby governments and STILL remain profitable. How do you fix the problem then, if you don’t address the cause? Why waste our life times developing superficial remedies when we should be focusing on finding and fixing the root causes.

We live a time of great scientific and technological marvels. But their development is also stymied by the need to be profitable.

The Venus Project and it's activist arm The Zeitgeist Movement seek to honestly address these foundational problems through the implementation of a resource based economy.
Think about it... In a world without money, profitability would become and abstract concept. Manufacture and consumption would simply be a process of measuring resource availability and priority.

Find more information @
www.thevenusproject.com
www.thezeitgeistmovement.com