Systems Crucial to Stability of Planet Compromised

New data and assessments suggest that resilience of the planet is now at risk.

Written byMcGill University
| 3 min read
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Almost half of the processes that are crucial to maintaining the stability of the planet have become dangerously compromised by human activity. That is the view of an international team of 18 researchers who provide new evidence of significant changes in four of the nine systems which regulate the resilience of the Earth. One of the systems which has been seriously affected is the nitrogen-phosphorus cycle which is essential to all life, and is particularly important to both food production and the maintenance of clean water. 

“People depend on food, and food production depends on clean water,” says Prof. Elena Bennett from McGill University’s School of the Environment who contributed the research on the nitrogen-phosphorus cycle to the study. “This new data shows that our ability both to produce sufficient food in the future and to have clean water to drink and to swim in are at risk.”

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