Will the World Starve
Looking out a window upon a barren desert, a dry wasteland unfolds as a carpet tonowhere. Abandoned cities dot the horizon, as the ruins speak volumes to the oncepopulated extravagance of a country which lived on wealth and opportunity. The visionjust described is not one out of a Hollywood movie script, but one that is not only possiblebut probable. Currently, the world population numbers over six billion, with China alonecradling over one-sixth of the world's total population. With the world populationincreasing at a rate of one hundred million a year, the numbers are expected to hit tenbillion by the end of 2040. Most scientists agree that the maximum number of people thatthe earth can sustain is fifteen billion, leaving the earth in a quandary before the end of thetwenty-first century when the total world population is expected to reach a staggeringsixteen to eighteen billion. The consumption of the world's natural resources due to thisexponential growth could result in worldwide famine, a complete breakdown in the worldmarket, uncontrollable outbreaks of disease, and widespread crime and disorder. Currently, the ratio of land which can be used for agricultural end
Now thewater has receded, but the problem of too many people, too little food and way too muchfrustration plague Mozambique. There was no way for people to obtain food. With the complete breakdown of civilization, which could occur based on the basicoverpopulation of the world; crime and disorder would surely follow. Many weretrapped in their household due to the floods. Nearly all ofthe currently prescribed medicines are, in fact, naturally made from plants. Considering the little amount of available farmland, it should be expected that therewould be more of an effort to conserve this vital resource, but unfortunately the issue hasnot yet risen to a level of global importance. Almost all of theworld's industrialized countries are very dependent on the treatment of many deadlydiseases. Since 1950 half of the world's trees have been cut down and every day six squareacres of rain forest are lost to the hum of a loggers chainsaw. The world's produce producer is only a small sliver of atotal land mass apple pie sliced into nine equal, yet tiny slices and as the amount of soilsuitable for agriculture dwindles, the slice with which the world relies on continues toshrink. Withthe people scrambling to find a quick fix solution to this problem that has been building fordecades, the economy along with the people's only domestic food source, is slippingfurther and further into a seemingly unrecoverable disaster. The earth's industry is expected to produce enough manufactured materials tosupport the world's current six billion people. The rains, which flooded the land,left the country at a standstill. Farm animals, washed away by the rains, layrotting in the now barren, stripped fields. This process, known assalinization, has affected many of the farms around the world.
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world population,
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prime example,
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