PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researcher is optimistic about meeting 'Grand Challenge' of global prosperity

2013-10-24
(Press-News.org) Contact information: John Carberry
johncarberry@cornell.edu
607-255-5353
Cornell University
Researcher is optimistic about meeting 'Grand Challenge' of global prosperity ITHACA, N.Y. – With ecological viability threatened, world resources draining, population burgeoning and despair running rampant, the end is nigh.

Or not, says Lawrence M. Cathles, Cornell professor of earth and atmospheric sciences.

"In spite of our apparent environmental problems, we stand a remarkable chance of achieving solutions," he says. "Societies all around the world are living longer. We have more access to food, clean water and energy… and we've never been more healthy."

Cathles outlines his optimism about the world's prospects for sustaining the human population in an environmentally responsible way in his article, "Future Rx: Optimism, Preparation, Acceptance of Risk," in a special publication of The Journal of the Geological Society, released Oct. 24.

"If we have the courage to do big things, all of humanity has a fine future," says Cathles in the article, which addresses food sustainability, natural resources and energy levels, and what he calls the "Grand Challenge" of the next century for everyone to achieve a European standard of living. In his paper, Cathles proposes a path to achieving that standard.

Today the world hosts 7.13 billion people, and Cathles says that while humans are living longer, the world population will peak at 10.5 billion about 100 years from now. The most essential resource is energy, and today most of the world uses less than 2 kilowatts of power per person (for heat, lighting, transportation and manufacturing), while those at the European standard of living (the average French or German citizen, for example) use 3.5 times more. The world currently consumes energy at the rate of 15 trillion watts (15 terawatts), with 86 percent from hydrocarbon sources.

Meeting the Grand Challenge would require energy production of 50 terawatts today and 75 terawatts 100 years from now, ideally all from zero carbon energy sources, says Cathles. Growing from 15 to 75 terawatts over a century requires a growth rate of 1.6 percent per year, which is modest, he says, compared with the U.S. growth rate of 2.6 percent over the past 50 years and China's recent 12 percent growth rate and their planned growth over the next 10 years of 7 percent annually.

The lion's share of the power expansion could be met by wind, solar power produced in deserts or nuclear; but by far the least environmentally intrusive, feasible and realistic option is nuclear, he says. The oceans have enough dissolved uranium to sustain 10.5 billion people at a European standard for more than 100 centuries, and the extraction footprint would be tiny.

"Everything is possible with energy, nothing is possible without it," says Cathles.

The paper also examines whether the supplies of other materials are adequate to sustain 10.5 billion people for hundreds of centuries – and Cathles sees no major sustainability problems.

Cathles also argues that natural gas provides a natural transition from dependence on other fossil fuels to carbon-free nuclear and other energy sources, although he cautions that the transition cannot be stretched out too much due to oil and gas resource limitations. Our most threatened resource may be soil, he says, but with enough energy this will not be a fundamental barrier to prosperity.

Embracing the challenge of a European standard a century from now is "the most constructive goal imaginable," he says, and one that is necessary for humans to have a future and, more importantly, a common future.

Says Cathles: "We have plenty of resources; we do not need to fight over them."

###


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Just 2 weeks in orbit causes changes in eyes

2013-10-24
Just 2 weeks in orbit causes changes in eyes HOUSTON -- ( Oct. 24, 2013 ) -- Just 13 days in space may be enough to cause profound changes in eye structure and gene expression, report researchers from Houston Methodist, NASA Johnson Space Center, and two other ...

King of beasts losing ground in Uganda's paradise

2013-10-24
King of beasts losing ground in Uganda's paradise Conservationists from the Wildlife Conservation Society and the University of St. Andrews warn that Uganda's African lions—a mainstay of the country's tourism industry and a symbol of Africa—are on the verge of ...

Identifying a mystery channel crucial for hearing

2013-10-24
Identifying a mystery channel crucial for hearing Our ability to hear relies on hair cells, sensory receptors that mechanically amplify low-level sound that enters the inner ear through a transduction channel. Although the transduction channel was characterized ...

Washing your hands makes you optimistic

2013-10-24
Washing your hands makes you optimistic Cologne Academic has examined the psychology of physical cleansing The Junior Professor for Social and Media Psychology Dr. Kai Kaspar from the University of Cologne has examined how physical cleansing affects us ...

NASA's SDO sees sun emit a mid-level solar flare

2013-10-24
NASA's SDO sees sun emit a mid-level solar flare The sun emitted a mid-level solar flare that peaked at 8:30 pm EDT on Oct. 23, 2013. Solar flares are powerful bursts of radiation. Harmful radiation from a flare cannot pass through Earth's atmosphere ...

Grafted limb cells acquire molecular 'fingerprint' of new location, UCI study shows

2013-10-24
Grafted limb cells acquire molecular 'fingerprint' of new location, UCI study shows Findings further creation of regenerative therapies for humans Irvine, Calif., Oct. 24, 2013 — Cells triggering tissue regeneration that are taken from one limb ...

Name that tune

2013-10-24
Name that tune Algorithm used in music retrieval systems applied to help identify dolphin whistles VIDEO: In this ...

Stopping transplant drugs before conception benefits fetus

2013-10-24
Stopping transplant drugs before conception benefits fetus Discontinuing mycophenolate acid products does not seem to pose risks of transplant rejection Atlanta, GA (October 23, 2013)—Research suggests that fetal exposure to mycophenolic acid products ...

How liver 'talks' to muscle: A well-timed, coordinated conversation

2013-10-24
How liver 'talks' to muscle: A well-timed, coordinated conversation Boston, MA – A major collaborative research effort involving scientists at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) and ...

UNH researcher: Bees underwent massive extinction when dinosaurs did

2013-10-24
UNH researcher: Bees underwent massive extinction when dinosaurs did DURHAM, N.H. -- For the first time ever, scientists have documented a widespread extinction of bees that occurred 65 million years ago, concurrent with the massive event that wiped out land ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

First Editorial of 2026: Resisting AI slop

Joint ground- and space-based observations reveal Saturn-mass rogue planet

Inheritable genetic variant offers protection against blood cancer risk and progression

Pigs settled Pacific islands alongside early human voyagers

A Coral reef’s daily pulse reshapes microbes in surrounding waters

EAST Tokamak experiments exceed plasma density limit, offering new approach to fusion ignition

Groundbreaking discovery reveals Africa’s oldest cremation pyre and complex ritual practices

First breathing ‘lung-on-chip’ developed using genetically identical cells

How people moved pigs across the Pacific

Interaction of climate change and human activity and its impact on plant diversity in Qinghai-Tibet plateau

From addressing uncertainty to national strategy: an interpretation of Professor Lim Siong Guan’s views

Clinical trials on AI language model use in digestive healthcare

Scientists improve robotic visual–inertial trajectory localization accuracy using cross-modal interaction and selection techniques

Correlation between cancer cachexia and immune-related adverse events in HCC

Human adipose tissue: a new source for functional organoids

Metro lines double as freight highways during off-peak hours, Beijing study shows

Biomedical functions and applications of nanomaterials in tumor diagnosis and treatment: perspectives from ophthalmic oncology

3D imaging unveils how passivation improves perovskite solar cell performance

Enriching framework Al sites in 8-membered rings of Cu-SSZ-39 zeolite to enhance low-temperature ammonia selective catalytic reduction performance

AI-powered RNA drug development: a new frontier in therapeutics

Decoupling the HOR enhancement on PtRu: Dynamically matching interfacial water to reaction coordinates

Sulfur isn’t poisonous when it synergistically acts with phosphine in olefins hydroformylation

URI researchers uncover molecular mechanisms behind speciation in corals

Chitin based carbon aerogel offers a cleaner way to store thermal energy

Tracing hidden sources of nitrate pollution in rapidly changing rural urban landscapes

Viruses on plastic pollution may quietly accelerate the spread of antibiotic resistance

Three UH Rainbow Babies & Children’s faculty elected to prestigious American Pediatric Society

Tunnel resilience models unveiled to aid post-earthquake recovery

Satellite communication systems: the future of 5G/6G connectivity

Space computing power networks: a new frontier for satellite technologies

[Press-News.org] Researcher is optimistic about meeting 'Grand Challenge' of global prosperity