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Waves of humanity. 

Sprawling Mexico City rolls across the landscape, displacing every scrap of natural habitat

2a5e2f23-aa20-4cc3-81bf-77fe701ff8cf-2060x1236‘If our species had started with just two people at the time of the earliest agricultural practices some 10,000 years ago, and increased by one percent per year, today humanity would be a solid ball of flesh many thousand light years in diameter, and expanding with a radial velocity that, neglecting relativity, would be many times faster than the speed of light.’Gabor Zovanyi

Photograph: Pablo Lopez Luz

Oil spill fire. 

Aerial view of an oil fire following the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico

2d4df69e-2737-47eb-8683-ba8acefbf15c-2060x1236‘We must realise that not only does every area have a limited carrying capacity, but also that this carrying capacity is shrinking and the demand growing. Until this understanding becomes an intrinsic part of our thinking and wields a powerful influence on our formation of national and international policies we are scarcely likely to see in what direction our destiny lies.’ William Vogt

Photograph: Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace

Feedlot. 

Industrial livestock production in Brazil

9ebd9778-f46f-462f-a23f-022a209a9675-2060x1236‘Despite the industry’s spin, concentrated animal feeding operations are not the only way to raise livestock and poultry. Thousands of farmers and ranchers integrate crop production, pastures, or forages with livestock and poultry to balance nutrients within their operations and minimise off-farm pollution through conservation practices and land management. Yet these sustainable producers, who must compete with factory farms for market share, receive comparatively little or no public funding for their sound management practices.’Martha Noble

Photograph: Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace

South City Mall in Kolkata, India. 

Consumer culture spreads to the global south

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‘In the developing world, the problem of population is seen less as a matter of human numbers than of western over-consumption. Yet within the development community, the only solution to the problems of the developing world is to export the same unsustainable economic model fuelling the overconsumption of the West.’ Kavita Ramdas

Photograph: Brett Cole

Greenhouses grow greenhouses. 

As far as the eye can see, greenhouses cover the landscape in Almeria, Spain

0951fa5a-66cc-49af-ae86-7ca6fe4f8edf-2060x1236‘We are slaves in the sense that we depend for our daily survival upon an expand-or-expire agro-industrial empire – a crackpot machine – that the specialists cannot comprehend and the managers cannot manage. Which is, furthermore, devouring world resources at an exponential rate.’ Edward Abbey

Photograph: Yann Arthus Bertrand

British Columbia clear-cut. 

Sometimes called the Brazil of the North, Canada has not been kind to its native forests as seen by clear-cut logging on Vancouver Island

a3c6198a-e86d-49c7-90ac-98275d887693-2060x1236‘Human domination over nature is quite simply an illusion, a passing dream by a naive species. It is an illusion that has cost us much, ensnared us in our own designs, given us a few boasts to make about our courage and genius, but all the same it is an illusion.’ Donald Worster

Photograph: Garth Lentz

Trash wave.

37850280-0eee-449e-b53e-863c7271d47b-2060x1236Indonesian surfer Dede Surinaya catches a wave in a remote but garbage-covered bay on Java, Indonesia, the world’s most populated island

‘Water and air, the two essential fluids on which all life depends, have become global garbage cans.’Jacques-Yves Cousteau

Photograph: Zak Noyle

Rectangular fields.

No room for nature, the entire landscape is devoted to crop production in China

4cee7bba-bd5b-4dab-bad3-f1586624074e-2060x1236‘Globalisation, which attempts to amalgamate every local, regional, and national economy into a single world system, requires homogenising locally adapted forms of agriculture, replacing them with an industrial system – centrally managed, pesticide-intensive, one-crop production for export – designed to deliver a narrow range of transportable foods to the world market.’ Helena Norberg-Hodge

Photograph: Google Earth/2014 Digital Globe

Cows and smoke.

Ground zero in the war on nature – cattle graze among the burning Amazon jungle in Brazil

538127aa-6d35-49ad-b5f6-cc024cac0b3a-2060x1236‘Throughout history human exploitation of the earth has produced this progression: colonise-destroy-move on.’ Garrett Hardin

Photograph: Daniel Beltra/Greenpeace

Oil wells

Depleting oil fields are yet another symptom of ecological overshoot as seen at the Kern River Oil Field in California

ea965a7b-977d-427e-ad90-de5db57cd0fd-2060x1236‘I don’t understand why when we destroy something created by man we call it vandalism, but when we destroy something created by nature we call it progress.’ Ed Begley, Jr.

Photograph: Mark Gamba/Corbis

Dead bird.

On Midway Atoll, far from the centres of world commerce, an albatross, dead from ingesting too much plastic, decays on the beach – it is a common sight on the remote island

f23a05ee-4399-4813-ab7a-515d0170805e-2060x1236‘Surely the fate of human beings is like that of the animals – the same fate awaits them both; as one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath.’ Ecclesiastes 3:19

Photograph: Chris Jordan

Hill-side slum.

Slum-dwelling residents of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, face bleak living conditions in the western hemisphere’s poorest country

5682d210-a2d7-4d70-8e4b-a4d40db9cc57-2060x1236‘Squatters trade physical safety and public health for a few square meters of land and some security against eviction. They are the pioneer settlers of swamps, floodplains, volcano slopes, unstable hillsides, rubbish mountains, chemical dumps, railroad sidings, and desert fringes … such sites are poverty’s niche in the ecology of the city, and very poor people have little choice but to live with disaster.’ Mike Davis

Photograph: Google Earth/2014 Digital Globe

Reservoir development.

Former old-growth forest leveled for reservoir development, Willamette National Forest, Oregon

48aa147d-e578-4a97-a153-8bdb6ee8bd20-2060x1236‘What an irony it is that these living beings whose shade we sit in, whose fruit we eat, whose limbs we climb, whose roots we water, to whom most of us rarely give a second thought, are so poorly understood. We need to come, as soon as possible, to a profound understanding and appreciation for trees and forests and the vital role they play, for they are among our best allies in the uncertain future that is unfolding.’ Jim Robbins

Photograph: Daniel Dancer

www.theguardian.com

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