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Eugene Robinson: If you dream of seeing the Great Barrier Reef, don’t wait

FILE - In this undated file photo, a diver swims on Australia's Great Barrier Reef. The United Nations Agency UNESCO said in a draft report to the World Heritage Committee released on Saturday that "climate change remains the most significant overall threat to the future" of the coral expanse. (AP Photo/Brain Cassey, File)

Washington • There are roughly eight million plant and animal species in the world. One of them — homo sapiens — may soon wipe out a million of the rest. And we’re just getting started.

That's the depressing bottom line from a comprehensive new United Nations report on biodiversity. Species are going extinct at a rate unmatched in human history — and the die-off is accelerating. It sounds melodramatic to say that we're killing the planet, but that's what the scientific evidence tells us. And ignorant, short-sighted leadership makes optimistic scenarios elusive.

Species extinction is one of those problems whose vast scale, in space and time, makes it difficult to comprehend, let alone address globally. As any paleontologist can tell you, species appear and disappear naturally at a gradual rate with no human intervention. And in the 3.5 billion-year history of life on earth, there have been five abrupt mass extinctions when more than three-quarters of all living species were quickly wiped out. The most recent came 66 million years ago, when an asteroid strike is believed to have killed off the dinosaurs.

If there are intelligent observers 66 million years from now, their scientists may conclude that the sixth mass extinction was caused by us — and that we saw what we were doing but lacked the wisdom and courage to stop ourselves.

The next species to go extinct may be some scruffy weed-like plant or weird little insect that you've never heard of. But that weed may synthesize a chemical that acts as a magic bullet against certain deadly cancers, or that insect may control the population of some other insect that harbors a plaguelike virus. We'll never know. They'll be gone.

Amphibians, marine mammals and corals are critically endangered, the report says. If you dream of a trip to see the Great Barrier Reef, I wouldn't put it off.

A summary of the report by the UN-sponsored Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services was released Monday in Paris, culminating years of work by leading environmental scientists around the globe. Its findings will be widely noted and lamented; its recommendations, I fear, widely ignored.

For once, human-induced climate change is not the most egregious cause of a slow-motion global catastrophe. The primary cause of accelerating species loss, according to the report, is rapid change in patterns of land- and sea-usage. Farming, fishing, logging, mining and other activities are changing — in many cases, deeply scarring — the natural world.

We knew that, of course. Sea captains have told us about the enormous patch of plastic trash floating in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Satellite photos chart the ongoing destruction of the Amazon rain forest. The report states that over 85 percent of the world's wetlands have been eliminated over the past three centuries. The amount of land designated as "urban" has doubled since 1992.

Malthusian predictions that rapid population growth would lead to scarcity and famine have proved spectacularly wrong. The global middle class has ballooned, while the percentage of humans living in extreme poverty has shrunk to levels never dreamed of. But all that economic growth has put an unprecedented strain on the natural world, and scientists can only sketch the ultimate consequences. In effect, we are running a fateful experiment with our one and only planet — and there's no chance of a do-over.

I have enormous faith in human ingenuity. But it needs to be accompanied by some basic common sense.

One example: Of the world's 7.5 billion people, nearly 5 billion have mobile phones. The incredible spread of that one technology greatly boosts global connectivity, creativity and happiness — and also creates enormous quantities of manufacturing waste and discardable plastic. We need to keep expanding access to this life-changing technology. But we need to find cleaner, more sustainable ways of doing so.

Whether we're talking about species loss or climate change, whether we're considering the smog that shrouds Beijing and New Delhi or the fracking fluids being pumped into the ground in Appalachia, at some point we're going to realize that development that fails to take sustainability into account is not a step forward. It's a step into the unknown, and potentially a step toward disaster.

The question isn't if we come to this realization and begin to act accordingly, but when. The new UN report says that for up to a million species, many of which we haven't even identified and studied, our enlightenment may come too late. We can only hope there is still time to save the one we call our own.

Eugene Robinson

Eugene Robinson’s email address is eugenerobinson@washpost.com.

(c) 2019, Washington Post Writers Group