1. World problems
  2. Irreversible problem emergence

Irreversible problem emergence

Nature

It is not the fact that problems emerge that is important, rather it is the fact that the emergence of many of these problems is irreversible. The remedies that can be applied are not capable of restoring the system to its earlier condition. Whether or not the further development of the problem can be contained, damage has been done and that damage may often prove to be very severe.

Incidence

Policy options in favour of unsustainable short-term benefit at the expense of long-term economic and environmental sustainability lead to irreversible environmental consequences, which not only constrain future growth and social well-being, but would require major investment to restore degraded national resources and prevent further deterioration. Environmental degradation provides many examples: tropical deforestation, extinction of species, desertification, soil erosion, depletion of non-renewable natural resources.

Broader

Irreversibility
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Entropy
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Narrower

Aggravates

Doom-mongering
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Aggravated by

Related

Latent problems
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Strategy

Value

Problem
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Irreversibility
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Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(F) Fuzzy exceptional problems
Content quality
Presentable
 Presentable
Language
English
Last update
Oct 4, 2020