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Thursday, April 9, 2020

Failed Environmental Predictions -- Pre-1990

1939:
“All the glaciers 
in Eastern Greenland 
are rapidly melting,”
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 
Sunday Courier reported 
on Dec. 17, 1939.



1947:
“The possibility 
of a prodigious
rise in the surface 
of the ocean 
with resultant 
widespread inundation, 
arising from an Arctic 
climate phenomenon 
was discussed yesterday 
by Dr. Hans Ahlmann, a noted 
Swedish geophysicist at the 
University of California 
Geophysical Institute,” 
a 1947 article in 
The West Australian




1952:
“The glaciers of Norway 
and Alaska are only half 
the size they were 
50 years ago,” 
said Dr. William Carlson, 
an Arctic expert, 
according to the 
February 18, 1952, 
edition of The Cairns 
[Australia] Post.




1955:
“There are now six million 
square miles of ice
in the Arctic. There once 
were 12 million square miles,” 
said Arctic explorer Adm. 
Donald McMillan, according to 
the March 10, 1955, issue 
of Rochester, New York’s 
Democrat and Chronicle.




1967:
“It is already too late 
for the world to avoid 
a long period of famine,” 
The Salt Lake Tribune 
reported this in 1967, 
citing Paul Ehrlich’s 
prediction of famines 
happening by 1975.




1970:
“Scientist predicts 
a new ice age 
by 21st century,” 
The Boston Globe 
reported on Apr. 16, 1970, 
saying that pollution expert 
James Lodge predicted 
that “air pollution 
may obliterate the sun 
and cause a new ice age 
in the first third of the 
new century.”




1978:
“An international team 
of specialists has concluded, 
from eight indexes of climate, 
that there is no end in sight 
to the cooling trend 
of the last 30 years, 
at least in the Northern 
Hemisphere,” 
The New York Times 
reported this in 1978.



1988:
The small nation 
of the Maldives 
was threatened to be 
completely covered by 
“a gradual rise in 
average sea level,” 
Agence France-Presse 
reported in 1988, 
noting that: 
“the end of the Maldives 
and its people could come 
sooner if drinking water 
supplies dry up by 1992, 
as predicted.”

Over 30
years later, 
the Maldives 
are thriving.

The population 
has doubled 
since the 1980s, 
and its picturesque
islands are 
“set for a flurry of 
new resort openings,” 
Hotelier Maldives 
reported in 2018.

Look up some recent 
Maldives photos online.