are all things shared out equally in our world
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No,all things in this world are not shared/distributed equally .
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hello frnd. .
No they will never be. Some countries will never have droughts, cyclones, floods, or earthquakes and volcanoes. Some countries are so small that they have no options - Tonga, for example, only has 100,000 residents but already there are 100,000 Tongans living outside the country. Their only real asset is the fishing rights in their Economic Exclusion Zone but every Pacific Island country has those so there principles of supply and demand work against them.
Look at the countries in the Sahel. As the climates get warmer the desert will spread south. It would cost trillions of dollars to fix this, even if it was possible. And where would you bring the water from, anyway? Lake Chad will be dry in dry in 20 years as the populations back upstream on its main tributaries increase. You can’t do anything about this without drastic population control.
Or take a wealthy country like Australia. A few years ago, our five biggest cities all had water restrictions - there aren’t any more rivers to dam. Desalinisation is a very high-cost solution and most of our country is so far away from the coast that it would never be viable. Even if you could get water out there, the weather is so hot that most of it would evaporate. There are parts of Western Australia where the potential evaporation rate is 8 times the rainfall.
hope it helps u
No they will never be. Some countries will never have droughts, cyclones, floods, or earthquakes and volcanoes. Some countries are so small that they have no options - Tonga, for example, only has 100,000 residents but already there are 100,000 Tongans living outside the country. Their only real asset is the fishing rights in their Economic Exclusion Zone but every Pacific Island country has those so there principles of supply and demand work against them.
Look at the countries in the Sahel. As the climates get warmer the desert will spread south. It would cost trillions of dollars to fix this, even if it was possible. And where would you bring the water from, anyway? Lake Chad will be dry in dry in 20 years as the populations back upstream on its main tributaries increase. You can’t do anything about this without drastic population control.
Or take a wealthy country like Australia. A few years ago, our five biggest cities all had water restrictions - there aren’t any more rivers to dam. Desalinisation is a very high-cost solution and most of our country is so far away from the coast that it would never be viable. Even if you could get water out there, the weather is so hot that most of it would evaporate. There are parts of Western Australia where the potential evaporation rate is 8 times the rainfall.
hope it helps u
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