Geography, asked by Thejaskrishna8421, 7 months ago

If human have a right to mine the Earth from mineral oil then they also have the responsibility to protect it right in 150 words

Answers

Answered by ray2803
1

Answer:

Humans have a right to mine the earth for minerals,oils etc., then they also have the responsibility to protect it.

Explanation:

  • With the world's population growing at an alarming rate, natural resource consumption is also growing. Those resources should therefore be conserved in order to preserve and save ecological balance for future generations. Conservation is considered careful control of a property in order to avoid its degradation or misuse.
  • Nature gives us everything we need on a regular basis. We continue to overuse our resources because of population explosion and human negligence. When this carries on, our future generation will have no resources left.
  • Minerals will take a long time to form, and will soon be consumed at the current pace of consumption. These are also infinite and non-renewable. Mineral explorations have also resulted in the displacement of marginalised groups such as local tribe, with very few instances of sufficient compensation
  • To conserve mineral, oil and other mined resources enhanced technologies have to be constantly evolved so that low-grade ores can be used at low cost, re-cycling of the minerals, strict regulators to ensure the responsible mining of resources, & use of alternatives via research such as scrap metals and other substitute materials.
Answered by sannyvardhan283
0

Answer:

We humans emerged as a species about 200,000 years ago. In geological time, that is really incredibly recent. Just 10,000 years ago, there were one million of us. By 1800, just over 200 years ago, there were 1 billion of us. By 1960, 50 years ago, there were 3 billion of us. There are now over 7 billion of us. By 2050, your children, or your children's children, will be living on a planet with at least 9 billion other people. Some time towards the end of this century, there will be at least 10 billion of us. Possibly more.

We got to where we are now through a number of civilisation- and society-shaping "events", most notably the agricultural revolution, the scientific revolution, the industrial revolution and – in the West – the public-health revolution. By 1980, there were 4 billion of us on the planet. Just 10 years later, in 1990, there were 5 billion of us. By this point initial signs of the consequences of our growth were starting to show. Not the least of these was on water. Our demand for water – not just the water we drank but the water we needed for food production and to make all the stuff we were consuming – was going through the roof. But something was starting to happen to water.

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