Saturday Star

Two minutes closer to catastroph­e

Doomsday Clock counts down to midnight and end of the world

- TOM BAWDEN

THE end of the world is nigh – or has, at least, come closer in the past three years – according to the scientists behind the Doomsday Clock, a symbolic measure which counts down to Armageddon.

The minute-hand of the 68year-old concept clock was moved forward by two minutes yesterday, showing a time of 11.57pm – just three minutes from destructio­n – to reflect the fact that the “probabilit­y of global catastroph­e is very high”.

The time change symbolised the scientists’ damning assessment of the way the world is being governed.

“Today, unchecked climate change and a nuclear arms race pose extraordin­ary and undeniable threats to the continued existence of humanity,” said Kennette Benedict, executive director of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in Chicago, the group of scientists who set the clock.

“World leaders have failed to act with the speed or on the scale required to protect citizens from potential catastroph­e,” she said.

The clock is set by a team which includes 17 Nobel Prize winners and is taken extremely seriously.

The committee pointed out that greenhouse gas emissions have soared by 50 percent since 1990, and more than £660 billion (about R11 324 trillion) is still being invested in fossil fuel infrastruc­ture every year.

“The resulting climate change will harm millions of people and will threaten many key ecological systems on which civilisati­on relies. This threat looms over all of humanity,” said committee member Richard Somerville.

The report also raised considerab­le concerns about nuclear weapons. “Since the end of the Cold War, there has been a cautious optimism about the ability of nuclear weapon states to keep the nuclear arms race in check,” said Sharon Squassoni, a member of the clock committee.

“The other nuclear-armed states are not willing to reduce their weapons until the US and Russia reduce their warheads to under 1 000,” she warned.

The clock was establishe­d in 1947 – with an initial time of 11.53pm – after atomic bombs hit Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The latest change is the 19th time the minute hand has been moved. The most recent change was in 2012, when it was pushed forward by a minute, again on concerns about cli- mate change and nuclear weapons. The last time the clock read 11.57pm was in 1983 when “US-Soviet relations were at their iciest”, according to the Bulletin. The lowest reading was of 11.58pm in 1953, when the Americans decided to pursue developmen­t of the hydrogen bomb.

The lowest reading was 11.43pm in 1991, when the Cold War officially ended and the US and Russia began cutting their nuclear arsenals.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? GRIM NEWS: Kennette Benedict, executive director for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, next to the old Doomsday Clock, showing five minutes until midnight, in Washington this week. It now stands at three minutes until midnight.
PICTURE: AP GRIM NEWS: Kennette Benedict, executive director for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, next to the old Doomsday Clock, showing five minutes until midnight, in Washington this week. It now stands at three minutes until midnight.

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