For climate change, for example, it explains how atmospheric CO2 levels are at a 15-million-year high, with global mean temperatures now higher than at any point since human civilisations emerged.
Typically, environmental challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution have been addressed separately, but the authors warn that these issues are interconnected and must be tackled collectively.
The report will be published annually using the latest satellite data, AI, Indigenous Peoples wisdom, and the latest modern science, serving as a compass for decision-making for nations, companies, multilaterals, and all citizens.
“The Planetary Health Check is a major leap forward in our collective mission to understand and protect our planet,” said Pik director Johan Rockström. “We have known for some time that we are weakening the planet’s resilience.
“This scientific update shows that, irrespective of what scale we operate on, all actions need to consider impacts at the planetary scale. Stewardship of the planet is necessary in all sectors of the economy and in societies, for security, prosperity and equity.
“By quantifying the boundaries for a healthy planet, we provide policy, economics and business with the tools needed to steer away from unmanageable risks."
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