Anthropogenic Global Warming is great for plant life. The world is greening right now, and that's great for food production and lowering world poverty.
Except it isn't. The Western US is experiencing the worst drought in over 1000 years.
And that's on top of the vast reduction in wild spaces, logging and burning of rainforests, urbanization, and conversion of prairies and grasslands to agriculture.
This is probably the least "green" the world has been for hundreds of thousands or millions of years, modulo ice ages.
You're gonna need a citation for that statement, because everything I know about the US disagrees with that. Indiana, for example, was almost completely forest before European settlers arrived [1] and has seen forest cover reduced by 75%. Most of the midwest is similar.
No, you're gonna need a citation for my statement; I already know it to be so. You can google as well as I can. I'm not here to win an Internet argument, merely to inform. Whether you agree with me is not my concern.
And that's on top of the vast reduction in wild spaces, logging and burning of rainforests, urbanization, and conversion of prairies and grasslands to agriculture.
This is probably the least "green" the world has been for hundreds of thousands or millions of years, modulo ice ages.