'Smoke plume from power plant chimney, Helsinki, Finland' photo (c) 2010, eutrophication&hypoxia - license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

The earth’s non-renewable resources are not going to last forever (hence, the reason for calling them “non-renewable”). Here are some interactives that show long each one has left:

Global resources stock check is from The BBC.

Born In 2010: How Much Is Left For Me?

Explore more visuals like this one on the web’s largest information design community – Visually.

This chart is described as “Our chart for this week takes a look at how far a year’s worth of natural resources goes given human consumption….In 1970 global consumption of natural resources just about matched the number of resources the Earth produced in a year. December 29th was the day in 1970 that global consumption ate up a year’s worth of resources. By 2018, a year’s worth of natural resources was consumed by August 1st. That means that in 2018 it took nearly two years of natural resources that the Earth naturally produced to match the amount people around the world consume in a single year”:

Infographic: Earth Overshoot Day Comes Sooner Every Year | Statista You will find more infographics at Statista

INFOGRAPHIC: “EARTH OVERSHOOT DAY”

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