A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, September 21, 2018

By Dr. Ranil Senanayake
There is a magic engine that produces one of the rarest substances in
the known universe, free molecular Oxygen. Free molecular Oxygen or O2
is found in abundance only on one known planet, ours and it is produced
by the engine that supports all life photosynthesis. The process of
photosynthesis is one where the energy of the sun, streaming on our
planet as sunlight, is captured by life and used to power all of its
processes. The resulting formula stated as
CO2 + H2O + e => CxHxOx + O2
Where Carbon Dioxide combine with water and powered by sunlight produces
solid organic matter (Carbohydrate) and free molecular Oxygen. This
could very well be termed the ‘Creation Formula’, as it harnesses the
power of the sun and is the basis of all life on this planet.
It is this simple action that we owe our lives and well-being to. On
land, photosynthesis occurs within the leaves of plants in the oceans
photosynthesis occurs within the phytoplankton. The work of which, over
hundreds of million years, created our atmosphere, rich with free
molecular Oxygen. The atmospheric concentration today is about 21.9%.
This is an important figure as any reduction will have adverse effects
on human well-being. Any loss of oxygen concentration to levels below
19% severely impacts human health. Impaired thinking and attention,
reduced coordination and decreased ability for strenuous work, at levels
below that there is permanent damage to heart and lungs, very poor
judgement, emotional trauma. In many heavily industrialized and
urbanized cities such as Mexico City or Delhi the Oxygen concentration
regularly falls below the 19% threshold.
A new study by Princeton University shows Earth's oxygen levels are on
the decline. By studying the Air bubbles trapped within ice, the time of
"deposition" and can be analysed for paleo-oxygen levels. The study
found that the amount of oxygen found in the atmosphere is decreasing
steadily by 0.7% but over the last 100 years it has suddenly declined to
a comparatively speedy 0.10%. Although this decline will not cause
immediate health problems globally, areas of low concentration are now
beginning to appear. In highly industrialized and urbanized cities like
Mexico City or New Delhi, Oxygen concentrations as low as 17% have been
recorded. Living in these ‘islands’ of low Oxygen concentration will
impact individuals negatively. This reality is totally ignored in the
process of ‘Urban Development’.
But it is the disappearance of Oxygen from the oceans, should ring alarm
bells. Ocean dead zones with zero oxygen have quadrupled in size since
1950. Again, Climate change caused by fossil fuel burning is the cause
of the large-scale deoxygenation, as warmer waters hold less oxygen
In coastal regions, fertiliser, manure and sewage pollution cause algal
blooms and when the algae decompose oxygen is sucked out of the water.
Oceanographer Dr. Diaz states "No other variable of such ecological
importance to coastal ecosystems has changed so drastically in such a
short period of time from human activities as dissolved oxygen."
But when it comes to Oxygen, The Ocean is even more efficient than the
forests, accounting for about 70% of annual production of free molecular
Oxygen, the bulk of which is released into the atmosphere. Thus the
increase of ‘dead zones’ with no oxygen, not only impacts fisheries and
food, it also impacts the presence of phytoplankton responsible for the
massive amount of Oxygen released into the global commons. As this is
the process that provides 60-70 % of the annual input of free Oxygen
required to maintain our global stock at equilibrium, any increase of
oceanic dead zones will mean reduction of Oxygen production provided to
the atmospheric. Currently, Oxygen concentration in the atmosphere is
1.2x1015 ton (12,000,000,000,000,000 t), with a Turnover rate about 4000
years, whereby Oxygen from photosynthesis by plants are constantly
added to the atmosphere so that a mean of 21.9 % in the atmosphere is
maintained.
In the current use of Oxygen, supply is taken for granted with no
investment nor responsibility for its replacement. The combined effects
of respiration, fossil fuel combustion, deforestation and loss of
oceanic production, has begun to affect the Global Commons of our
atmosphere and are creating increasing events of reduced air quality and
low atmospheric oxygen concentration. Already that effect is being felt
as increases in lung disease and difficulty in breathing in many
cities. Bringing into stark focus, the motto of the American Lung
Association: "If you can’t breathe, nothing else matters."
So, while waiting for industry to become responsible and replace the
atmospheric Oxygen that they consume, we should not be holding our
breath. We should be working at initiatives that seek to build up the
Photosynthetic Biomass stocks wherever possible. The most promising
areas for development being the deforested and degraded lands. The most
promising resource for implementation being the rural poor. Each tree
estimated to produce over 150Kg of Oxygen per year. Each human being
uses about 750 kg of Oxygen per year for breathing. Thus establishing
4-5 trees will compensate for the Oxygen we breathe from the Global
Commons. But in the end, it is those who live in rural areas who will be
able to help us by planting, looking after and protecting the trees we
plant. It will be rural societies who can help us be responsible for the
air we breathe. They could be empowered if those industrial users of
atmospheric Oxygen like, chemical industries, internal combustion
engines, jet engines and industrial use of atmospheric Oxygen that is
being used furiously with not a penny paid to replace the Oxygen that
our lungs require.
The magic engine of photosynthesis is being destroyed. The forests are
disappearing for ‘fossil based development’ and the Oceans are dying due
to ‘fossil based development’ as is the air, dying on the altar of
‘fossil based development’. This notion of ‘development’ has become an
abused word used by political hacks to defend their greedy,
self-centered actions. For how long can we allow them to destroy the
very basis for life on their crooked altar?
