The future looks bright: light pollution
rises on a global scale
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[November 27, 2017]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The world is getting
brighter, but scientists say that may not be a good thing.
Researchers said on Wednesday satellite data showed that Earth's
artificially lit outdoor surface at night grew by about 2 percent
annually in brightness and area from 2012 to 2016, underscoring concerns
about the ecological effects of light pollution on people and animals.
The rate of growth observed in developing countries was much faster than
in already brightly lit rich countries.
The researchers said the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration weather satellite data may understate the situation
because its sensor cannot detect some of the LED lighting that is
becoming more widespread, specifically blue light.
"Earth's night is getting brighter. And I actually didn't expect it to
be so uniformly true that so many countries would be getting brighter,"
said physicist Christopher Kyba of the GFZ German Research Centre for
Geosciences, who led the research published in the journal Science
Advances.
With few exceptions, growth in nighttime light was observed throughout
South America, Africa and Asia. Light remained stable in only a few
countries. These included some of the world's brightest such as Italy,
Netherlands, Spain and the United States, although the researchers said
the satellite sensor's "blindness" to some LED light may mask an actual
increase.
Australia's lit area decreased due to wildfires. Nighttime light
declined in war-hit Syrian and Yemen.
Ecologist Franz Hölker of Germany's Leibniz-Institute for Freshwater
Ecology and Inland Fisheries (IGB) said light pollution has ecological
consequences, with natural light cycles disrupted by artificial light
introduced into the nighttime environment. Increased sky glow can affect
human sleep, he noted.
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Yukihiro Yoshida from Nagoya, Japan, tries to imitate a skyscraper
in front of the Brooklyn Bridge and the Lower Manhattan skyline from
Brooklyn borough of New York September 10, 2013. REUTERS/Adrees
Latif/File Photo
"In addition to threatening 30 percent of vertebrates that are
nocturnal and over 60 percent of invertebrates that are nocturnal,
artificial light also affects plants and microorganisms," Hölker
said. "It threatens biodiversity through changed night habits, such
as reproduction or migration patterns, of many different species:
insects, amphibians, fish, birds, bats and other animals."
Kyba said nighttime lighting also obscures the stars that people
have witnessed for millennia.
Experts had hoped the growing use of highly efficient LED lighting
might lessen energy usage worldwide. The new findings indicate use
of artificial lighting instead is growing, increasing energy demand.
"While we know that LEDs save energy in specific projects, for
example when a city transitions all of its street lighting from
sodium lamps to LED, when we look at our data and we look at the
national and the global level, it indicates that these savings are
being offset by either new or brighter lights in other places," Kyba
said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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