Contact:
Patrick Tucker
Associate Editor
THE FUTURIST
Director of Communications
World Future Society
301-656-8274
ptucker@wfs.org
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Futurists Release Top Ten Forecasts for 2008 and
Beyond
Bethesda,
Maryland 10.5.07— The World Future Society,
www.wfs.org , has released a 10 page report forecasting more than 70
major global developments for the coming year and beyond. The OUTLOOK 2008
report examines key trends in technology, the environment, the economy,
international relations, etc., in order to paint a full and credible
portrait of our likely future: Among the most significant findings:
1. The world will have a billion millionaires by 2025. Globalization
and technological innovation are driving this increased prosperity. But
challenges to prosperity will also become more acute, such as water
shortages that will affect two-thirds of world population by 2025. — James
Canton, author of "The Extreme Future." Reviewed in the May-June 2007 issue,
p. 54
2. Fashion will go wired as technologies and tastes converge to
revolutionize the textile industry. Researchers in smart fabrics and
intelligent textiles (SFIT) are working with the fashion industry to bring
us color-changing or perfume emitting jeans, Casio wristwatches that work as
digital wallets, and running shoes like the Nike +iPod that watch where
you’re going (possibly allowing others to do the same). Powering these
gizmos remains a key obstacle. But industry watchers estimate that a $400
million market for SFIT is already in place and predict that smart fabrics
could revitalize the U.S. and European textile industry. —Patrick Tucker,
"Smart Fashion," Sep-Oct 2007, p. 68
3. The threat of another cold war with China, Russia, or both could
replace terrorism as the chief foreign-policy concern of the United States.
Scenarios for what a war with China or Russia would look like make the
clashes and wars in which the United States is now involved seem
insignificant. The power of radical jihadists is trivial compared with
Soviet missile capabilities, for instance. The focus of U.S. foreign policy
should thus be on preventing an engagement among Great Powers. —Edward N.
Luttwak, "Preserving Balance among the Great Powers," Nov-Dec 2006, p. 26
4. Counterfeiting of currency will proliferate, driving the move toward a
cashless society. Sophisticated new optical scanning technologies could,
in the next five years, be a boon for currency counterfeiters, so societies
are increasingly putting aside their privacy fears about going cashless.
Meanwhile, cashless technologies are improving, making them far easier and
safer to use. —Allen H. Kupetz, "Our Cashless Future," May-June 2007, p. 37
5. The earth is on the verge of a significant extinction event. The
twenty-first century could witness a biodiversity collapse 100 to 1,000
times greater than any previous extinction since the dawn of humanity,
according to the World Resources Institute. Protecting biodiversity in a
time of increased resource consumption, overpopulation, and environmental
degradation will require continued sacrifice on the part of local, often
impoverished communities. Experts contend that incorporating local
communities’ economic interests into conservation plans will be essential to
species protection in the next century. —World Trends & Forecasts, Nov-Dec
2006, p. 6
6. Water will be in the twenty-first century what oil was in the
twentieth century. Global fresh water shortages and drought conditions
are spreading in both the developed and developing world. In response, the
dry state of California is building 13 desalination plants that could
provide 10%-20% of the state’s water in the next two decades. Desalination
will become more mainstream by 2020. —William E. Halal, "Technology’s
Promise: Highlights from the TechCast Project," Nov-Dec, p. 44
7. World population by 2050 may grow larger than previously expected, due
in part to healthier, longer-living people. Slower than expected
declines of fertility in developing countries and increasing longevity in
richer countries are contributing to a higher rate of population growth. As
a result, the UN has increased its forecast for global population from 9.1
billion people by 2050 to 9.2 billion. —World Trends & Forecasts, Sep-Oct
2007, p. 10
8. The number of Africans imperiled by floods will grow 70-fold by 2080.
The Rapid urbanization taking place throughout much of Africa makes
flooding particularly dangerous, altering the natural flow of water and
cutting off escape routes. If global sea levels rise by the predicted 38 cm
by 2080, the number of Africans affected by floods will grow from 1 million
to 70 million. —World Trends & Forecasts, July-Aug 2007, p. 7
9. Rising prices for natural resources could lead to a full-scale rush to
develop the Arctic. Not just oil and natural gas, but also the Arctic’s
supplies of nickel, copper, zinc, coal, freshwater, forests, and of course
fish are highly coveted by the global economy. Whether the Arctic states
tighten control over these commodities or find equitable and sustainable
ways to share them will be a major political challenge in the decades ahead.
—Lawson W. Brigham, "Thinking about the Arctic’s Future: Scenarios for
2040," Sep-Oct 2007, p. 27
10. More decisions will be made by nonhuman entities. Electronically
enabled teams in networks, robots with artificial intelligence, and other
noncarbon life-forms will make financial, health, educational, and even
political decisions for us. Reason: Technologies are increasing the
complexity of our lives and human workers’ competency is not keeping pace
well enough to avoid disasters due to human error. —Arnold Brown, "’Not with
a Bang’: Civilization’s Accelerating Challenge," Sep-Oct 2007, p. 38
All of these forecasts plus dozens more were included in the report that
scanned the best writing and research from THE FUTURIST magazine over the
course of the previous year. The Society hopes this report, covering
developments in business and economics, demography, energy, the environment,
health and medicine, resources, society and values, and technology, will
assist its readers in preparing for the challenges and opportunities in 2008
and beyond.
"The forecasts in this year’s Outlook touch on the most important,
soon-to-be important, and just plain surprising trends taking place in our
world today. Everyone from leaders in business and government to the simply
curious will find something valuable or interesting in this snapshot of our
changing world," said Patrick Tucker, director of communications for the
World Future Society and associate editor of THE FUTURIST.
The 2008 Outlook Report was released as part of the November-December issue
of THE FUTURIST magazine. An individual report can be obtained from the
World Future Society for $5 in both print and online PDF format at
www.wfs.org .
THE FUTURIST is a bi-monthly magazine published continuously since 1967 by
the World Future Society and is a principal benefit of membership, read by
25,000 members worldwide. The magazine is also available in newsstands coast
to coast.
Among the many influential thinkers and experts who have contributed to THE
FUTURIST are: Gene Roddenberry, Al Gore, Alvin and Heidi Toffler,
Buckminster Fuller, Frederik Pohl, Isaac Asimov, Vaclav Havel, Hazel
Henderson, Margaret Mead, Robert McNamara, B.F. Skinner, Nicholas
Negroponte, David Walker, Lewis Lapham, Arthur C. Clarke, Kofi Anan, and Ray
Kurzweil.
The focus of THE FUTURIST is innovation, creative thinking, and emerging
trends in the social, economic, and technological areas. More information
can be obtained at www.wfs.org or by
calling 301-656-8274, ext. 116.
Editors: For more information on Outlook 2008, THE FUTURIST magazine or the
World Future Society, feel free to contact World Future Society president
Tim Mack, 301-656-8274 ext. 104,
Tmack@wfs.org, or director of communications Patrick Tucker 301-656-8274
ext. 116, ptucker@wfs.org. More
information about the World Future Society can also be obtained from the
Society’s Web site, www.wfs.org .
For information about WorldFuture 2007, contact the World Future Society at
1-301-656-8274 or e-mail director of communications Patrick Tucker, ptucker@wfs.org,
or Susan Echard, sechard@wfs.org, vice president of membership and
conference operations, or check the World Future Society’s Web site
www.wfs.org.
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