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The World In 2030 is Ray Hammond's first non-fiction book since 'Digital Business' (1996).

Commissioned by PlasticsEurope, the trade association of European plastics suppliers, the book started life as a report but, during its year of gestation and creation, grew to be a full-length work of non-fiction.

The book is a comprehensive survey of the trends that are going to shape life over the coming quarter of a century.

The following section is an extract from the Executive Summary of the book:

The speed of technological development is accelerating exponentially and, for this reason, by the year 2030 it will seem as if a whole century’s worth of progress has taken place in the first three decades of the 21st century.

By 2030 it will appear as if a mass of dizzying scientific breakthroughs have suddenly been made simultaneously – in computing, in healthcare, in communications, in wealth generation, in materials performance (including smart plastics), in travel and in robotics.

In many ways, life in 2030 will be
unrecognisable compared with life today. But not all of the changes in the world are going to be beneficial.

Climate change, already the cause
of extreme and unpredictable weather around the world, will almost certainly have worsened by 2030. Even if the world magically stopped emitting
greenhouse gases today, those gases emitted over the last thirty years will continue to influence the Earth’s atmosphere deleteriously until the middle of the 21st century. For this reason, solving the problem of climate change must be seen as humankind’s
greatest and most important challenge over the next twenty-five years.


Any exercise in futurology is a process of identifying key trends in the present and then extrapolating from them in a systematic way in order to discern
how they may affect our future. This approach can yield useful results over a period limited to the next twenty-five years but beyond that point lies a barrier which inhibits our ability to speculate meaningfully about humanity’s longer-term future.
(continued in next column.)

 

 

 

Most of the world’s futurists, futurologists and computer scientists agree that at some point between 2030 and 2040 a milestone in technological development will be reached that will cause a rupture, a complete disjoint, in human evolution.

Around this time we will build the first computer that is the intellectual equal of a human. Because of the accelerating, exponential nature of technological
development (fuelled entirely by faster and richer information flows) it follows that a short time after that we will be assisted by our super-intelligent computers to build a machine twice as clever as the most capable human. Shortly after will appear a machine four times as clever as a human, then eight times as clever, then sixteen times as clever, and so on.

This projected point in future human history is called ‘The Singularity’ by futurists and futurologists because once super-intelligent machines begin to take over the task of technological development it is expected that progress will be so rapid, and will take such unforeseeable directions, that it is pointless to speculate

Paper copies of The World In 2030 can be ordered here.