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{{About|the current century in the [[Gregorian calendar]]}}
So I guess i'm gonna be cheesy and say that I love you brooke beers and that i would totally do you, over and over again. just saying.
{{Original research|date=December 2009}}
{{Systemic bias|bias=U.S. events and accomplishments|date=June 2010}}
{{Centurybox|21}}
The '''21st century''' is the current century of the [[Christian Era]] or [[Common Era]] in accordance with the [[Gregorian calendar]]. It began on January 1, 2001 and will end on December 31, 2100.<ref>http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/astronomical-information-center/millennium</ref>

==Turn of the 21st century (2001–present)==
In [[contemporary history]], the 21st century began with the [[United States]] as the sole [[superpower]] in the absence of the [[Soviet Union]], with five other entities, [[China]], [[India]], the [[European Union]], [[Brazil]] and the [[Russian Federation]] as [[potential superpowers]] in the coming decades.
As the [[Cold War]] was over and [[terrorism]] on the rise exemplified by the [[September 11, 2001 attacks]] at the [[World Trade Center]] in [[New York City]]; the [[The Pentagon|Pentagon]] in [[Arlington, Virginia]]; followed by the [[2001 anthrax attacks]] that commenced as letters containing anthrax spores were mailed from [[Princeton, New Jersey]] to [[ABC News]], [[CBS News]], [[NBC News]], the ''[[New York Post]]'', and the ''[[National Enquirer]]''; the United States and its allies turned their attention to the Middle East.

Digital technology, in its early stages of mainstream use in the 1980s and 1990s, became widely accepted by most of the world, though concerns about [[Stress (biological)|stress]] and [[sociopathy|antisociality]] from the overuse of [[mobile phone]]s, the [[Internet]] and related technologies remains controversial.<ref>{{cite news | title=Workplace trends: Technology increases workplace stress | url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3840/is_199910/ai_n8869850 | work= Office World News| publisher= | year=1999 | accessdate= }}</ref>

In 2009, 4.6 billion people globally, or nearly half the world's population used cell phones,<ref>{{cite web | title=4.6 Billion Cell Phone Users | url=http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/idi/2010/Material/MIS_2010_Summary_E.pdf | work=Mobilewhack.com | publisher= | date= | accessdate= }}</ref> and in 2005, over a billion people worldwide used the [[Internet]].<ref>{{cite web | title=Stats - Web Worldwide | url=http://www.clickz.com/showPage.html?page=stats/web_worldwide | work=ClickZ | publisher= | date= | accessdate= }}</ref>

==Pronunciation==
Regarding pronunciation of 21st-century years, academics suggest that since former years such as 1805 and 1905 were commonly pronounced as "eighteen oh" or "nineteen oh" five, the year 2005 should naturally have been pronounced as "twenty oh-five".<ref name="preferMC">[http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article376957.ece Experts clash over millennium bugbear]—[[The Times]]</ref> A less common variation would have been "twenty nought-five".

The year 2010 "twenty ten" is suggested by many, with the "two thousand x" pronunciation reserved only for the "two thousands" decade of [[2000s (decade)|2000s]]<ref>http://maxspeak.org/mt/archives/002457.html</ref><ref>[http://www.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg.tcl?msg_id=0026Sg The Naughty Noughties, or something<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and the [[2010 Winter Olympics|Vancouver Olympics]], taking place in 2010, is being officially referred to by ''Vancouver 2010'' as "the twenty-ten olympics", while 2011<ref name="preferMC" /> and 2013 are popular as well. The latest timeframes for change are usually placed at 2020.<ref name="preferMC" />

According to The [[Stanley Kubrick]] archives, in the press release for his film ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'', film director Stanley Kubrick included specific instructions for journalists to refer to the movie as "two thousand and one" instead of the commonplace pronunciation of "twenty-oh-one". Kubrick said he did this in the hope that if the film became popular, it would influence the pronunciation of that year, which some have theorized is partially the case.<ref name="preferMC">[http://www.taschen.com/pages/en/catalogue/film/new/00301/facts.the_stanley_kubrick_archives.htm The Stanley Kubrick Archives]</ref>

==Significant events==
===Politics, war, and genocide===
Politics in this century have so far been divisive, in the [[United States]] and to a lesser degree the whole [[Western World]] between the [[ideologies]] of [[liberalism]] and [[conservatism]]; more precisely, the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] vs the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]].

Genocide still remains a problem in the century with the concern of [[War in Darfur|the situation in Darfur]] and the growing concern in [[Sri Lanka]]. Low estimates on the deaths in Darfur stand around 200,000 deaths with 2.5 million in displacement, there has been much outcry against the [[Janjaweed|perpetrators]], the Sudanese government, and the very weak international response. Also controversies from past genocides remain commonplace in the minds of victims and average people alike.

*1998–2002 &ndash; The [[Second Congo War]] continued into the early 21st century. A 1999 ceasefire quickly broke down and a UN peacekeeping mission, [[MONUC]], was unable to control the fighting. Troops from [[Rwanda]] and [[Uganda]] continued to support rebel groups against the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] and rifts also grew between Rwanda and Uganda as they accused each other of supporting rival rebel groups as well. [[Laurent Kabila]], president of the DRC, was assassinated in January 2002 and his son, [[Joseph Kabila]], took power. Throughout 2002 steps were made towards peace and Rwanda and Uganda both removed their troops from the country. On December 17, 2002, a massive treaty officially ended the war. However, the DRC only holds power in less than half of the country, with most of the eastern and northern portions still controlled by rebel groups, where there is still significant infighting. In addition, Rwanda still supports anti-DRC rebels and anti-Rwandan rebels continue to operate from the DRC. The war killed an estimated 3.9 million people, displaced nearly 5.5 million, and led to a widespread and ongoing famine that continues to result in deaths. Severe human rights violations continue to be reported.
*2001 &ndash; [[Al-Qaeda]] terrorists hijacked 4 [[commercial airliner]]s and [[September 11 attacks|crashed 3 of them]] into the [[World Trade Center]] and [[the Pentagon]] in the United States on September 11, killing nearly 3,000 people. The United States subsequently declared a [[War on Terrorism]].
*2001–present &ndash; The U.S. and [[North Atlantic Treaty Organization|NATO]] invaded [[Afghanistan]] on October 7, 2001 and overthrew the Al-Qaeda-supportive [[Taliban]] government. Troops remained to install a democratic government, fight a slowly escalating insurgency, and to hunt for Al Qaeda leader [[Osama bin Laden]].
*2002 &ndash; The [[International Criminal Court]] (ICC) was established on July 1.
*2002 &ndash; A [[2002 Bali bombings|series of bombings]] carried out by Islamic militants killed 202 people at the resort of [[Kuta]], [[Bali]], [[Indonesia]] on October 12.
*2003–present &ndash; In February 2003, a conflict in [[Darfur]], [[Sudan]] began and soon escalated into [[War in Darfur|full-scale war]]. It is soon considered the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. By 2008 it is believed that up to 400,000 people have been killed and over 2.5 million displaced. In 2005, the ICC decided that Darfur war criminals would be tried, and on July 14, 2008, Sudanese president [[Omar al-Bashir]] was charged with 5 accounts of crimes against humaninty and 2 accounts of war crimes, although the ICC currently has no power to enforce these charges.
*2003–2010 &ndash; The [[Multinational force in Iraq|U.S.-led coalition]] [[War in Iraq|invaded]] Iraq on March 20, 2003 and overthrew the government of [[Saddam Hussein]] (who was executed by the Iraqi government on December 30, 2006). Coalition troops remain in the country to install a democratic government and fight an escalating insurgency. In addition to an insurgency against the American presence, Iraq also suffered from a [[Civil war in Iraq|civil war]] for several years. The war was soon seen as the central front of the War on Terror by many governments, despite growing international dissatisfaction with the war. The total death toll has been estimated at near 150,000 but these estimations are highly disputed, some guessing even over 1 million. After the U.S.-led coalition initiated a [[troop surge]] in 2007, casualty numbers have decreased significantly. Combat ended, at least officially, in August 2010.
*2003–2005 &ndash; A series of [[nonviolence|nonviolent]] revolutions known as the [[colour revolution]]s overthrew governments in [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], [[Ukraine]], [[Kyrgyzstan]], and [[Lebanon]].
*2004 &ndash; The [[European Union]] [[Enlargement of the European Union|expanded]] by 10 countries, including 8 former communist countries, plus [[Malta]] and [[Cyprus]].
*2004 &ndash; On March 11, [[11 March 2004 Madrid train bombings|bombings]] carried out by Islamic militants killed 191 people on the commuter rail system of [[Madrid]], Spain.
*2005 &ndash; [[7 July 2005 London bombings|A series of bombings]] carried out by Islamic militants killed 56 people in London on July 7.
*2005 &ndash; [[Israel]] [[Israel's unilateral disengagement plan|withdrew]] from the [[Gaza Strip]] on September 11.
*2006–2008 &ndash; The dismantling of former [[Yugoslavia]] continues after [[Montenegro]] gained independence on June 3, 2006 and [[Kosovo]] declared independence on February 17, 2008. However, Kosovo's independence is disputed by Russia and many of its allies and is currently only [[International recognition of Kosovo|partially recognized]].
*2006 &ndash; On July 12, [[Hezbollah]] militants crossed the border of [[Lebanon]] and captured two Israeli troops. Israel [[2006 Lebanon War|responded]] by sending troops across the border and bombing Hezbollah strongholds, while Hezbollah fired missiles on towns in northern Israel, approximately 6 each day. At the end of the war 300–450 Lebanese civilians, 600 Hezbolla troops, 44 Israeli civilians and 121 Israeli soldiers died. A ceasefire was signed on August 14, after which Israeli troops withdrew from Lebanon. Many military sources in Israel have warned about the danger of a new Israeli-Lebanese conflict back in the year 2000, when Israel has withdrawn from Lebanon.
*2006 &ndash; On July 11, bombs planted on the train system in [[Mumbai]] [[11 July 2006 Mumbai train bombings|exploded]], killing 209 people.
*2006 &ndash; [[North Korea]] conducted its [[2006 North Korean nuclear test|first nuclear test]] on October 9.<ref>{{cite news |title=US confirms nuclear claim |publisher=New York Times |date=2006-10-15 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/16/world/asia/17koreacnd.html?hp&ex=1161057600&en=891cb4c4775510b3&ei=5094&partner=homepage |accessdate=2006-10-16 | first1=John | last1=O'Neil | first2=Norimitsu | last2=Onishi}}</ref> This was preceded by years of political wrangling with the U.S. over the status of their nuclear program.
*2007 &ndash; A [[Fatah–Hamas conflict|civil war]] escalated in the [[Gaza Strip]] throughout June, which resulted in [[Hamas]] eventually driving most [[Fatah]]-loyal forces from the Strip. In reaction, Palestinian president [[Mahmoud Abbas]] dismissed Hamas prime minister [[Ismail Haniyeh]] and dissolved the Hamas-ruled parliament. Scattered conflict continues.
*2008 &ndash; [[2008 South Ossetia war|Armed conflict]] in August 2008 between [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] on one side, and the [[Russian Federation]] together with [[South Ossetia|Ossetians]] and [[Abkhazia]]ns on the other. Russia officially recognized independence of [[Abkhazia]] and [[South Ossetia]].
*2008–2009 &ndash; [[Israel]] launches [[2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict|a military campaign]] on the [[Gaza Strip]], due to continuous rocket launching on south Israeli cities by radical elements of the Hamas.
*2009 &ndash;[[Barack Obama]] becomes the first [[African-American]] [[president]] of the [[United States]]
*2009 &ndash; [[North Korea]] tests a second nuclear device.
*2010 &ndash; Polish president [[Lech Kaczynski]] and 95 others died in an air disaster in western Russia. Investigations into the accident are still ongoing.

===Science and technology===
====Space exploration====
*2001 – [[Dennis Tito]] becomes the first [[space tourism|space tourist]] by paying $19 million to board the [[International Space Station]].
*2002 – ''[[Mars Odyssey]]'' arrives in orbit around [[Mars]].
*2003 – [[Space Shuttle Columbia disaster|Space Shuttle ''Columbia'' disaster]] February 1.
*2003 – The [[Chinese space program]] launches its first [[manned space flight]], ''[[Shenzhou 5]]'' on October 15. This made China the third country in the world to have indigenous manned space capability.
*2004 – [[Mars Exploration Rover]]s land on [[Mars]]; ''[[Opportunity (rover)|Opportunity]]'' discovers evidence that an area of [[Mars]] was once covered in water.
*2004 – The ''[[Cassini–Huygens]]'' probe arrives at [[Saturn]].
*2004 – ''[[Scaled Composites SpaceShipOne|SpaceShipOne]]'' makes the first privately funded [[human spaceflight]], June 21
*2005 – The ''[[Huygens probe|Huygens]]'' probe lands on [[Titan (moon)|Titan]], the largest of Saturn's moons, January 14.
*2005 – The ''[[Deep Impact (space mission)|Deep Impact]]'' probe impacts [[Comet Tempel 1]], July 4.
*2005 - The [[Space Shuttle Discovery|Space Shuttle ''Discovery'']] launches on [[STS-114]] on July 26, the first [[Return to Flight]] mission following the [[Space Shuttle Columbia disaster|Space Shuttle ''Columbia'' disaster]]. The mission marks the beginning of the end of the current [[Space Shuttle Program]] (shuttles ''Endeavour'', ''Atlantis'', and ''Discovery'')
*2006 – ''[[New Horizons]]'' is launched on a 9 year voyage to [[Pluto]], January 19.
*2006 – The ''[[Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter]]'' arrives at [[Mars]].
*2006 - The [[Space Shuttle Discovery|Space Shuttle ''Discovery'']] launches on [[STS-121]], the second [[Return to Flight]] mission following the Columbia accident, July 4.
*2006 - NASA resumes construction of the International Space Station following the Columbia accident with the launch of [[Space Shuttle Atlantis|Space Shuttle ''Atlantis'']] on [[STS-115]] on September 9.
*2006 – [[Pluto]] is reclassified from a [[planet]] to a [[dwarf planet]], leaving the solar system with eight planets.
*2007 - China launches its first lunar mission with the [[Chang'e 1]] on October 24.
*2008 – [[NASA]]'s [[MESSENGER]] flies by Mercury, becoming the first spacecraft to do so in 33 years.
*2008 – [[Phoenix Lander]] successfully arrives at Mars; later tests conducted by the spacecraft reveal evidence of ice on Mars.
*2008 – [[Chinese space program]] launches its third manned space flight carrying its first three-person crew and conducts its first spacewalk that makes China the third nation after Russia and USA to do that, ''[[Shenzhou 7]]'' on September 25.
*2008 – The [[Indian Space Research Organisation]]'s [[Chandrayaan-1]] is launched on October 22. India becomes the fourth nation to reach the moon.
*2009 - NASA launches the [[Kepler Mission|''Kepler Space Observatory'']] on a three year mission to search the sky in the Cygnus, Lyra, and Draco constellations for Earth-like planets, March 6.
*2009 – The [[Space Shuttle Atlantis|Space Shuttle ''Atlantis'']] rendezvous with the [[Hubble Space Telescope]] on [[STS-125]] to give the Hubble much needed repairs. This mission will enable Hubble to last for approximately 5 to 10 years.
*2009 - NASA conducts the [[Ares I-X]] test flight. The 6-minute suborbital flight was the only flight of the [[Constellation program]] that was supposed to replace the [[Space Shuttle]] fleet in the next decade.
*2009 - [[ISRO]] discovers water on the [[Moon]].

====Medicine====
*2003 – Completion of the [[Human Genome Project]]
*2003 – [[Dolly the sheep|Dolly the cloned sheep]] dies prematurely February 14.
*2003 – [[Severe acute respiratory syndrome]] (SARS) spreads around the globe.
*2005 – The first successful partial [[face transplant]] is performed in France.
*2006 – [[Australian of the Year]] Dr [[Ian Frazer]] develops a [[vaccine]] for [[cervical cancer]].
*2008 – Japanese scientists create a form of artificial DNA.
*2009 – The mouse genome is fully sequenced.
*2009 – [[Influenza A virus subtype H1N1]] spreads around the globe.
*2009 - The horse genome is fully sequenced.

====Personal technology====
* [[Mobile phone]] usage approaches nearly 100% in [[Europe]].<ref>
{{cite web
|url=http://www.mobiletracker.net/archives/2005/05/18/mobile-subcribers-worldwide
|title=Total mobile subscribers top 1.8 billion
|accessdate=2008-12-31
|author= |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors=
|date=May 18, 2005
|year= |month= |format=
|work=[[MobileTracker Cell Phone News and Reviews]]
|publisher=
|pages= |language= |doi=
|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20080119070741/http://www.mobiletracker.net/archives/2005/05/18/mobile-subcribers-worldwide
|archivedate=January 19, 2008
|quote= }}
</ref>
* [[Digital audio player]]s are widely used in developed nations.
* Personal [[digital camera]]s are making traditional home [[Photographic film|film]] cameras virtually obsolete.
* [[Wireless technologies]] are beginning to play a greater role in people's lives.

====Other====
* 2003 – Discovery of an old dwarf human species, ''[[Homo floresiensis]]'' by modern humans (published October 2004).
* 2004 – The first ever recorded hurricane in the South Atlantic forms.
* 2007 – The [[Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change|IPCC]] (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) releases its Fourth Assessment Report.
* 2009 – Details of ''[[Darwinius]]'', a vital ‘missing link’ in human evolution dated to 47 million years ago, are published.
* 2010 - A team of scientists, including DNA researcher [[Craig Venter]], create the first synthetic lifeform.

===Conflicts===
*[[Colombian armed conflict (1964–present)]]
*[[Sri Lankan Civil War]] (1983–2009)
*[[September 11, 2001 attacks]] on USA
*[[War in Afghanistan (2001–present)]]
*[[2002 Bali terrorist bombing|12 October 2002 Bali bombing]]
*[[Moscow theater hostage crisis]] October 2002
*[[Iraq War]] (20 March 2003–19 August 2010)
*[[Darfur conflict]] (2003–present)
*[[11 March 2004 Madrid train bombings]]
*[[War in North-West Pakistan]] (2004–present)
*September 2004 [[Beslan school hostage crisis]]
*[[7 July 2005 London bombings]]
*[[2006 East Timorese crisis]]
*[[11 July 2006 Mumbai train bombings]]
*[[2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict]]
*[[Civil war in Chad (2005–present)]]
*[[War in Somalia (2006–2009)]]
*[[War on Terrorism]] (2001–present)
*[[2008 South Ossetia War|Russian-Georgian War]] (08/07/2008–08/16/2008)
*[[2008 Mumbai Attacks|26/11 - 2008 Mumbai attacks]]
*[[2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict]]
*[[War in Somalia (2009-present)]]

====Worldwide deaths from war and terrorist attacks====
*[[Second Congo War]], approximately 1.8 million deaths (3.8 million since 1998)
*[[Iraq War]], a wide variation in the number of casualties quoted, ranging from the tens of thousands, up to approximately 1 million deaths,<ref>[http://www.opinion.co.uk/Newsroom_details.aspx?NewsId=88 Update on Iraqi Casualty Data] by Opinion Research Business, January 2008</ref> [[Iraq Body Count project]], [[ORB survey of Iraq War casualties]].
*[[Darfur conflict]], approximately 400,000 deaths
*Civil War in [[Côte d'Ivoire]], 3,000 deaths
*September 11, 2001 19 members of [[al-Qaeda]] hijacked four commercial airliners, intentionally crashing two of them into The [[World Trade Centers]] in New York City, and one into [[the Pentagon]] in [[Arlington, Virginia]]. The fourth plane's intended target was either the White House or Capitol Building, but passengers aboard the plane resisted the initiatives of the hijackers and crashed the plane into a field in Pennsylvania. 2,997 people from 90 different countries died.
*December 13, 2001 attacks, [[Terrorist attack on Indian Parliament (2001)|Terrorist attack on Indian Parliament]], terrorists storm the Indian Parliament Building in New Delhi and kill six police officers.
*October 12, 2002 [[2002 Bali terrorist bombing|Bali terrorist bombings]] kill 202 people.
*March 11, 2004 terrorist attacks shake several train stations on Spain's capital [[Madrid]], killing 191 people and injuring 1,247.
*[[7 July 2005 London bombings]], Suicide terrorist attacks shake [[London]] transport system killing 52 people and injuring 700.
*[[29 October 2005 Delhi bombings]], terrorists attack various markets in New Delhi, killing 61 people and injuring 188 more, right before the start of the festival season in India.
*July 11, 2006 six bombs explode in train stations in [[Mumbai]], killing 190.
*[[November 2008 Mumbai attacks]], a series of ten coordinated terrorist attacks across Mumbai, India, killing 195 people and injuring 290 more.

===Civil Unrest===
''2000s''
*[[December 2001 riots in Argentina|2001 riots in Argentina]]
*[[2005 civil unrest in France]]
*[[2005 Cronulla riots]]
*[[Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy|2006 Muhammad cartoons controversy]]
*[[Ungdomshuset|2007 Danish riots]]
*[[Bronze Night|2007 Bronze Soldier riots in Estonia]]
*[[2007 Burmese anti-government protests]]
*[[2007 Georgian demonstrations]]
*[[2008 Tibetan unrest]]
*[[2008 Greek riots]]
*[[2009 Moldova civil unrest]]
*[[2009 Riga riot]]
*[[2009 Iranian election protests]]
*[[2009 Tamil diaspora protests]]

''2010s''
*[[2010 Kyrgyzstan riots]]
*[[2010 Thailand riots]]
*[[2010 Jamaica Unrest]]

===Natural disasters===
[[Image:2004-tsunami.jpg|thumb|300px|right|The tsunami striking [[Ao Nang]] in [[Thailand]] on December 26, 2004.]]

'''2000s'''
*[[2001 Gujarat Earthquake]] - An earthquake in Gujarat,India on January 26, 2001 killed approximately 20,000.
*[[2001 El Salvador Earthquake]] - 7.9 earthquake in El Salvador shook the whole country Jan. 13 2001 causing a major devastating landslide, hundred dead, thousands injured and many homeless. A month later Feb. 13 2001 the country suffered a second earthquake - 6.7
*[[2003 European heat wave]] - Approximately 30,000 people were killed across Europe in a summer long heat wave.
*[[2003 Bam earthquake]] - An [[Bam, Iran#2003 earthquake|earthquake]] in [[Bam, Iran|Bam]], [[Iran]] on December 27, 2003 killed more than 26,000.
*[[Hurricane Jeanne|2004 Hurricane Jeanne]] - Over 3,000 people are killed by [[Hurricane Jeanne]] in [[Haiti]] in September 2004.
*[[2004 Asian Tsunami]] - On December 26, 2004, an undersea earthquake resulted in a massive tsunami striking southeast Asia killing approxomately 230,000.
*[[Hurricane Katrina|2005 Hurricane Katrina]] - The hurricane killed 1,836 in southeast Louisiana and Mississippi (mostly in New Orleans). A significant portion of the city, most of which sits below sea level, was submerged.
*[[2005 Kashmir earthquake]] An [[2005 Kashmir earthquake|earthquake in Kashmir]] on October 8, 2005, killed at least 74,500 in India and [[Pakistan]]
*[[Cyclone Nargis|2008 Cyclone Nagris]] - lead to catastrophic storm surge, leading to a death toll in excess of 100,000 and making millions homeless.
*[[2008 Sichuan earthquake]] - An earthquake in Sichuan, China killed 68,712, 17,921 missing.
*[[2009 L'Aquila earthquake]] - A 6.3 magnitude earthquake strikes near [[L'Aquila]] ([[Italy]]) in April 2009, one of the worst in Italian history.
*[[2009 flu pandemic]] - A worldwide outbreak of [[Influenza A virus subtype H1N1]] spread around the world forming a pandemic by June 2009.
'''2010s'''
*[[2010 Haiti earthquake]] - At least 230,000 are killed in Haiti after a massive earthquake on January 12, 2010. As of late February 2010, the death toll is expected to rise. Three million people were made homeless.
*[[2010 Chile earthquake]] - A massive earthquake, magnitude 8.8, strikes the central Chilean coast on February 27, 2010.
*[[2010 Yushu earthquake]] - A large 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck the Yushu region of China in Qinghai near Tibet, on April 14, 2010, killing over 2200 people.
*[[2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull]] - A massive ash cloud is formed by the eruption of the Icelandic volcano [[Eyjafjallajökull]], on April 14, 2010 grounding flights across northwest Europe. Scientists began recording volcanic activity there in 2009 which increased through March 2010 culminating in the second phase eruption in April.
*[[2010 Pakistan floods]] - Began in July 2010 after record heavy [[monsoon]] rains. The [[Khyber Pakhtunkhwa]] province of [[Pakistan]] was worst affected. At least 1,600 people were killed, thousands were rendered homeless, and more than thirteen million people were affected.<ref name="Bodeen">{{cite news|last=Bodeen|first=Christopher|title=Asia flooding plunges millions into misery|url=http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jLQ5AssQ1MzPfWcFQRV8ZeJhjctQD9HFBA400|accessdate=8 August 2010|newspaper=The Associated Press|date=August 8, 2010}}</ref><ref name="nyt">Masood, Salman and Adam B. Ellick. [http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/02/world/asia/02pstan.html Floods in Pakistan Kill at Least 700]. NYTimes. <!--On Sunday officials reduced the number of dead to 730, saying earlier reports on Sunday, reaching as high at 1,100, were not credible.--></ref><ref name="bbc20100731">{{cite news|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-10827712|title=UN voices Pakistan flood fears as death toll soars|date={{Nowrap|31 July}} 2010|publisher=[[BBC]]|accessdate={{Nowrap|31 July}} 2010}}</ref><ref name="nyt20100730">{{cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/31/world/asia/31pstan.html|title=400 Killed in Flooding in Pakistan, Officials Say|last=Khan|first=Ismail|publisher=[[The New York Times]]|accessdate={{Nowrap|30 July}} 2010 | date=July 30, 2010}}</ref><ref>[http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100801/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan_floods Thousands trapped by Pakistan floods; 900 dead]</ref> Estimates from rescue service officials suggest the death toll may reach 3,000 victims.<ref>[http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-07-31/pakistan-death-toll-from-flash-floods-in-northwest-rises-to-539-edhi-says.html Deaths From Pakistan Floods May Reach 3,000, Rescue Service Official Says]</ref>
====Man made disasters====

[[File:STS-107 reentry.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The [[Space Shuttle Columbia|space shuttle ''Columbia'']] disintegrates on reentry, February 1, 2003.]]
* On July 25, 2000, [[Air France Flight 4590]], a [[Concorde]] aircraft, crashes into a hotel in [[Gonesse]] just after takeoff from [[Paris]], killing all 109 aboard and 4 in the hotel.

* On August 1, 2000, the ''[[Russian submarine K-141 Kursk]]'' sinks in the [[Barents Sea]], killing all 118 men on board.

* On July 27, 2002, a [[Sukhoi Su-27]] fighter [[Sknyliv airshow disaster|crashes]] at an [[air show]] in [[Ukraine]], killing 85 and injuring more than 100, making it the worst air show disaster in history.

* On February 1, 2003, at the conclusion of the ''[[STS-107]]'' mission, the [[Space Shuttle]] ''[[Space Shuttle Columbia|Columbia]]'' [[Space Shuttle Columbia disaster|disintegrates during reentry]] over [[Texas]], killing all seven astronauts onboard.

* The 2009 [[H1N1]] (swine flu) [[2009 flu pandemic|flu pandemic]] was the worst epidemic or pandemic of the decade, killing nearly 12,000.

* The [[Black Saturday bushfires]] - the deadliest [[bushfire]]s in [[Australia]]n history took place across the [[Australia]]n [[Australian state|state]] of [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] on and around Saturday 7&nbsp;February 2009 during extreme bushfire-weather conditions, resulting in 173 people killed and, more than 500 injured and around 7,500 homeless. The fires came after [[Melbourne, Australia|Melbourne]] recorded the [[2009 southeastern Australia heat wave|highest-ever temperature]] (46.4°C, 115°F) of any capital city in Australia. The majority of the fires were ignited by either fallen or clashing power lines or deliberately lit.

* On April 10, 2010, Polish President [[Lech Kaczyński]], his wife and 95 other people, including dozens of government officials are killed in [[2010 Polish Air Force Tu-154 crash|a plane crash]].

*On April 20, 2010 an explosion on the ''[[Deepwater Horizon]]'' offshore [[drilling rig]], operating in the [[Gulf of Mexico]] off the coast of [[Louisiana]], left eleven crewmen dead and resulted in a fire that sank the rig and caused a massive-scale [[oil spill]] <ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126468782|title=BP Will Pay For Gulf Oil Spill Disaster, CEO Says|publisher = NPR|date=2010-05-03 |accessdate=2010-05-03}}</ref> that may become one of the worst environmental disasters in [[United States]] history.<ref>[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126410895 "Choppy Seas Hinder Effort To Contain Oil Spill"], ''National Public Radio'', April 30, 2010</ref> On June 18, 2010 oceanographer John Kessler said that the crude gushing from the well contains 40 percent methane, compared to about 5 percent found in typical oil deposits. Methane is a natural gas that could potentially suffocate marine life and create "dead zones" where oxygen is so depleted that nothing lives. "This is the most vigorous methane eruption in modern human history," Kessler said.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37778190/ns/disaster_in_the_gulf/ |title=Oil spill full of methane, adding new concerns |publisher =msnbc |date=2010-06-18 |accessdate = 2010-06-20}}</ref> On June 20 an internal BP document was released by Congress revealing that BP estimated the flow could be as much as {{convert|100000|oilbbl|USgal m3|abbr=none}} per day under the circumstances that existed since the April 20 blowout.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=10964694 |title=Document Shows BP Estimates Spill up to 100,000 Bpd |publisher =ABC News |date=2010-06-20 |accessdate = 2010-06-20}} {{Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=H3llBot}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://globalwarming.house.gov/files/WEB/flowrateBP.pdf |accessdate = 2010-06-20}}</ref>

*On August 23, 2010 A [[Manila hostage crisis|hostage crisis]] occurs on board a bus in [[Manila]]. Nine people, including the hostage-taker, are killed.<ref name="hkgovt-victimlist">{{cite news|title=Manila hostage incident victim name list|url=http://www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/201008/24/P201008240172.htm|accessdate=24 August 2010|newspaper=Hong Kong's Information Services Department Press Release|date=24 August 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/201008/24/P201008240005.htm |title=HKSAR flag at half-mast August&nbsp;24|work=[[Hong Kong Government|HKSAR government]]|date=August 24, 2010 |accessdate=August 25, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/201008/24/P201008240260.htm |title=HKSAR flag continues to fly at half-mast August&nbsp;25 and August 26|work=[[Hong Kong Government|HKSAR government]]|date=August 24, 2010 |accessdate=August 25, 2010}}</ref>

===New countries===
Some territories have gained independence during the 21st century. This is a list of sovereign states that have gained independence in the 21st century and have been recognized by a majority of foreign governments.

*{{Flagicon|East Timor}} '''[[East Timor]]''' (Timor-Leste)<ref>Grolier- the new book of knowledge, section "E"</ref> on May 20, 2002
*{{Flagicon|Montenegro}} '''[[Montenegro]]''' on June 3, 2006
*{{Flagicon|Serbia}} '''[[Serbia]]''' on June 5, 2006
One country has declared independence but it has not been [[International recognition of Kosovo|recognized by most countries]].
*{{Flagicon|Kosovo}} '''[[Kosovo]]''' on February 17, 2008

===Sports===
====Olympic Games====
''2000s''
* [[2000 Summer Olympics]] were held in [[Sydney]], [[Australia]]
* [[2002 Winter Olympics]] were held in [[Salt Lake City]], [[United States]]
* [[2004 Summer Olympics]] were held in [[Athens]], [[Greece]]
* [[2006 Winter Olympics]] were held in [[Turin]], [[Italy]]
* [[2008 Summer Olympics]] were held in [[Beijing]], [[China]]

''2010s''
* [[2010 Winter Olympics]] were held in [[Vancouver]], [[Canada]]
* [[2010 Summer Youth Olympics]] were held in [[Singapore]]
* [[2012 Summer Olympics]] Will be held in [[London]], [[United Kingdom]]
* [[2014 Winter Olympics]] Will be held in [[Sochi]], [[Russia]]
* [[2016 Summer Olympics]] Will be held in [[Rio de Janerio]], [[Brazil]]

====Association Football====
''International''
''2000s''
* [[Euro 2000]] is won by [[France national football team|France]]
* [[2002 FIFA World Cup]] is won by [[Brazil national football team|Brazil]]
* [[Euro 2004]] is won by [[Greece national football team|Greece]]
* [[2006 FIFA World Cup]] is won by [[Italy national football team|Italy]]
* [[Euro 2008]] is won by [[Spain national football team|Spain]]
* [[2010 FIFA World Cup]] is won by Spain
* [[2010 FIFA World Cup]] is held in [[South Africa]] - the first African nation to ever host this tournament

''Domestic''
''2000s''
* [[2000 FIFA Club World Cup]] is won by [[Sport Club Corinthians Paulista]]
* [[2005 FIFA Club World Cup]] is won by [[São Paulo FC]]
* [[2006 FIFA Club World Cup]] is won by [[Sport Club Internacional|International]]
* [[2007 FIFA Club World Cup]] is won by [[AC Milan]]
* [[2008 FIFA Club World Cup]] is won by [[Manchester United]]
* [[2009 FIFA Club World Cup]] is won by [[F.C. Barcelona|Barcelona]]

====Athletics====
''2000s''
* [[Usain Bolt]] broke various world records including the [[100 meter dash]] at the [[2009 World Championships]], setting the record of 9.58 Seconds.
* United States won all Three Olympic Medal Tables for the Athletics.
* A record low amount of Athletes failing drug tests occurred in 2008 for Athletes, with only one recordedly failing a drug test in the Women's Long Jump.

====Basketball====
''2000s''
*[[2000 NBA Finals]] - [[Los Angeles Lakers]] defeated the [[Indiana Pacers]]
*[[2001 NBA Finals]] - Los Angeles Lakers defeated the [[Philadelphia 76ers]]
*[[2002 NBA Finals]] - Los Angeles Lakers defeated the [[New Jersey Nets]]
*[[2003 NBA Finals]] - [[San Antonio Spurs]] defeated the New Jersey Nets
*[[2004 NBA Finals]] - [[Detroit Pistons]] defeated the Los Angeles Lakers
*[[2005 NBA Finals]] - San Antonio Spurs defeated the Detroit Pistons
*[[2006 NBA Finals]] - [[Miami Heat]] defeated the [[Dallas Mavericks]]
*[[2007 NBA Finals]] - San Antonio Spurs defeated the [[Cleveland Cavaliers]]
*[[2008 NBA Finals]] - [[Boston Celtics]] defeated the Los Angeles Lakers
*[[2009 NBA Finals]] - Los Angeles Lakers defeated the [[Orlando Magic]]
*[[2010 NBA Finals]] - Los Angeles Lakers defeated the Boston Celtics

====Cycling====
''2000s''
*[[2000 Tour de France]] - started in France Futuroscope, France (winner United States [[Lance Armstrong]])
*[[2001 Tour de France]] - started in France Dunkerque, France (winner United States [[Lance Armstrong]])
*[[2002 Tour de France]] - started in Luxembourg (winner United States [[Lance Armstrong]])
*[[2003 Tour de France]] - started in France Paris, France (winner United States [[Lance Armstrong]])
*[[2004 Tour de France]] - started in Belgium Liège, Belgium (winner United States [[Lance Armstrong]])
*[[2005 Tour de France]] - started in France Vendée, France (winner United States [[Lance Armstrong]])
*[[2006 Tour de France]] - started in France Strasbourg, France (winner Spain [[Oscar Pereiro]])
*[[2007 Tour de France]] - started in United Kingdom London, United Kingdom (winner Spain [[Alberto Contador]])
*[[2008 Tour de France]] - started in France Brest, France (winner Spain [[Carlos Sastre]])
*[[2009 Tour de France]] - started in Monaco, Monaco (winner Spain [[Alberto Contador]])
*[[2010 Tour de France]] - started in Rotterdam, Netherlands (winner Spain [[Alberto Contador]])

====Golf====
''2000s''
*the 2002 Ryder Cup was won by Europe 15 and a half to USA's 12 and a half.
*the 2004 Ryder Cup was won by Europe 18 and a half to USA's 9 and a half.
*the 2006 Ryder Cup was won by Europe again 18 and a half to USA's 9 and a half
*the 2008 Ryder Cup and last this decade was won by USA 16 and a half to Europe's 11 and a half.

====Rugby Union====
''2000s''
*[[2003 Rugby World Cup]] - host [[Australia]] (winner [[England national rugby union team|England]] defeated [[Australia national rugby union team|Australia]])
*[[2007 Rugby World Cup]] - host [[France]] (winner [[South Africa national rugby union team|South Africa]] defeated [[England national rugby union team|England]])

''2010s''
*[[2011 Rugby World Cup]] - host [[New Zealand]]

====Tennis====
''2000s''
*[[Roger Federer]] wins 16 grand slam titles (4 Australian Open titles, 1 French Open title, 6 Wimbledon titles, and 5 U.S. Open titles) to beat Pete Sampras' record.

*[[Rafael Nadal]] beats Roger Federer at the 2008 Wimbledon final with a score of 6-4,6-4,6-7(5),6-7(8),9-7. People consider this match the greatest tennis match of all-time. The match lasted for 8 hours (with 2 rain delays).

*Roger Federer played Andy Roddick in the 2009 Wimbledon final for his 15th Grand Slam championship. Roddick won the first set 6-4, then after a 6-2 Roddick tiebreak lead, Federer came back and won the 2nd set 7-6 and the 3rd set 7-6. Roddick then won the 4th set 6-3. Federer led Roddick 15-14 in the 5th set, finally broke Roddick and won the 5th set 16-14.

*At the Wimbledon Championships 2010, John Isner and Nicolas Mahut completed the [[Isner–Mahut match at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships|longest tennis match in history]]. Isner won 6–4, 3–6, 6–7(7), 7–6(3), 70–68.

====Formula One====
*F1-Michael Schumacher wins World Championship for the third time at Suzuka, Japan 2000 in a Ferrari F1-2000, Ferrari's first driver's championship in 21 years

*Ralph Dale Earnhardt, Sr. (Dale Earnhardt) passes away after a last-lap crash during the Daytona 500 in February 2001

====Aquatics====
*Michael Phelps won six gold medals in the 2004 Olympics, and a record eight in the 2008 Olympics (some of those medals coming from split-second wins). Meanwhile back in the 2000 games, Dara Torres and Jenny Thompson got a bronze medal each after they made a 1 in a million occurrence of finishing the race both at the exact same time.

====American Football====
*[[Super Bowl XXXIV|2000 Super Bowl XXXIV]] - [[St. Louis Rams]] defeated the [[Tennessee Titans]]
*[[Super Bowl XXXV|2001 Super Bowl XXXV]] - [[Baltimore Ravens]] defeated the [[New York Giants]]
*[[Super Bowl XXXVI|2002 Super Bowl XXXVI]] - [[New England Patriots]] defeated the St Louis Rams
*[[Super Bowl XXXVII|2003 Super Bowl XXXVII]] - [[Tampa Bay Buccaneers]] defeated the [[Oakland Raiders]]
*[[Super Bowl XXXVIII|2004 Super Bowl XXXVIII]] - New England Patriots defeated the [[Carolina Panthers]]
*[[Super Bowl XXXIX|2005 Super Bowl XXXIX]] - New England Patriots defeated the [[Philadelphia Eagles]]
*[[Super Bowl XL|2006 Super Bowl XL]] - [[Pittsburgh Steelers]] defeated the [[Seattle Seahawks]]
*[[Super Bowl XLI|2007 Super Bowl XLI]] - [[Indianapolis Colts]] defeated the [[Chicago Bears]]
*[[Super Bowl XLII|2008 Super Bowl XLII]] - [[New York Giants]] defeated the New England Patriots
*[[Super Bowl XLIII|2009 Super Bowl XLIII]] - Pittsburgh Steelers defeated the [[Arizona Cardinals]]
*[[Super Bowl XLIV|2010 Super Bowl XLIV]] - [[New Orleans Saints]] defeated the Indianapolis Colts

====National Hockey League====
*[[2000 Stanley Cup Finals|2000 Stanley Cup]] - [[New Jersey Devils]] defeated the [[Dallas Stars]]
*[[2001 Stanley Cup Finals|2001 Stanley Cup]] - [[Colorado Avalanche]] defeated the New Jersey Devils
*[[2002 Stanley Cup Finals|2002 Stanley Cup]] - [[Detroit Red Wings]] defeated the [[Carolina Hurricanes]]
*[[2003 Stanley Cup Finals|2003 Stanley Cup]] - New Jersey Devils defeated the [[Mighty Ducks of Anaheim]]
*[[2004 Stanley Cup Finals|2004 Stanley Cup]] - [[Tampa Bay Lightning]] defeated the [[Calgary Flames]]
* 2005 Stanley Cup - Season cancelled due to [[2004–05 NHL lockout|labour dispute]]
*[[2006 Stanley Cup Finals|2006 Stanley Cup]] - Carolina Hurricanes defeated the [[Edmonton Oilers]]
*[[2007 Stanley Cup Finals|2007 Stanley Cup]] - [[Anaheim Ducks]] defeated the [[Ottawa Senators]]
*[[2008 Stanley Cup Finals|2008 Stanley Cup]] - Detroit Red Wings defeated the [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]
*[[2009 Stanley Cup Finals|2009 Stanley Cup]] - Pittsburgh Penguins defeated the Detroit Red Wings
*[[2010 Stanley Cup Finals|2010 Stanley Cup]] - [[Chicago Blackhawks]] defeated the [[Philadelphia Flyers]]

===Business and industry===
*[[Music Industry]]: The early 21st century has had a profound impact on the condition of music distribution. Recent advents in digital technology have fundamentally altered industry and marketing practices as well as players in unusual rapidity.
*Many American auto brands have been phased out such as [[Plymouth (automobile)|Plymouth]] by [[Chrysler]] in 2001 and [[Oldsmobile]] by [[General Motors]] in 2004. General Motors will also be phasing out [[Pontiac]] as well as [[Saturn]] by 2010. There has been speculation that [[Mercury (automobile)|Mercury]] by [[Ford]] could be phased out in the near future.
*The [[financial crisis of 2007–2010]] continues to affect the worldwide economy.

==Issues and concerns==
{{Unreferenced section|date=March 2008}}
''There are several points-of-view pertaining to the following items, all of which should be considered accordingly.''

Issues that have been frequently discussed and debated so far in this century include:
*'''[[Globalization]].''' Advances in [[telecommunications]] and [[transportation]], the expansion of [[capitalism]] and [[democratization|democracy]], and [[free trade]] agreements have resulted in unprecedented global economic and cultural integration. This has caused (and is continuing to cause) economic and cultural shifts which have been the subject of considerable controversy.
*'''[[Overpopulation]].''' The [[United Nations]] [http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/02/24/un.population/ estimates] that [[world population]] will reach 9.2 billion by mid-century. Such growth raises questions of ecological [[sustainability]] and creates many [[economic]] and [[political]] disruptions. In response, many countries have adopted policies which either force or encourage their citizens to have fewer children, and others have limited [[immigration]]. Considerable debate exists over what the ultimate carrying capacity of the planet may be; whether or not population growth containment policies are necessary; to what degree growth can safely occur thanks to increased economic and [[ecological efficiency]]; and how distribution mechanisms should accommodate demographic shifts. Evidence suggests that developed countries (such as Japan) suffer population ''implosion,'' and the population debate is strongly tied with discussions about the [[distribution of wealth]].
*''' [[Abortion]].''' Debates between "[[Pro-choice]]" and "[[Pro-life]]" factions on the controversial procedure continue. The approximate number of induced abortions performed worldwide in 2003 was 42 million.<ref name="Worldwide">{{cite journal |first=Gilda |last=Sedgh |coauthors=Stanley Henshaw, Susheela Singh, Elisabeth Åhman and Iqbal H. Shah |year=2007 |month=October |title=Induced abortion: estimated rates and trends worldwide |journal=[[The Lancet]] |volume=370 |issue=9595 |pages=1338–1345 |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61575-X |pmid=17933648 |url=http://media.mcclatchydc.com/smedia/2007/10/17/13/Chang-Guttmacher_Institute_abortion_report.source.prod_affiliate.91.pdf |format=PDF|accessdate=2008-12-02}}</ref>
*'''[[LGBT rights by country or territory|Gay rights]]''' are a major political issue in many places, with [[same sex marriage]] being legalized in several jurisdictions during the first decade of the century, but outlawed by constitutional amendment in other places. Meanwhile, some countries such as [[Uganda]] moved to toughen their laws against any sort of [[homosexuality|homosexual]] behavior. Political battles over pro- or anti-gay legislation provoked much activism in the streets and on the Internet.
*'''[[Dysgenics]].''' Due to the negative correlation between [[fertility and intelligence]], human genetic integrity may be deteriorating, lowering the intellectual capacity of the average human.<ref name="PBS">{{cite web| title = William Shockley 1910–1989| work = A Science Odyssey People and Discoveries| publisher = PBS online| year= 1998| url = http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/btshoc.html| accessdate = 2006-11-13}}</ref><ref name = "Shockley">[[William Shockley, Roger Pearson]]: ''Shockley on Eugenics and Race: The Application of Science to the Solution of Human Problems'' [[Scott-Townsend Publishers]], ISBN 978-1878465030</ref>
*'''[[Poverty]].''' Poverty remains the root cause of many of the world's other ills, including [[famine]], [[disease]], and insufficient [[education]]. Poverty contains many self-reinforcing elements (for instance, poverty can make education an unaffordable luxury, which tends to result in continuing poverty) that various aid groups hope to rectify in this century. [[Microcredit]] lending has also started to gain a profile as a useful anti-poverty tool.
*'''[[Disease]].''' [[AIDS]], [[tuberculosis]] and [[malaria]] each kill over a million people annually. [[HIV]] remains without a cure or vaccine, and is growing rapidly in India and much of the African continent. [[Antibiotic resistance]] is a growing concern for organisms such as [[tuberculosis]]. Other diseases, such as [[SARS]], [[ebola]], and [[flu]] variations, are also causes for concern. The [[World Health Organization]] has [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3524824.stm warned] of a possible coming flu [[pandemic]] resulting from [[Avian influenza|bird flu]] [[mutation]]s. In 2009, the outbreak of [[2009 flu pandemic|swine flu]] in [[Mexico]] and later around the world caused widespread panic and concern, and is currently still a problem.
*'''[[War]] and [[terrorism]].''' [[Ongoing wars|Active conflicts]] continue around the world, including civil wars in the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] (the largest war since [[World War II]]), [[Chechnya]], [[Côte d'Ivoire]], [[Somalia]], [[Senegal]], [[Colombia]], and [[Sudan]] (mainly in [[Darfur]]). The [[September 11, 2001 attacks|9/11 terrorist attacks]] triggered invasions of [[War in Afghanistan (2001–present)|Afghanistan]] and partially and controversially [[2003 invasion of Iraq|Iraq]]. The [[War on Terrorism]] has seen controversies over [[civil liberties]], accusations of [[torture]], continued terrorist attacks and ongoing instability, violence, and military occupation. Violence continues in the [[Arab–Israeli conflict]]. Considerable concern remains about [[nuclear proliferation]], especially in [[Iran]] and [[North Korea]], and the availability of [[weapons of mass destruction]] to rogue groups.
* '''[[Global warming]].''' Climate scientists have postulated that the earth is currently undergoing significant [[anthropogenic]] (human-induced) [[global warming]]. [http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/306/5702/1686] The resulting economic and ecological costs are hard to predict. Some scientists argue that human-induced global warming risks considerable losses in biodiversity and ecosystem services unless considerable sociopolitical changes are introduced, particularly in patterns of mass consumption and transportation. Others, however, doubt or deny human influence and counter-action were in effect significant, or question whether global warming will actually be a significant detriment to the planet.
* '''[[Power in international relations]].''' Issues surrounding the cultural, economic, and military dominance of the United States and its role in the world community have become even more pointed given its recent military activities, problematic relations with the [[United Nations]], disagreement over several international treaties, and its economic policies with regard to globalization. Integration of the [[European Union]] and the [[African Union]] have proceeded.
* '''[[Intellectual property]].''' The increasing popularity of digital formats for entertainment media such as movies and music, and the ease of copying and distributing it via the [[Internet]] and [[peer-to-peer]] networks, has raised concerns in the media industry about [[copyright infringement]]. Much debate is proceeding about the proper bounds between protection of [[copyright]], [[trademark]] and [[patent]] rights versus [[fair use]] and the [[public domain]], where some argue that such laws have shifted greatly towards intellectual property owners and away from the interests of the general public in recent years, while others say that such legal change is needed to deal with a perceived threat of new technologies against the rights of authors and artists (or, as others put it, against the outmoded business models of the current entertainment industry). [[Domain name]] "cybersquatting" and access to patented drugs and generics to combat epidemics in third-world countries are other IP concerns.
* '''[[Technology]]''' developments show no sign of ending. [[Cybernetics|Communications and control]] technology continues to augment the intelligence of individual humans, collections of humans, and machines. Cultures are forced into the position of sharply defining humanity and determining boundaries on desire, thought, communication, behavior, and manufacturing. Some, notably [[Ray Kurzweil]], have predicted that by the middle of the century there will be a [[Technological Singularity]] if [[artificial intelligence]] that outsmart humans is created. If these AIs then create even smarter AIs technological change could accelerate in ways that are impossible for us to foresee. (However, gradual and simultaneous use of AI technology to increase our own intelligence might prevent this from ever occurring.)
* '''[[Fossil fuel]]s''' are becoming scarce and more expensive, due to the escalating [[demand (economics)|demand]] for [[petroleum]] ("oil") and oil-based products such as [[gasoline]] and [[kerosene]], unmatched by production. Discovery of new [[oil field]]s has not been sufficient to sustain current levels of production, and some fear that the earth may be running out of economically viable oil, pressing for alternatives. As [[Biofuel|Agrofuel]], one possible alternative, yields further hazards for the environment and endangers food security, debate is far from over.
* '''[[NATO–Russia relations]]''' seem to remain strained as the "Western Alliance" and NATO square off with Russia and other nations over international policy and the future of the ex-Soviet sphere. An Eastern Europe Missile Defense Shield, military and social conflicts in former Yugoslavia and the Caucasus (particularly Georgia and Chechnya), fossil fuel infrastructures like the [[Nabucco pipeline]] and the future of nuclear arsenals are among the topics that have strained the relations between the two sides with eerie reminders reminiscent of the Cold War.

The [[United Nations]] lists global issues on its [http://www.un.org/issues/ agenda] and lists a set of [http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/ Millennium Development Goals] ([[Millennium Development Goals|MDG]]s) to attempt to address some of these issues.

==Astronomical events (passed or to come) in the 21st century==
===List of the long total solar eclipses===
* [[Solar eclipse of July 22, 2009]], [[saros cycle|saros]] 136, 6 min 38.8 s. The longest of the century.
* [[Solar eclipse of August 2, 2027]], of 6 min 23 s, saros 136.
* [[Solar eclipse of August 12, 2045]], of 6 min 06 s, saros 136.
* [[Solar eclipse of August 24, 2063]], of 5 min 49 s, saros 136.
* [[Solar eclipse of May 11, 2078]], of 5 min 40 s, saros 139.
* [[Solar eclipse of May 22, 2096]], of 6 min 07 s, saros 139.

===Other phenomena===
''2000s''
* Wednesday, May 7, 2003: [[Transit of Mercury]], the first of this century.
* Wednesday, August 27, 2003: Closed approach of [[Mars]], closest since the [[middle Paleolithic]].
* Tuesday, June 8, 2004: First [[transit of Venus]] for 122 years.
* November 8, 2006: [[Transit of Mercury]].
* December 23, 2007: [[Conjunction (astronomy and astrology)#2007|grand conjunction]] a galactic conjunction which happens every 26,000 years.
* 2009: [[Triple conjunction]] [[Jupiter]]–[[Neptune]].

''2010s''
* 2010/2011: Triple conjunction Jupiter-[[Uranus]].
* July 12, 2011: Neptune completes its first orbit since [[discovery of Neptune|its discovery]] on September 23, 1846.
* Wednesday, June 6, 2012: Transit of [[Venus]] to occur a second time (and last time) this century.
* May 9, 2016: Transit of [[Mercury (planet)|Mercury]].
* Monday, August 21, 2017 [http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/5MCSEmap/2001-2100/2017-08-21.gif] : First total [[solar eclipse]] of the 21st century for the United States, and the first visible in the continental US since February 26, 1979 [http://sunearth.gsfc.nasa.gov/eclipse/5MCSEmap/1901-2000/1979-02-26.gif].
* November 11, 2019: [[Transit of Mercury]].

''2020s''
* 2024 (plus or minus 5 years): Next predicted return of Comet [[12P/Pons-Brooks]].
* 2025/2026: Triple conjunction [[Saturn]]-Neptune.
* Friday, April 13, 2029: The [[asteroid]] [[99942 Apophis]] (previously better known by its [[provisional designation]] 2004 MN<sub>4</sub>) will pass within 30,000&nbsp;km (18,600&nbsp;mi) of the Earth.

''2030s''
* November 13, 2032: [[Transit of Mercury]].
* 2037/2038: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Uranus.
* November 7, 2039: [[Transit of Mercury]].

''2040s''
* 2041/2042: Triple conjunction [[Mars]]-Uranus.
* October 1, 2044: [[Occultation]] of [[Regulus]] by Venus. The last was on July 7, 1959. After 2044, the next occultation of Regulus by Venus would occur on July 22, [[32nd century|3126]], although some sources claim it will occur again on October 6, [[23rd century|2271]].
* 2047/2048: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Neptune.
* May 7, 2049: [[Transit of Mercury]].

''2050s''
* November 9, 2052: [[Transit of Mercury]].

''2060s''
* July 2061: Next return of [[Halley's Comet]].
* 2063: Triple conjunction Mars-Uranus.
* November 11, 2065: [[Transit of Mercury]].
* November 22, 2065: At 12:45 UTC, Venus will occult Jupiter. This event will be the first [[occultation]] of a planet by another since January 3, 1818. This event will be very difficult to observe, because the elongation of Venus and Jupiter from the Sun on that date will be only 7 degrees.
* 2066: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Uranus.
* July 15, 2067: At 11:56 UTC, Mercury will occult Neptune. This rare event will be very difficult to observe, because of the constant low elongation of Mercury from the Sun, and the magnitude of Neptune always under the limit of visibility with the naked eye.

''2070s''
* 2071/2072: Triple conjunction Mars-Neptune.
* November 14, 2078: [[Transit of Mercury]].
* 2079: Triple conjunction Saturn-Uranus.
* August 11, 2079: At 01:30 UTC, Mercury will occult [[Mars]].

''2080s''
* Friday, November 10, 2084: [[Transit of Earth from Mars|Transit of Earth]] as seen from Mars, the first and the only one in this century.
* November 7, 2085: [[Transit of Mercury]].
* 2085/2086: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Neptune.
* October 27, 2088: At 13:43 UTC, Mercury will occult Jupiter.

''2090s''
* 2088/2089: Triple conjunction Mars-Neptune.
* 2093: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Uranus.
* April 7, 2094: At 10:48 UTC, Mercury will occult Jupiter.
* May 8, 2095: [[Transit of Mercury]].
* November 10, 2098: [[Transit of Mercury]].

==Pop cultural references to the remaining years of the 21st century==
===Doomsday Scenarios===

*[[2012 phenomenon|2012]] &ndash; Many people believe the world will undergo a great transformation on December 21, 2012. The exact nature of the transformation is not agreed on, but this Doomsday Prediction is the most-known doomsday theories so far, making the date highly anticipated and watched.<ref name="usa">{{cite news|author=G. Jeffrey MacDonald|url=http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2007-03-27-maya-2012_n.htm|title=Does Maya calendar predict 2012 apocalypse?|work=USA Today|date=March 27, 2007|accessdate=2009-10-14}}</ref> This originated with the idea of that date being the end of the Mayan calendar.

*[[99942 Apophis|2036]] &ndash; An asteroid (Apophis) was initially believed to have a chance of impacting Earth in 2029. With further study, this possibility was ruled out; however, there is a chance that Apophis will pass close to the earth, altering its path to impact the Earth in 2036. The chances of this occurring are estimated at 1 in 250,000.

===Television and film===
* [[t.A.T.u]] Video [[Beliy Plaschik]] Is set "Sometime in the 21st century"
* The new series of [[Doctor Who]] which began in 2005 depicts many fictional events that take place in the 21st century.
* The television series ''[[seaQuest DSV]]'' takes place between the years 2018 and 2032.
* In the sequel to ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'', a joint American-Soviet space expedition is sent to Jupiter in ''[[2010 (film)|2010]]''.
* The [[Adult Swim]] series [[Sealab 2021]] takes place in the year 2021.
* The events of ''[[Stargate SG-1]]'' continue into the early 21st century.
* ''[[Stargate Atlantis]]'' is set in the early 21st century.
* ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]'': is set in the year 2005. The subsequent third season of the [[The Transformers (TV series)|Transformers series]] takes place after the events of the movie.
* The Japanese anime show ''[[The Super Dimension Fortress Macross]]'' spans the years 1999 to 2012 (its final episode takes place in January 2012, and a direct to video epilogue featurette takes place in September 2012). Its prequel and sequels take place in 2008 (''[[Macross Zero]]''), 2040 (''[[Macross Plus]]''), 2045–2046 (''[[Macross 7]]'') and 2059 (''[[Macross Frontier]]''). A dramatized historical fiction movie about the First Space War, ''[[The Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love?]]'', premieres in 2031.
* The American cartoon show ''[[Robotech]]'', composed from the footage of three unrelated anime series (including ''[[The Super Dimension Fortress Macross|Macross]]'', above) spans the years 1999 to 2015, 2030–2031 and 2044–2045.
* Part of the sequel ''[[Back to the Future Part II]]'' is set on October 21, 2015.
* The Japanese anime series ''[[Neon Genesis Evangelion (anime)|Neon Genesis Evangelion]]'' is also set in 2015.
* The film ''[[Blade Runner]]'' takes place in November 2019.
* The [[cult television|cult]] series ''[[Dark Angel (TV series)|Dark Angel]]'' is set in 2019.
* The film ''[[Daybreakers]]'' is set in 2019
* The film ''[[The Running Man]]'' starring [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]] is set in 2019.
* Both parts of the ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]'' episode "[[Past Tense (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)|Past Tense]]" take place in 2024.
* The dystopic sci-fi novel and film ''[[Metropolis (film)|Metropolis]]'' takes place in 2027.
* The film ''[[Children of Men]]'' is set in 2027.
* The [[anime]] universe of ''[[Ghost in the Shell]]'', its sequel ''[[Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence]]'', and anime television series based on the same premise (''[[Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex]]'' and ''[[Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. 2nd GIG]]''), are centered somewhere around 2029.
* ''[[The Terminator]]'' is set up during the early years of the 21st century in terms of the wars between humans & Skynet. Some of the intervening years are dealt with by the two sequels, ''[[Terminator 2: Judgment Day]]'' and ''[[Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines]]'', with the whole [[Media franchise|franchise]] building to a conclusion of the War in 2029.
* The 2002 version of ''[[The Time Machine]]'' has scenes that take place in the 2030 and 2037 NYC.
* The [[Doctor Who]] story ''[[The Enemy of the World]]'' is set in Australia in 2030.
* The comedy series [[Time Trumpet]] is set in 2031, and "looks back on" the first 30 years of the 21st century.
* The anime OAV series ''[[Bubblegum Crisis]]'' (2032–33), its sequel ''[[Bubblegum Crash]]'' (2034), and its TV-series re-imagining ''[[Bubblegum Crisis Tokyo 2040]]'' (2040).
* ''[[Demolition Man (film)|Demolition Man]]'' is set in 2032.
* ''[[I, Robot]]'' was set in 2035.
* Deep space vessel [[Event Horizon (film)|''Event Horizon'']] was sent to test an artificial wormhole ([[black hole]]) in deep space in the year 2040. The lost ship is found 7 years later by a rescue team on board the ship ''Lewis and Clark'' on low orbit around the planet [[Neptune]].
* ''[[The Outward Urge]]'' has a major nuclear war in 2044 and the first manned landing on [[Mars]] in 2094.
*[[Bollywood]] movie [[Love Story 2050]] was partly set in 2050.
* ''[[Minority Report (film)|Minority Report]]'' was set in April 2054.
* World War III ends in 2053 according to ''[[Star Trek: First Contact]]'', with 600,000,000 dead and most major cities destroyed.
* The 1998 remake of ''[[Lost in Space]]'' was set in 2058.
* Most of ''[[Star Trek: First Contact]]'' takes place in 2063. In Star Trek canon, the human [[Zefram Cochrane]] develops faster-than-light travel and makes first contact with [[Vulcan (Star Trek)|an alien race]] during this year.
*''[[Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within]]'' is set in 2065.
* The [[Doctor Who]] story ''[[The Moonbase]]'' is set in 2070.
* The Japanese anime show ''[[Cowboy Bebop]]'' is set in 2071.
* The Nicktoon ''[[My Life as a Teenage Robot]]'' is set in 2072.
* ''[[Equilibrium (film)|Equilibrium]]'' is set in 2072.
* The [[Doctor Who]] story ''[[Day of the Daleks]]'' is set in 2073, albeit in an alternative [[Alternate history (fiction)|timeline]].
* The film ''[[Total Recall (film)|Total Recall]]'', and the [[Doctor Who]] story ''[[Warriors of the Deep]]'' are set in 2084.
* In ''[[Star Trek: Insurrection]]'', it is discovered that the [[Ba'ku]] moved to the [[Briar Patch (Star Trek)|Briar Patch]] at some point in this century.
* ''[[The Jetsons]]'' is supposed to take place in the late 21st century.
* ''[[Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century (film)|Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century]]'' and its sequels takes place in the years 2049–2054.
* The final episode of ''[[The X-Files]]'' sets [[2012 doomsday prediction|December 22, 2012]] as the date for alien colonization.
* The CGI animated series ''[[Cubix: Robots for Everyone]]'' takes place in 2040.
* The [[Doctor Who]] story ''[[The Seeds of Death]]'' is set in 2090.
* The [[Doctor Who]] story ''[[Nightmare of Eden]]'' is set in 2096.
* The events of ''[[Leprechaun 4: In Space]]'' takes place in 2096.
* The 2008 [[Disney Channel]] movie ''[[Minutemen (film)|Minutemen]]'' is based between the dates September 3, 2005 and September 8, 2008.
* The tagline of [[Torchwood]] series one is: "The 21st century is when everything changes. And we have to be ready." In series two, the second sentence changes to: "And Torchwood is ready."
* The 2008 film ''[[Repo! The Genetic Opera]]'' is set in the year 2056. Plastic surgery and a fictional pain-killing drug known as Zydrate are commonplace as fashion statements and addictions.
* ''The events of the Sci-Fi anime [[Planetes]] is set in the year 2075.
* The 2009 disaster film [[2012 (film)|2012]] takes place in the year 2012. It is based on an end of the world event on [[2012 phenomenon|December 21, 2012]].

===Computer and video games===
* The events of [[Metal Gear Solid]] take place in 2005, [[Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty]] takes places in the years 2007 (Tanker Chapter) and 2009 (Big Shell Chapter), and the events of [[Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots]] take place in 2014.
* ''[[Duke Nukem 3D]]'' is set in the early 21st century and contains evidence (such as calendars) that suggest it is more specifically set in October or December 2007
* ''[[Uplink (video game)|Uplink]]'' is set on the internet of the year 2010.
* ''[[Perfect Dark Zero]]'' is set in 2020 and ''[[Perfect Dark]]'' is set in 2023.
* The races in ''[[San Francisco Rush 2049]]'' take place in 2049.
* The events of ''[[Deus Ex]]'' take place in 2052.
* The levels "Breaking and Entering" and "You Genius, U-Genix" in ''[[TimeSplitters: Future Perfect]]'' take place in 2052.
* ''[[System Shock]]'' is set in 2072.
* ''[[Future Cop: LAPD]]'' takes place in the year 2098.
* The discovery of the Zohar in ''[[Xenosaga]]'' takes place in 20XX.
* The events of ''[[Ace Combat 4]]'' take place in 2008
* The Great War of the ''[[Fallout (video game)|Fallout]]'' universe starts on October 23, 2077; [[nuclear bombs]] are launched, nobody knows who the aggressor was.
* The events of ''[[Shin Megami Tensei III: Nocturne]]'' occur in 20XX.
* In ''[[Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction]]'', the 2nd Korean War starts early in this century.
* ''[[Mercenaries 2: World in Flames]]'', takes place sometime around between 2008 and 2010.
* The [[Mega Man Classic]] series takes place sometime in the 21st century, represented as 20XX.
* The ''[[Mega Man Battle Network (series)|MegaMan Battle Network]]'' series takes place in 20XX.
* The arcade game ''[[Robotron: 2084]]'' takes place in the year 2084.
* ''[[One Must Fall|One Must Fall: 2097]]'' takes place in 2097.
* The ''[[Mr. Driller]]'' series (and ''[[Dig Dug: Digging Strike]]'', a game in its related timeline) takes place in 20XX.
* The events of ''[[Half-Life (video game)|Half-Life]]'' takes place around 2000–2009.
* The events of ''[[Half-Life 2]]'' and its [[expansion pack]]s takes place around the early 2020s.
* The video game and cartoon [[Homestar Runner#20X6|20X6]] of [[Homestar Runner]] supposedly takes place in the seventh year of an unspecified decade in the 21st century.
* The [[nuclear holocaust]] of the ''[[AquaNox]]'' universe takes place in mid-21st century, followed by the massive exodus of survivors underwater.
* ''[[Trauma Center: Under the Knife]]'' and ''[[Trauma Center: Second Opinion]]'' take place in 2018, when AIDS and cancer supposedly have cures.
* The events of ''[[Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow]]'' takes place in this time; specifically 2035. The sequel, ''[[Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow]]'' takes place one year later, in 2036. These are the only two [[Castlevania]] titles to have taken place beyond the early to mid 20th century thus far.
* The events of ''[[Tokyo Xtreme Racer: Drift]]'' and ''[[Tokyo Xtreme Racer: Drift 2]]'' take place during 20XX, when Japanese highways have supposedly been opened as racing circuits.
* The events of ''[[Namco × Capcom]]'' takes place during 20XX.
* In the [[Command & Conquer: Tiberian series]], the 2nd Tiberium War between the [[Global Defense Initiative]] and the [[Brotherhood of Nod]] begins in 2030. The 3rd Tiberium War takes place 17 years later in 2047, which also sees the arrival of the [[Scrin]] to Earth.
* ''Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter 2'' (GRAW 2) takes place in 2014
* The events of ''Grand Theft Auto IV'' take place in the fall of 2008.
* The fictional story line of [[Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2]], supposedly takes place in 2016.
* The events that are set in the 'present' of both ''[[Assassin's Creed]]'' and ''[[Assassin's Creed 2]]'' take place in the year 2012. The plot of both games builds toward a worldwide catastrophe prophesied to occur on December 21, 2012. See ''[[2012 phenomenon]]''

===Internet===
*Stinkoman 20X6, of [[Homestar Runner]] fame, takes place in the seventh year of an unspecified decade in the 21st century.

===Novels===
* [[Arthur C. Clarke]]'s ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey]]'', ''[[2010: Odyssey Two]]'' and ''[[2061: Odyssey Three]]''.
* [[Tad Williams]]' ''[[Otherland]]'' series is set at some undefined point in the 21st century
* [[Neal Stephenson]]'s ''[[The Diamond Age]]'' is also set in the 21st century, after some disaster befell the centralized telephone network. This led people to build a decentralized network, which they used to transfer money, thus destroying normal methods of taxation and bringing down most large governments.
* ''Red Mars'' of [[Kim Stanley Robinson]]'s [[Mars trilogy]] begins in 2027.
* Some books by [[Arkady and Boris Strugatsky]] are set in 21st century
* ''[[The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress]]'' by [[Robert A. Heinlein]] takes place in 2075.
* ''[[Turnabout (novel)|Turnabout]]'' by [[Margaret Peterson Haddix]], is set in 2005–06, 2057, and mainly 2085.

==Decades and years==
===2000s===
''Main Article'': [[2000s (decade)]]
*[[September 11 attacks|September 11, 2001]] &ndash; Al-Qaeda terrorists hijack four aircraft in the US, and deliberately crash them; three of them reach their targets, two hit the WTC, another the Pentagon, with one more missing its target, a total of 3,000 people die from the attacks.
*December 26, 2004 &ndash; the [[2004 Indian Ocean earthquake]] killed up to 250,000 people.
*December, 2007 &ndash; the [[late-2000s recession]] begins, as the United States would see its biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.
*June 11, 2009 &ndash; The [[2009 flu pandemic]] begins - it was declared a pandemic less than two months into the spread by the [[World Health Organization]].

===2010s===
{{Main|2010s}}
{{DecadesAndYears}}
{{Centuries}}

==References==
{{Refimprove|date=November 2006}}
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
*[http://stateoftheworld.reuters.com Reuters - The State of the World] The story of the 21st century
*[http://www.longbets.org/ Long Bets] Foundation to promote long-term thinking
*[http://www.longnow.org/ Long Now] Long-term cultural institution
*[http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa006&articleID=00031010-F7DA-1304-B72683414B7F0000 Scientific American Magazine (September 2005 Issue) The Climax of Humanity]
*[http://www.futuretimeline.net http://www.futuretimeline.net] - a timeline of the 21st century and beyond

{{DEFAULTSORT:21st Century}}
[[Category:21st century| ]]
[[Category:3rd millennium]]
[[Category:Centuries]]

[[af:21ste eeu]]
[[als:21. Jahrhundert]]
[[am:21ኛው ምዕተ ዓመት]]
[[ar:ملحق:قرن 21]]
[[an:Sieglo XXI]]
[[ast:Sieglu XXI]]
[[az:XXI əsr]]
[[zh-min-nan:21 sè-kí]]
[[be:21 стагоддзе]]
[[be-x-old:21 стагодзьдзе]]
[[bs:21. vijek]]
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[[ca:Segle XXI]]
[[cv:XXI ĕмĕр]]
[[cs:21. století]]
[[cy:21ain ganrif]]
[[da:21. århundrede]]
[[de:21. Jahrhundert]]
[[et:21. sajand]]
[[el:21ος αιώνας]]
[[es:Siglo XXI]]
[[eo:21-a jarcento]]
[[eu:XXI. mendea]]
[[fa:سده ۲۱ (میلادی)]]
[[hif:21st century]]
[[fo:21. øld]]
[[fr:XXIe siècle]]
[[fy:21e ieu]]
[[ga:21ú haois]]
[[gv:21oo eash]]
[[gd:21mh Linn]]
[[gl:Século XXI]]
[[gan:21世紀]]
[[ko:21세기]]
[[hy:21-րդ դար]]
[[hr:21. stoljeće]]
[[io:21ma yarcento]]
[[id:Abad ke-21]]
[[ia:Seculo 21]]
[[os:XXI æнус]]
[[is:21. öldin]]
[[it:XXI secolo]]
[[he:המאה ה-21]]
[[jv:Abad kaping 21]]
[[ka:XXI საუკუნე]]
[[kk:21 ғ.]]
[[kw:21ns kansbledhen]]
[[sw:Karne ya 21]]
[[kv:XXI нэм]]
[[ku:Sedsala 21'an]]
[[la:Saeculum 21]]
[[lv:21. gadsimts]]
[[lb:21. Joerhonnert]]
[[lt:XXI amžius]]
[[lij:XXI secolo]]
[[li:Einentwintegste iew]]
[[jbo:20xyxymoi]]
[[lmo:XXI secul]]
[[hu:21. század]]
[[mk:21 век]]
[[mi:Rautau 21]]
[[mr:इ.स.चे २१ वे शतक]]
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[[nds-nl:21e eeuw]]
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[[frr:21. iirhunert]]
[[no:21. århundre]]
[[nn:2000-talet]]
[[nrm:XXIe s.]]
[[nov:21esmi sekle]]
[[oc:Sègle XXI]]
[[mhr:XXI курым]]
[[uz:XXI asr]]
[[nds:21. Johrhunnert]]
[[pl:XXI wiek]]
[[pt:Século XXI]]
[[ksh:21. Joohunndot]]
[[ro:Secolul al XXI-lea]]
[[qu:21 ñiqin pachakwata]]
[[ru:XXI век]]
[[sah:XXI үйэ]]
[[se:2000-lohku (jahkečuohti)]]
[[stq:21. Jierhunnert]]
[[sq:Shekulli XXI]]
[[scn:Sèculu XXI]]
[[simple:21st century]]
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[[sl:21. stoletje]]
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[[sh:21. vijek]]
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[[fi:2000-luku]]
[[sv:2000-talet]]
[[ta:21ம் நூற்றாண்டு]]
[[kab:Lqern wis XXI]]
[[tt:21. yöz]]
[[th:คริสต์ศตวรรษที่ 21]]
[[tr:21. yüzyıl]]
[[tk:21-nji asyr]]
[[uk:21 століття]]
[[ur:2000صبم]]
[[vec:XXI secoło]]
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[[fiu-vro:21. aastagasada]]
[[wa:21inme sieke]]
[[yi:21טער י"ה]]
[[yo:Ọ̀rúndún 21k]]
[[zh-yue:21世紀]]
[[diq:Seserra 21ine]]
[[bat-smg:XXI omžios]]
[[zh:21世纪]]

Revision as of 17:28, 29 September 2010

Template:Systemic bias

The 21st century is the current century of the Christian Era or Common Era in accordance with the Gregorian calendar. It began on January 1, 2001 and will end on December 31, 2100.[1]

Turn of the 21st century (2001–present)

In contemporary history, the 21st century began with the United States as the sole superpower in the absence of the Soviet Union, with five other entities, China, India, the European Union, Brazil and the Russian Federation as potential superpowers in the coming decades. As the Cold War was over and terrorism on the rise exemplified by the September 11, 2001 attacks at the World Trade Center in New York City; the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia; followed by the 2001 anthrax attacks that commenced as letters containing anthrax spores were mailed from Princeton, New Jersey to ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, the New York Post, and the National Enquirer; the United States and its allies turned their attention to the Middle East.

Digital technology, in its early stages of mainstream use in the 1980s and 1990s, became widely accepted by most of the world, though concerns about stress and antisociality from the overuse of mobile phones, the Internet and related technologies remains controversial.[2]

In 2009, 4.6 billion people globally, or nearly half the world's population used cell phones,[3] and in 2005, over a billion people worldwide used the Internet.[4]

Pronunciation

Regarding pronunciation of 21st-century years, academics suggest that since former years such as 1805 and 1905 were commonly pronounced as "eighteen oh" or "nineteen oh" five, the year 2005 should naturally have been pronounced as "twenty oh-five".[5] A less common variation would have been "twenty nought-five".

The year 2010 "twenty ten" is suggested by many, with the "two thousand x" pronunciation reserved only for the "two thousands" decade of 2000s[6][7] and the Vancouver Olympics, taking place in 2010, is being officially referred to by Vancouver 2010 as "the twenty-ten olympics", while 2011[5] and 2013 are popular as well. The latest timeframes for change are usually placed at 2020.[5]

According to The Stanley Kubrick archives, in the press release for his film 2001: A Space Odyssey, film director Stanley Kubrick included specific instructions for journalists to refer to the movie as "two thousand and one" instead of the commonplace pronunciation of "twenty-oh-one". Kubrick said he did this in the hope that if the film became popular, it would influence the pronunciation of that year, which some have theorized is partially the case.[5]

Significant events

Politics, war, and genocide

Politics in this century have so far been divisive, in the United States and to a lesser degree the whole Western World between the ideologies of liberalism and conservatism; more precisely, the Democratic Party vs the Republican Party.

Genocide still remains a problem in the century with the concern of the situation in Darfur and the growing concern in Sri Lanka. Low estimates on the deaths in Darfur stand around 200,000 deaths with 2.5 million in displacement, there has been much outcry against the perpetrators, the Sudanese government, and the very weak international response. Also controversies from past genocides remain commonplace in the minds of victims and average people alike.

  • 1998–2002 – The Second Congo War continued into the early 21st century. A 1999 ceasefire quickly broke down and a UN peacekeeping mission, MONUC, was unable to control the fighting. Troops from Rwanda and Uganda continued to support rebel groups against the Democratic Republic of the Congo and rifts also grew between Rwanda and Uganda as they accused each other of supporting rival rebel groups as well. Laurent Kabila, president of the DRC, was assassinated in January 2002 and his son, Joseph Kabila, took power. Throughout 2002 steps were made towards peace and Rwanda and Uganda both removed their troops from the country. On December 17, 2002, a massive treaty officially ended the war. However, the DRC only holds power in less than half of the country, with most of the eastern and northern portions still controlled by rebel groups, where there is still significant infighting. In addition, Rwanda still supports anti-DRC rebels and anti-Rwandan rebels continue to operate from the DRC. The war killed an estimated 3.9 million people, displaced nearly 5.5 million, and led to a widespread and ongoing famine that continues to result in deaths. Severe human rights violations continue to be reported.
  • 2001 – Al-Qaeda terrorists hijacked 4 commercial airliners and crashed 3 of them into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon in the United States on September 11, killing nearly 3,000 people. The United States subsequently declared a War on Terrorism.
  • 2001–present – The U.S. and NATO invaded Afghanistan on October 7, 2001 and overthrew the Al-Qaeda-supportive Taliban government. Troops remained to install a democratic government, fight a slowly escalating insurgency, and to hunt for Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
  • 2002 – The International Criminal Court (ICC) was established on July 1.
  • 2002 – A series of bombings carried out by Islamic militants killed 202 people at the resort of Kuta, Bali, Indonesia on October 12.
  • 2003–present – In February 2003, a conflict in Darfur, Sudan began and soon escalated into full-scale war. It is soon considered the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. By 2008 it is believed that up to 400,000 people have been killed and over 2.5 million displaced. In 2005, the ICC decided that Darfur war criminals would be tried, and on July 14, 2008, Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir was charged with 5 accounts of crimes against humaninty and 2 accounts of war crimes, although the ICC currently has no power to enforce these charges.
  • 2003–2010 – The U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq on March 20, 2003 and overthrew the government of Saddam Hussein (who was executed by the Iraqi government on December 30, 2006). Coalition troops remain in the country to install a democratic government and fight an escalating insurgency. In addition to an insurgency against the American presence, Iraq also suffered from a civil war for several years. The war was soon seen as the central front of the War on Terror by many governments, despite growing international dissatisfaction with the war. The total death toll has been estimated at near 150,000 but these estimations are highly disputed, some guessing even over 1 million. After the U.S.-led coalition initiated a troop surge in 2007, casualty numbers have decreased significantly. Combat ended, at least officially, in August 2010.
  • 2003–2005 – A series of nonviolent revolutions known as the colour revolutions overthrew governments in Georgia, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, and Lebanon.
  • 2004 – The European Union expanded by 10 countries, including 8 former communist countries, plus Malta and Cyprus.
  • 2004 – On March 11, bombings carried out by Islamic militants killed 191 people on the commuter rail system of Madrid, Spain.
  • 2005 – A series of bombings carried out by Islamic militants killed 56 people in London on July 7.
  • 2005 – Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip on September 11.
  • 2006–2008 – The dismantling of former Yugoslavia continues after Montenegro gained independence on June 3, 2006 and Kosovo declared independence on February 17, 2008. However, Kosovo's independence is disputed by Russia and many of its allies and is currently only partially recognized.
  • 2006 – On July 12, Hezbollah militants crossed the border of Lebanon and captured two Israeli troops. Israel responded by sending troops across the border and bombing Hezbollah strongholds, while Hezbollah fired missiles on towns in northern Israel, approximately 6 each day. At the end of the war 300–450 Lebanese civilians, 600 Hezbolla troops, 44 Israeli civilians and 121 Israeli soldiers died. A ceasefire was signed on August 14, after which Israeli troops withdrew from Lebanon. Many military sources in Israel have warned about the danger of a new Israeli-Lebanese conflict back in the year 2000, when Israel has withdrawn from Lebanon.
  • 2006 – On July 11, bombs planted on the train system in Mumbai exploded, killing 209 people.
  • 2006 – North Korea conducted its first nuclear test on October 9.[8] This was preceded by years of political wrangling with the U.S. over the status of their nuclear program.
  • 2007 – A civil war escalated in the Gaza Strip throughout June, which resulted in Hamas eventually driving most Fatah-loyal forces from the Strip. In reaction, Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas dismissed Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniyeh and dissolved the Hamas-ruled parliament. Scattered conflict continues.
  • 2008 – Armed conflict in August 2008 between Georgia on one side, and the Russian Federation together with Ossetians and Abkhazians on the other. Russia officially recognized independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
  • 2008–2009 – Israel launches a military campaign on the Gaza Strip, due to continuous rocket launching on south Israeli cities by radical elements of the Hamas.
  • 2009 –Barack Obama becomes the first African-American president of the United States
  • 2009 – North Korea tests a second nuclear device.
  • 2010 – Polish president Lech Kaczynski and 95 others died in an air disaster in western Russia. Investigations into the accident are still ongoing.

Science and technology

Space exploration

Medicine

Personal technology

Other

  • 2003 – Discovery of an old dwarf human species, Homo floresiensis by modern humans (published October 2004).
  • 2004 – The first ever recorded hurricane in the South Atlantic forms.
  • 2007 – The IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) releases its Fourth Assessment Report.
  • 2009 – Details of Darwinius, a vital ‘missing link’ in human evolution dated to 47 million years ago, are published.
  • 2010 - A team of scientists, including DNA researcher Craig Venter, create the first synthetic lifeform.

Conflicts

Worldwide deaths from war and terrorist attacks

  • Second Congo War, approximately 1.8 million deaths (3.8 million since 1998)
  • Iraq War, a wide variation in the number of casualties quoted, ranging from the tens of thousands, up to approximately 1 million deaths,[10] Iraq Body Count project, ORB survey of Iraq War casualties.
  • Darfur conflict, approximately 400,000 deaths
  • Civil War in Côte d'Ivoire, 3,000 deaths
  • September 11, 2001 19 members of al-Qaeda hijacked four commercial airliners, intentionally crashing two of them into The World Trade Centers in New York City, and one into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. The fourth plane's intended target was either the White House or Capitol Building, but passengers aboard the plane resisted the initiatives of the hijackers and crashed the plane into a field in Pennsylvania. 2,997 people from 90 different countries died.
  • December 13, 2001 attacks, Terrorist attack on Indian Parliament, terrorists storm the Indian Parliament Building in New Delhi and kill six police officers.
  • October 12, 2002 Bali terrorist bombings kill 202 people.
  • March 11, 2004 terrorist attacks shake several train stations on Spain's capital Madrid, killing 191 people and injuring 1,247.
  • 7 July 2005 London bombings, Suicide terrorist attacks shake London transport system killing 52 people and injuring 700.
  • 29 October 2005 Delhi bombings, terrorists attack various markets in New Delhi, killing 61 people and injuring 188 more, right before the start of the festival season in India.
  • July 11, 2006 six bombs explode in train stations in Mumbai, killing 190.
  • November 2008 Mumbai attacks, a series of ten coordinated terrorist attacks across Mumbai, India, killing 195 people and injuring 290 more.

Civil Unrest

2000s

2010s

Natural disasters

The tsunami striking Ao Nang in Thailand on December 26, 2004.

2000s

2010s

  • 2010 Haiti earthquake - At least 230,000 are killed in Haiti after a massive earthquake on January 12, 2010. As of late February 2010, the death toll is expected to rise. Three million people were made homeless.
  • 2010 Chile earthquake - A massive earthquake, magnitude 8.8, strikes the central Chilean coast on February 27, 2010.
  • 2010 Yushu earthquake - A large 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck the Yushu region of China in Qinghai near Tibet, on April 14, 2010, killing over 2200 people.
  • 2010 eruption of Eyjafjallajökull - A massive ash cloud is formed by the eruption of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajökull, on April 14, 2010 grounding flights across northwest Europe. Scientists began recording volcanic activity there in 2009 which increased through March 2010 culminating in the second phase eruption in April.
  • 2010 Pakistan floods - Began in July 2010 after record heavy monsoon rains. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan was worst affected. At least 1,600 people were killed, thousands were rendered homeless, and more than thirteen million people were affected.[11][12][13][14][15] Estimates from rescue service officials suggest the death toll may reach 3,000 victims.[16]

Man made disasters

File:STS-107 reentry.jpg
The space shuttle Columbia disintegrates on reentry, February 1, 2003.
  • The 2009 H1N1 (swine flu) flu pandemic was the worst epidemic or pandemic of the decade, killing nearly 12,000.
  • The Black Saturday bushfires - the deadliest bushfires in Australian history took place across the Australian state of Victoria on and around Saturday 7 February 2009 during extreme bushfire-weather conditions, resulting in 173 people killed and, more than 500 injured and around 7,500 homeless. The fires came after Melbourne recorded the highest-ever temperature (46.4°C, 115°F) of any capital city in Australia. The majority of the fires were ignited by either fallen or clashing power lines or deliberately lit.
  • On April 10, 2010, Polish President Lech Kaczyński, his wife and 95 other people, including dozens of government officials are killed in a plane crash.
  • On April 20, 2010 an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig, operating in the Gulf of Mexico off the coast of Louisiana, left eleven crewmen dead and resulted in a fire that sank the rig and caused a massive-scale oil spill [17] that may become one of the worst environmental disasters in United States history.[18] On June 18, 2010 oceanographer John Kessler said that the crude gushing from the well contains 40 percent methane, compared to about 5 percent found in typical oil deposits. Methane is a natural gas that could potentially suffocate marine life and create "dead zones" where oxygen is so depleted that nothing lives. "This is the most vigorous methane eruption in modern human history," Kessler said.[19] On June 20 an internal BP document was released by Congress revealing that BP estimated the flow could be as much as 100,000 barrels (4,200,000 US gallons; 16,000 cubic metres) per day under the circumstances that existed since the April 20 blowout.[20][21]

New countries

Some territories have gained independence during the 21st century. This is a list of sovereign states that have gained independence in the 21st century and have been recognized by a majority of foreign governments.

One country has declared independence but it has not been recognized by most countries.

Sports

Olympic Games

2000s

2010s

Association Football

International 2000s

Domestic 2000s

Athletics

2000s

  • Usain Bolt broke various world records including the 100 meter dash at the 2009 World Championships, setting the record of 9.58 Seconds.
  • United States won all Three Olympic Medal Tables for the Athletics.
  • A record low amount of Athletes failing drug tests occurred in 2008 for Athletes, with only one recordedly failing a drug test in the Women's Long Jump.

Basketball

2000s

Cycling

2000s

Golf

2000s

  • the 2002 Ryder Cup was won by Europe 15 and a half to USA's 12 and a half.
  • the 2004 Ryder Cup was won by Europe 18 and a half to USA's 9 and a half.
  • the 2006 Ryder Cup was won by Europe again 18 and a half to USA's 9 and a half
  • the 2008 Ryder Cup and last this decade was won by USA 16 and a half to Europe's 11 and a half.

Rugby Union

2000s

2010s

Tennis

2000s

  • Roger Federer wins 16 grand slam titles (4 Australian Open titles, 1 French Open title, 6 Wimbledon titles, and 5 U.S. Open titles) to beat Pete Sampras' record.
  • Rafael Nadal beats Roger Federer at the 2008 Wimbledon final with a score of 6-4,6-4,6-7(5),6-7(8),9-7. People consider this match the greatest tennis match of all-time. The match lasted for 8 hours (with 2 rain delays).
  • Roger Federer played Andy Roddick in the 2009 Wimbledon final for his 15th Grand Slam championship. Roddick won the first set 6-4, then after a 6-2 Roddick tiebreak lead, Federer came back and won the 2nd set 7-6 and the 3rd set 7-6. Roddick then won the 4th set 6-3. Federer led Roddick 15-14 in the 5th set, finally broke Roddick and won the 5th set 16-14.
  • At the Wimbledon Championships 2010, John Isner and Nicolas Mahut completed the longest tennis match in history. Isner won 6–4, 3–6, 6–7(7), 7–6(3), 70–68.

Formula One

  • F1-Michael Schumacher wins World Championship for the third time at Suzuka, Japan 2000 in a Ferrari F1-2000, Ferrari's first driver's championship in 21 years
  • Ralph Dale Earnhardt, Sr. (Dale Earnhardt) passes away after a last-lap crash during the Daytona 500 in February 2001

Aquatics

  • Michael Phelps won six gold medals in the 2004 Olympics, and a record eight in the 2008 Olympics (some of those medals coming from split-second wins). Meanwhile back in the 2000 games, Dara Torres and Jenny Thompson got a bronze medal each after they made a 1 in a million occurrence of finishing the race both at the exact same time.

American Football

National Hockey League

Business and industry

  • Music Industry: The early 21st century has had a profound impact on the condition of music distribution. Recent advents in digital technology have fundamentally altered industry and marketing practices as well as players in unusual rapidity.
  • Many American auto brands have been phased out such as Plymouth by Chrysler in 2001 and Oldsmobile by General Motors in 2004. General Motors will also be phasing out Pontiac as well as Saturn by 2010. There has been speculation that Mercury by Ford could be phased out in the near future.
  • The financial crisis of 2007–2010 continues to affect the worldwide economy.

Issues and concerns

There are several points-of-view pertaining to the following items, all of which should be considered accordingly.

Issues that have been frequently discussed and debated so far in this century include:

  • Globalization. Advances in telecommunications and transportation, the expansion of capitalism and democracy, and free trade agreements have resulted in unprecedented global economic and cultural integration. This has caused (and is continuing to cause) economic and cultural shifts which have been the subject of considerable controversy.
  • Overpopulation. The United Nations estimates that world population will reach 9.2 billion by mid-century. Such growth raises questions of ecological sustainability and creates many economic and political disruptions. In response, many countries have adopted policies which either force or encourage their citizens to have fewer children, and others have limited immigration. Considerable debate exists over what the ultimate carrying capacity of the planet may be; whether or not population growth containment policies are necessary; to what degree growth can safely occur thanks to increased economic and ecological efficiency; and how distribution mechanisms should accommodate demographic shifts. Evidence suggests that developed countries (such as Japan) suffer population implosion, and the population debate is strongly tied with discussions about the distribution of wealth.
  • Abortion. Debates between "Pro-choice" and "Pro-life" factions on the controversial procedure continue. The approximate number of induced abortions performed worldwide in 2003 was 42 million.[26]
  • Gay rights are a major political issue in many places, with same sex marriage being legalized in several jurisdictions during the first decade of the century, but outlawed by constitutional amendment in other places. Meanwhile, some countries such as Uganda moved to toughen their laws against any sort of homosexual behavior. Political battles over pro- or anti-gay legislation provoked much activism in the streets and on the Internet.
  • Dysgenics. Due to the negative correlation between fertility and intelligence, human genetic integrity may be deteriorating, lowering the intellectual capacity of the average human.[27][28]
  • Poverty. Poverty remains the root cause of many of the world's other ills, including famine, disease, and insufficient education. Poverty contains many self-reinforcing elements (for instance, poverty can make education an unaffordable luxury, which tends to result in continuing poverty) that various aid groups hope to rectify in this century. Microcredit lending has also started to gain a profile as a useful anti-poverty tool.
  • Disease. AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria each kill over a million people annually. HIV remains without a cure or vaccine, and is growing rapidly in India and much of the African continent. Antibiotic resistance is a growing concern for organisms such as tuberculosis. Other diseases, such as SARS, ebola, and flu variations, are also causes for concern. The World Health Organization has warned of a possible coming flu pandemic resulting from bird flu mutations. In 2009, the outbreak of swine flu in Mexico and later around the world caused widespread panic and concern, and is currently still a problem.
  • War and terrorism. Active conflicts continue around the world, including civil wars in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (the largest war since World War II), Chechnya, Côte d'Ivoire, Somalia, Senegal, Colombia, and Sudan (mainly in Darfur). The 9/11 terrorist attacks triggered invasions of Afghanistan and partially and controversially Iraq. The War on Terrorism has seen controversies over civil liberties, accusations of torture, continued terrorist attacks and ongoing instability, violence, and military occupation. Violence continues in the Arab–Israeli conflict. Considerable concern remains about nuclear proliferation, especially in Iran and North Korea, and the availability of weapons of mass destruction to rogue groups.
  • Global warming. Climate scientists have postulated that the earth is currently undergoing significant anthropogenic (human-induced) global warming. [1] The resulting economic and ecological costs are hard to predict. Some scientists argue that human-induced global warming risks considerable losses in biodiversity and ecosystem services unless considerable sociopolitical changes are introduced, particularly in patterns of mass consumption and transportation. Others, however, doubt or deny human influence and counter-action were in effect significant, or question whether global warming will actually be a significant detriment to the planet.
  • Power in international relations. Issues surrounding the cultural, economic, and military dominance of the United States and its role in the world community have become even more pointed given its recent military activities, problematic relations with the United Nations, disagreement over several international treaties, and its economic policies with regard to globalization. Integration of the European Union and the African Union have proceeded.
  • Intellectual property. The increasing popularity of digital formats for entertainment media such as movies and music, and the ease of copying and distributing it via the Internet and peer-to-peer networks, has raised concerns in the media industry about copyright infringement. Much debate is proceeding about the proper bounds between protection of copyright, trademark and patent rights versus fair use and the public domain, where some argue that such laws have shifted greatly towards intellectual property owners and away from the interests of the general public in recent years, while others say that such legal change is needed to deal with a perceived threat of new technologies against the rights of authors and artists (or, as others put it, against the outmoded business models of the current entertainment industry). Domain name "cybersquatting" and access to patented drugs and generics to combat epidemics in third-world countries are other IP concerns.
  • Technology developments show no sign of ending. Communications and control technology continues to augment the intelligence of individual humans, collections of humans, and machines. Cultures are forced into the position of sharply defining humanity and determining boundaries on desire, thought, communication, behavior, and manufacturing. Some, notably Ray Kurzweil, have predicted that by the middle of the century there will be a Technological Singularity if artificial intelligence that outsmart humans is created. If these AIs then create even smarter AIs technological change could accelerate in ways that are impossible for us to foresee. (However, gradual and simultaneous use of AI technology to increase our own intelligence might prevent this from ever occurring.)
  • Fossil fuels are becoming scarce and more expensive, due to the escalating demand for petroleum ("oil") and oil-based products such as gasoline and kerosene, unmatched by production. Discovery of new oil fields has not been sufficient to sustain current levels of production, and some fear that the earth may be running out of economically viable oil, pressing for alternatives. As Agrofuel, one possible alternative, yields further hazards for the environment and endangers food security, debate is far from over.
  • NATO–Russia relations seem to remain strained as the "Western Alliance" and NATO square off with Russia and other nations over international policy and the future of the ex-Soviet sphere. An Eastern Europe Missile Defense Shield, military and social conflicts in former Yugoslavia and the Caucasus (particularly Georgia and Chechnya), fossil fuel infrastructures like the Nabucco pipeline and the future of nuclear arsenals are among the topics that have strained the relations between the two sides with eerie reminders reminiscent of the Cold War.

The United Nations lists global issues on its agenda and lists a set of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to attempt to address some of these issues.

Astronomical events (passed or to come) in the 21st century

List of the long total solar eclipses

Other phenomena

2000s

2010s

  • 2010/2011: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Uranus.
  • July 12, 2011: Neptune completes its first orbit since its discovery on September 23, 1846.
  • Wednesday, June 6, 2012: Transit of Venus to occur a second time (and last time) this century.
  • May 9, 2016: Transit of Mercury.
  • Monday, August 21, 2017 [2] : First total solar eclipse of the 21st century for the United States, and the first visible in the continental US since February 26, 1979 [3].
  • November 11, 2019: Transit of Mercury.

2020s

2030s

2040s

  • 2041/2042: Triple conjunction Mars-Uranus.
  • October 1, 2044: Occultation of Regulus by Venus. The last was on July 7, 1959. After 2044, the next occultation of Regulus by Venus would occur on July 22, 3126, although some sources claim it will occur again on October 6, 2271.
  • 2047/2048: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Neptune.
  • May 7, 2049: Transit of Mercury.

2050s

2060s

  • July 2061: Next return of Halley's Comet.
  • 2063: Triple conjunction Mars-Uranus.
  • November 11, 2065: Transit of Mercury.
  • November 22, 2065: At 12:45 UTC, Venus will occult Jupiter. This event will be the first occultation of a planet by another since January 3, 1818. This event will be very difficult to observe, because the elongation of Venus and Jupiter from the Sun on that date will be only 7 degrees.
  • 2066: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Uranus.
  • July 15, 2067: At 11:56 UTC, Mercury will occult Neptune. This rare event will be very difficult to observe, because of the constant low elongation of Mercury from the Sun, and the magnitude of Neptune always under the limit of visibility with the naked eye.

2070s

  • 2071/2072: Triple conjunction Mars-Neptune.
  • November 14, 2078: Transit of Mercury.
  • 2079: Triple conjunction Saturn-Uranus.
  • August 11, 2079: At 01:30 UTC, Mercury will occult Mars.

2080s

  • Friday, November 10, 2084: Transit of Earth as seen from Mars, the first and the only one in this century.
  • November 7, 2085: Transit of Mercury.
  • 2085/2086: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Neptune.
  • October 27, 2088: At 13:43 UTC, Mercury will occult Jupiter.

2090s

  • 2088/2089: Triple conjunction Mars-Neptune.
  • 2093: Triple conjunction Jupiter-Uranus.
  • April 7, 2094: At 10:48 UTC, Mercury will occult Jupiter.
  • May 8, 2095: Transit of Mercury.
  • November 10, 2098: Transit of Mercury.

Pop cultural references to the remaining years of the 21st century

Doomsday Scenarios

  • 2012 – Many people believe the world will undergo a great transformation on December 21, 2012. The exact nature of the transformation is not agreed on, but this Doomsday Prediction is the most-known doomsday theories so far, making the date highly anticipated and watched.[29] This originated with the idea of that date being the end of the Mayan calendar.
  • 2036 – An asteroid (Apophis) was initially believed to have a chance of impacting Earth in 2029. With further study, this possibility was ruled out; however, there is a chance that Apophis will pass close to the earth, altering its path to impact the Earth in 2036. The chances of this occurring are estimated at 1 in 250,000.

Television and film

Computer and video games

Internet

  • Stinkoman 20X6, of Homestar Runner fame, takes place in the seventh year of an unspecified decade in the 21st century.

Novels

Decades and years

2000s

Main Article: 2000s (decade)

  • September 11, 2001 – Al-Qaeda terrorists hijack four aircraft in the US, and deliberately crash them; three of them reach their targets, two hit the WTC, another the Pentagon, with one more missing its target, a total of 3,000 people die from the attacks.
  • December 26, 2004 – the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake killed up to 250,000 people.
  • December, 2007 – the late-2000s recession begins, as the United States would see its biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.
  • June 11, 2009 – The 2009 flu pandemic begins - it was declared a pandemic less than two months into the spread by the World Health Organization.

2010s

References

  1. ^ http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/astronomical-information-center/millennium
  2. ^ "Workplace trends: Technology increases workplace stress". Office World News. 1999.
  3. ^ "4.6 Billion Cell Phone Users" (PDF). Mobilewhack.com.
  4. ^ "Stats - Web Worldwide". ClickZ.
  5. ^ a b c d Experts clash over millennium bugbearThe Times Cite error: The named reference "preferMC" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ http://maxspeak.org/mt/archives/002457.html
  7. ^ The Naughty Noughties, or something
  8. ^ O'Neil, John; Onishi, Norimitsu (2006-10-15). "US confirms nuclear claim". New York Times. Retrieved 2006-10-16.
  9. ^ "Total mobile subscribers top 1.8 billion". MobileTracker Cell Phone News and Reviews. May 18, 2005. Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-31. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |coauthors= (help)
  10. ^ Update on Iraqi Casualty Data by Opinion Research Business, January 2008
  11. ^ Bodeen, Christopher (August 8, 2010). "Asia flooding plunges millions into misery". The Associated Press. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  12. ^ Masood, Salman and Adam B. Ellick. Floods in Pakistan Kill at Least 700. NYTimes.
  13. ^ "UN voices Pakistan flood fears as death toll soars". BBC. 31 July 2010. Retrieved 31 July 2010. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help)
  14. ^ Khan, Ismail (July 30, 2010). "400 Killed in Flooding in Pakistan, Officials Say". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 July 2010. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  15. ^ Thousands trapped by Pakistan floods; 900 dead
  16. ^ Deaths From Pakistan Floods May Reach 3,000, Rescue Service Official Says
  17. ^ "BP Will Pay For Gulf Oil Spill Disaster, CEO Says". NPR. 2010-05-03. Retrieved 2010-05-03.
  18. ^ "Choppy Seas Hinder Effort To Contain Oil Spill", National Public Radio, April 30, 2010
  19. ^ "Oil spill full of methane, adding new concerns". msnbc. 2010-06-18. Retrieved 2010-06-20.
  20. ^ "Document Shows BP Estimates Spill up to 100,000 Bpd". ABC News. 2010-06-20. Retrieved 2010-06-20. [dead link]
  21. ^ http://globalwarming.house.gov/files/WEB/flowrateBP.pdf. Retrieved 2010-06-20. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  22. ^ "Manila hostage incident victim name list". Hong Kong's Information Services Department Press Release. 24 August 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  23. ^ "HKSAR flag at half-mast August 24". HKSAR government. August 24, 2010. Retrieved August 25, 2010.
  24. ^ "HKSAR flag continues to fly at half-mast August 25 and August 26". HKSAR government. August 24, 2010. Retrieved August 25, 2010.
  25. ^ Grolier- the new book of knowledge, section "E"
  26. ^ Sedgh, Gilda (2007). "Induced abortion: estimated rates and trends worldwide" (PDF). The Lancet. 370 (9595): 1338–1345. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61575-X. PMID 17933648. Retrieved 2008-12-02. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  27. ^ "William Shockley 1910–1989". A Science Odyssey People and Discoveries. PBS online. 1998. Retrieved 2006-11-13.
  28. ^ William Shockley, Roger Pearson: Shockley on Eugenics and Race: The Application of Science to the Solution of Human Problems Scott-Townsend Publishers, ISBN 978-1878465030
  29. ^ G. Jeffrey MacDonald (March 27, 2007). "Does Maya calendar predict 2012 apocalypse?". USA Today. Retrieved 2009-10-14.