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30 years ago Tomorrow’s World predicted 2025

January 1, 2025
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BBC A man and a woman, with the man wearing sunglassesBBC

This fictional 2025 couple, along with the man’s ‘VR headset’, featured in the Tomorrow’s World episode in 1995.

In 1995, the BBC’s Tomorrow’s World programme decided to predict what the world would look like 30 years later, in 2025.

The show, which is no longer broadcast, featured one of the most famous scientists of the age, Prof Stephen Hawking, who predicted: “By 2025 we can expect big changes.”

The programme team agreed, suggesting a raft of world-shaking innovations from hologram surgery to space junk gel.

So, with the help of some experts – and the benefit of three decades of hindsight – let’s take a look at how much of today’s world that Tomorrow’s World successfully anticipated.

The ‘Cyberspace Riots’ of 2005

A burning car in the middle of a riot

The programme predicted there would be riots after financial markets “succumb to viral terrorism”.

In 1995, the world wide web was really taking off – a development Tomorrow’s World thought would bring future trouble.

They predicted “business barons” and banks would take control of the internet by 2000, establishing a “supernet” which they restricted access to.

That, in turn, would prompt hacks, viruses and even riots.

Tomorrow’s World in 1995 predicted riots would happen after the creation of the “supernet”

Verdict – The internet has remained – mostly – open, and there have been no riots but there is little doubt the actions of hackers have caused misery for many people.

One thing the programme didn’t predict was the role of the nation state hackers like North Korea, expertly told in the BBC’s Lazarus Heist podcast.

Cybersecurity is hugely important for governments and companies, and people who are suspicious of banks have championed cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

Asteroid mining and space junk gel

Tomorrow’s World predicted the rise of asteroid mining, and the death of an astronaut from space junk

The programme speculated space mining would become a lucrative industry, with companies excavating asteroids near Earth for precious metals.

The show also suggested space junk would become such a problem it would not be safe for astronauts. The answer – a gigantic foam gel to slow down debris.

Verdict – Well, there is no super foam gel and the problem of space junk is an acute one. There is also no space mining industry – but that could change.

Futurist Tom Cheesewright is an optimist about mining beyond our planet.

“The potential riches are unfathomable and the technology is entirely within our grasp,” he said.

The super surgeons and their robots

A robot operating on a patient on a hospital bed

Tomorrow’s World thought patients would be operated on by robots that were remotely operated by a surgeon from a far-off location

Tomorrow’s World predicted by 2004, a law would be passed for all UK hospitals to publish a league table of surgeon success rates. The top surgeons would become so popular, and so well paid, it would make no sense for them to travel to patients.

Instead, patient holograms would be sent to them and the surgeon would operate using “spacial gloves”. At the patient’s end, a robot would perfectly mimic the movements of the surgeon.

Verdict – They didn’t get it exactly right but robots are helping with surgeries.

A smart speaker with a floating head

A man speaking to a floating holographic head - a section of the Tomorrow's World programme

Alexa? Siri? Google? Not quite.

The programme featured a man of the future (wearing a fetching VR headset), his wife and a young girl in what appears to be modern-day London.

In one section, the floating head of a woman comes out of a “smart speaker” to tell the man it has been a year since his holiday to “Indo Disney.” She encourages him to take another holiday via a “shuttle to Bangalore” – which would only take 40 minutes.

Verdict – Ultra-fast travel feels as far away as ever, but holograms, smart speakers and VR headsets are becoming ever more prevalent.

Banking using a microchip in your arm

A woman at a future bank, speaking to a hologram with the sign Barlands Bank

How do you feel about withdrawing some money using a chip implanted in your arm?

Elsewhere in the programme, we were given a vision of the future of banking.

It featured a woman going to a bank, complaining there were no humans, and then withdrawing 100 “Euro marks.” The bank gives her the money after scanning a chip in her arm.

Verdict – Banking has indeed become more and more automated. And though paying via microchips inside the human body is a reality, other technologies – mainly fingerprint and face scanning – are much more widely used.

In 1995, Tomorrow’s World offered a vision of self-driving cars and the failure of electric vehicles by 2025

Memories from the presenters

Getty Images Monty DonGetty Images

Monty Don is a familiar face to many who enjoy gardening programmes

Gardeners’ World star Monty Don was one of the presenters on that Tomorrow’s World programme 30 years ago. His segment predicted a huge restoration of British woodlands thanks to genetic engineering and multi-storey agri facilities, leading to the return of animals including the brown bear.

Reflecting on it now, he told BBC News that his part of the programme was “utopian” and “naive”.

Looking towards the next 30 years, he is pleased the current generation of young people are “much more sensitive to climate change” and thinks people will be growing more of their own food by 2055.

He added: “Tomorrow’s World was by definition geared towards the way that mankind could change and improve the world, whereas what we have really learnt since then is that mankind has a habit of making things worse, particularly environmentally, and we have to work with nature rather than try modify and control it.”

Presenter Monty Don and on a split screen with a brown bear

Monty Don talking about the reintroduction of brown bears in the 1995 programme.

Vivienne Parry was another presenter on the prediction show, and fronted a section about medicine.

She fondly remembers filming it – and the rather limited visual effects of the day. “I had to stay absolutely still. I had a set of glasses on with a little camera attached. They were stuck on my face via a big blob of black sticky stuff.

“It was this fantastically hot day, and this black stuff started to leak down my face and I couldn’t move. Someone from make-up came along with a long cane with cotton wool on the end to get it off.”

Vivienne has been involved with Genomics England since 2013, and highlights that some of the predictions from the 1995 Tomorrow’s World about genomic sequencing have come true, as she works on a research study to help diagnose and treat genetic conditions.

Presenter Vivienne Parry on the Tomorrow's World programme from 1995

Can you see the black blob? While filming this sequence, Vivienne Parry and the make-up team had to get creative

So what could the world look like in 2055?

Futurist Tracey Follows thought the 1995 programme got a lot of big ideas right, but missed two of the biggest themes of the last 30 years – the spread of big tech and social media.

By 2055, she thinks many people will be “cognitively connected” – a hive mind of humans and technology via servers, which will help in the sharing of ideas.

“Brainstorming will literally be brainstorming, where you can share ideas by thinking them.”

Tom Cheesewright thinks two of the most exciting prospects for the next 30 years will be materials science and bioengineering.

In materials, the creation of devices that are even stronger, lighter and thinner could change the world, while bioengineering – married with tight regulation – has the power to transform medicine and tackle “some of the biggest challenges humanity faces – decarbonisation, clean water, food”.

So what do you think the world will look like in 30 years?

Whatever your answers, it would be wise to listen to what Prof Hawking said to Tomorrow’s World three decades ago.

“Some of these changes are very exciting, and some are alarming. The one thing that we can be sure of is that it will be very different, and probably not what we expect.”



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