400 likes | 565 Views
Climate, Development, and Planetary Transition. Historic Descent or Global Civilization?. Expert Group Meeting UN Headquarters November 19, 2007. Overview. The Planetary Phase Transitions Scenarios The Great Transition. Earthland. the world as a single country!
E N D
Climate, Development, and Planetary Transition Historic Descent or Global Civilization? Expert Group Meeting UN Headquarters November 19, 2007
Overview The Planetary Phase Transitions Scenarios The Great Transition
Earthland the world as a single country! Dualistic, diverse, unequal, weakly governed, unable to act collectively even in the face of clear and present danger. And dangers there are plenty!
Earth’s Shrinking Biosphere1900-2000 AD Title Body text The Earth is the only home we have. With each new person added to our growing population, the amount of our living space decreases. Land Area hectare per/capita
Growth or Catastrophe • We don’t know how to live without growth: • It is our only sure recipe for overcoming the grotesque global inequality • No country, howsoever rich, knows how to survive without it • We will not live if growth continues on its existing pattern, because it leads to ecological destruction
The South Commission Were all humanity a single nation-state, the present North-South divide would make it an unviable, semi-feudal entity, split by internal conflicts. Its small part is advanced, prosperous, powerful; its much bigger part is underdeveloped, poor, powerless. A nation so divided within itself would be recognized as unstable. A world so divided should likewise be recognized as unstable. And the position is worsening, not improving.
Six billion characters… [for you] whatever is a reality today, whatever you touch and believe in and that seems real for you today, is going to be – like the reality of yesterday – an illusion tomorrow…. But [our reality] doesn't change! Do you see? That's the difference! Ours doesn't change, it can't change, it can never be different, never, because it is already determined, like this, for ever, that's what's so terrible! We are an eternal reality.
Earthland: Imagined Community • Globalization and Nationalism • Language, trade, travel • Nationalism and Identity • Falk: Stewards, Activists, Entrepreneurs, Visionaries • In the beginning, there is death
The beginning is like a god • Silent Spring 1962 • Thirteen Days 1962 • The Population Bomb 1968 • Tragedy of the Commons 1968 • The Closing Circle 1971 • Limits to Growth 1972 • The Shallow and the Deep 1972 • Stockholm UNCHE 1972 • First poster of the blue planet 1972
What Difference a Color Makes • I was terrified by its fragile appearance. (Ulf Merbold, Germany). • The atmosphere almost looks like an eggshell on an egg, it's so very thin. We know that we don't have much air, we need to protect what we have. (Eileen Collins, USA) • That beautiful, warm, living object looked so fragile, so delicate, that if you touched it with a finger it would crumble and fall apart. (James Irwin, USA) • The first day or so we all pointed to our countries. The third day we were pointing to our continents. By the fourth day we were only aware of one Earth. (Bin Salman aI-Saud, Saudi Arabia)
But Some Havent Heard Yet • in 30,000 words, only 30 (that is correct, 30), recognize that we now live in a unified world, “There is no longer division between what is foreign and what is domestic—the world economy, the world environment, the world AIDS crisis, the world arms race—they affect us all”. • “environment” mentioned exactly once. • a few references(all after 1992) to trade and technology. • Every President until JFK mentions the UN as a hope for the future -- but none thereafter. • aid mentioned positively in half the speeches (generally as charity from a great hearted nation)
SCENARIOS Branch Points Branch Points • Sources of Uncertainty • Ignorance • Surprise • Volition
Acceleration Take-off Phases of Transition Stabilization Indicators of development Time
Historical Transitions Planetary Phase c. 100 years ? Modern Era c. 1,000 years Complexity Early Civilization c. 10,000 years Stone Age c. 100,000 years 20,000 10,000 0 Years Before Present
Planetary Phase Accelerated Transitions Modern Era Early Civilization Stone Age 105 104103 102 Years Before Present
Planet Social Organization Nation City-state Tribe 105 104103 102 Years Before Present
Globalization Economic Basis Industrial capitalism Settled agriculture Hunting & gathering 105 104103 102 Years Before Present
Internet Communication Printing Writing Language 105 104103 102 Years Before Present
Planetary Transition • Global environmental change • Information technology • Collapse of USSR, hegemony of capitalism • WTO, multinationals, “Davos Man” • Earth Summit, NGOs, “Seattle Woman” Global Connectivity Take-off 1980- 1950 2000 2050
But Where are we Going? • From the Age of Plenty to the Age of Limits • The political economy of limits • Human solidarity and individual action
Conventional Worlds Great Transitions Barbarization market forces fortress world eco-communalism policy reform breakdown new sustainability Global Scenarios
Xenophobia Resentment Conflict Inequity Environment Barbarization
1 billion 30 1 Major Conflicts Social Equity Hunger 1980 2020 2060 1980 2020 2060 1980 2020 2060 Climate Ecosystems Water 550 4.5 billion 5 billion CO2(ppm) People in stress Forests (ha) 300 3 1980 2020 2060 1980 2020 2060 1980 2020 2060 Bending the Curve Development Peace Freedom
Limits of the Reform Path Policy Reformis feasible, in principle – the necessary technologies and policies are available But daunting, in practice – gradually bending highly unsustainable trends imposes immense challenges The critical uncertainty – where wouldthepolitical will come from? Reform may not be enough…..
The Great Transition A values-led scenario • Quality of life • Human solidarity • Ecological sensibility A pluralistic scenario
Population Technology Economy Governance Knowledge and Understanding Values and Needs Power Structure Culture Proximate and Ultimate Drivers Proximate Drivers Ultimate Drivers
consumption well-being rich throughput poor poverty spring dematerialization wedge equity magnet lifestyle wedge dematerialization wedge Tools for Transitions Market Forces Policy Reform Great Transition
Values Knowledge Social Economic Governance Technology Demographic Dimensions of Transition
Intergovernmental organizations Transnational corporations An aware and engaged public Civil society Change Agents
The future is always present, as a promise and a lure. Karl Popper Which worlddo we want?