NOTE: This is a guest post by Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus of The Breakthrough Institute
In the two years since
climate treaty talks fizzled in Copenhagen, the international community
finally seemed to be learning from its mistakes. A growing number of NGOs and academics pointed
to the lack of cheap and clean alternatives to fossil energy as the
underlying cause of the failure of Kyoto, cap and trade, and the
Emissions Trading Scheme in Europe. Business leaders like Bill Gates called for radical energy innovation as the key to feeding and electrifying the planet -- without overheating it. And in a recent BioScience article, a number of prominent ecologists issued a manifesto calling for an international embrace of "planetary opportunities" like urbanization and agricultural innovation, two keys to truly sustainable development.
Now,
in preparation for the Rio+20 Earth Summit next June, the UN appears to
be poised to take a giant step backwards. Last week officials announced that
the proposed Rio+20 framing document endorses the notion that there are
hard ecological limits -- "planetary boundaries" -- to human
development. When asked about the BioScience paper calling for a focus on planetary opportunities, Johan Rockstöm, the lead author of the planetary boundaries hypothesis, told a green blogger last week,
"We should not frame this crisis as an opportunity. This is not an
opportunity." Rockstrom added that he found the
"technology-will-solve-all- our-problems camp tiresome."
If
the United Nations were seeking to further alienate the rapidly-growing
developing world from common ecological action, it could do no better
than to embrace this hoary, unscientific Malthusianism. China has done
more than any nation in recent years to make solar, nuclear and wind
energy cheap. Brazil has become a soy powerhouse through agricultural
innovations that hold promise for increasing food production in Africa.
The last thing the UN should be telling the four out of ten human beings
who rely on wood and dung as their primary power sources is that we've
reached the limits to human development, and technology can't save you.
Per
capita food production has risen steadily ever since the 18th Century
aristocratic British economist Thomas Malthus called for greater
celibacy and cutting off assistance to the poor in the name of
environmental limits to technology. And yet, to this day, putting limits
on human development continues to appeal to those who have been wealthy
for so long that they have forgotten the material foundation of their
affluence and are delusional about their ability to live without it.
To
be sure, there are tipping points in nature, including in the climate
system, but there is no way for scientists to identify fixed boundaries
beyond which point human civilization becomes unsustainable for the
simple reason that there are no fixed boundaries. Humankind has
constantly transgressed and changed such boundaries through technology
and social systems. Writes Erle Ellis in a new Breakthrough Debate with Bill
McKibben, Nils Gilman, and others, "Human populations have been
sustained far beyond their 'natural limits' for millennia, not by
benevolent nature, but by increasingly engineered environments and
increasing use of energy."
What
the world offers are not bright lines but rather trade-offs -- often
difficult ones. By burning coal, for instance, poor nations can cheaply
and quickly develop in ways that better protect them from natural
disasters -- even as its emissions increase the risk of extreme weather
events in the future. In converting more forest land into farms, nations
increase living standards and food consumption -- even as they increase
emissions, deplete water resources, and send species into extinction.
Stop
and think for a moment about the basic elements of the planetary
boundaries hypothesis: apocalyptic fears of the future, a professed
desire to return to an earlier state of nature, hypocrisy about wealth,
appeals to higher authorities. These are the qualities of our worst
religions, not our best scientific theories.
If
the UN is to fulfill its promise of being a global leader, it must
direct humankind's powers into shared endeavors, like making clean
energy cheap, and agricultural innovation for adaptation to a hotter
world. The nations of the world will never unify around policies aimed
at slowing or reversing growth in order to return to the Holocene, but
they might come together around common technology investments to create a
better Anthropocene.
This
will require getting comfortable with humankind's role as high-tech
stewards of a rapidly-changing planet, and a new global ethic. Drawing
on recent discoveries in archeology, the two of us argue for a new
ecological worldview in the environmental magazine Orion (below).
It was technology that made us human. We have been engineering
ecosystems since before we were Homo sapiens, and will continue to do so
long into the future.
Faced
with serious ecological challenges, "saving the world" can no longer
mean protecting it as it once was but rather constantly re-creating it
through the intelligent application of our technologies. For
civilization to thrive in the Anthropocene, we must make the most of
them.