TIME RUNNING OUT TO ENSURE SUSTAINABLE PROSPERITY FOR ALL
Over the last 50 years, the world's middle and upper
classes have more than doubled their consumption levels, and an
additional one to two billion people globally aspire to join the
consumer class. The planet cannot maintain such increases in
resource demand without serious consequences for both people and
ecosystems, concludes the Worldwatch Institute in State of the
World 2012: Moving Toward Sustainable Prosperity.
The book, the 29th in a series that Worldwatch began in 1984,
stresses that we must act quickly to redefine our understanding of
the 'good life' and redouble our efforts to make that life
sustainable.
'The Industrial Revolution gave birth to an economic growth
model rooted in structures, behaviors and activities that are
patently unsustainable,' said Worldwatch senior researcher, Michael
Renner, co-director of State of the World 2012. 'Mounting
ecosystem stress and resource pressures are accompanied by
increased economic volatility, growing inequality and social
vulnerability. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that the
economy no longer works for either people or the planet.'
Instead, we need to reprioritise basic needs and pursue true
sustainable prosperity: development that allows all human beings to
live with their fundamental needs met, with their dignity
acknowledged, and with abundant opportunity to pursue lives of
satisfaction and happiness, all without risk of denying others in
the present and the future the ability to do the same. This, in
turn, means not just preventing further degradation of Earth's
systems, but actively restoring them to full health.
With the United Nation's conference on sustainable development
taking place in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June, this is the year
to catalyse a move toward sustainable prosperity. The gathering,
more commonly known as Rio+20 for its commemoration of the
anniversary of the 1992 Rio Earth Summit, offers a chance to set
the course for an economic system that promotes the health of both
people and ecosystems. The themes for Rio+20 are: 1) a green
economy in the context of sustainable development and poverty
eradication, and 2) an institutional framework for sustainable
development.
'We are cautiously optimistic about the upcoming Rio
conference,' says Erik Assadourian, a senior fellow at Worldwatch
and co-director of State of the World 2012. 'But minor
shifts in policy and technology will not be enough to save
humanity. Rio+20 participants should re-consider the vision that
guides their deliberations. If we do not radically change our
consumer culture and collectively re-prioritise sustainable living,
we will be the agents of our own undoing.'
The aspirations of the original 1992 meeting in Rio collided
with a set of painfully sobering developments, including unfriendly
politics, orthodox economics, and a dominant culture of
consumerism. The 20 years since then have made it clear that
necessary change is not merely technical, but encompasses changes
in lifestyle, culture and politics.
The report's 35 contributors describe many of the currently
untenable social and economic patterns and explore opportunities
for creative alternatives on sustainability topics ranging from
agriculture, communication technologies, and biodiversity to
'green' construction, local politics and global governance.
Specific topics include:
- A green economy that works for
everyone: For industrial, emerging, and developing
countries, a green economy will mean different things. But they
have in common the need to create green jobs that offer a decent
living, and they all can benefit from policy innovations such as a
network of cooperative green innovation centres, a standard-setting
global 'top runner' programme, green financing and skills training,
and greater economic democracy.
- Degrowth in overdeveloped countries:
Humanity uses 1.5 Earths' worth of ecological capacity, with much
of that consumed by overdeveloped industrial countries. Sustainable
prosperity will require economic degrowth in these countries. This
can be achieved by a mix of tax shifting, shortening work weeks,
denormalising certain types of consumption, and de-marketising
certain sectors of the economy, such as food production and child
care.
- Inclusive and sustainable urban
development: Urban poverty is pervasive, and absolute
numbers are expanding in both the developed and developing worlds:
some 828 million people live in slums worldwide. Urban planning
needs to include strategies such as explicit and transparent
spatial plans, democratic engagement of the poor and
community-based organisations, and coordination across sectors,
especially affordable housing, transportation and economic
development.
- Sustainable transportation: Today
there are nearly 800 million cars on the world's roads, and in the
developing world transportation is the source of up to 80 per cent
of harmful air pollutants. A sustainable and socially progressive
alternative requires a shift toward denser cities that generally
require less motorised travel, investment in high-quality transit,
and support of vibrant, healthy communities by enabling walking and
cycling.
- Information and communications technologies
(ICTs): More than half of the world's population
lives in cities, and 90 per cent of urbanisation is occurring in
the developing world. ICTs can help cities become safer, cleaner
and more sustainable places to live, but they are currently
underutilised in both the developed and developing worlds.
Reversing this trend must go beyond the current public-private
partnerships and 'smart cities' projects by providing broad public
access to data and boosting public involvement.
- Measuring sustainable urban
development: Since the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio,
there has been limited progress in developing a universal
sustainability indicator system that is scientifically valid and
credible. Efforts are under way to develop a database of indicators
that will inform discussions at Rio+20 about how to measure urban
sustainability.
- Reinventing the corporation:
Transnational corporations (TNCs) have evolved over the past five
centuries into globally influential entities. They often go
unchecked, with no limits placed on their impacts on society, the
environment or the economy. TNCs must adapt if sustainability is to
become a reality, including shifts in their purpose, ownership,
capital investment and governance.
- The global architecture of sustainable
governance: Sustainability efforts worldwide will be
shaped by the reforms being discussed for the United Nations
Environment Programme (UNEP). If UNEP is going to play a valuable
and productive role in these efforts, it must enjoy increased
authority and financial resources, but above all it must be better
connected to other international agencies so it can play the
coordinating and visionary role its founders had in mind.
- Population growth strategies: In
2011, global population passed the seven billion mark, and
confronting population growth is critical to the future
sustainability of the planet. Over time, population growth will end
and reverse with no need for 'population control' through assuring
reproductive health and rights for all, adequate education for
girls and boys, and equal economic activity for both sexes with
internalisation of the environmental costs of economic
activity.
- Sustainable buildings: The
construction and operation of buildings use 25-40 per cent of all
produced energy, accounting for a comparable share of global carbon
dioxide emissions. We must aim for the goals of net zero energy
use, zero emissions and zero waste if new construction and existing
buildings are going to be sustainable.
- Public policy and sustainable
consumption: Combating the rise of consumerism will
require government involvement, including advertisement management,
tax modification to include the true cost of a product or service,
and the establishment of sustainability certification
programmes.
- Mobilising the business community:
Our current economic model does not consider planetary limits, is
socially exclusive, and places private interests above public ones.
A recipe for a successful 21st-century economy needs to be green,
inclusive and responsible.
- Sustainable agriculture: Almost two
billion people are fed by produce from the 500 million small farms
in developing countries. Yet these small-scale producers are some
of the most food-insecure people: 80 per cent of the world's hungry
live in rural areas. To optimise the productivity and environmental
sustainability of small farms, future agricultural policy must
combine a rights-based approach with legislation that is localised
and culturally specific.
- Food security and equity: In recent
decades, factory farming has increased meat, egg, and dairy
consumption worldwide, particularly in the developing world. But
this industrial meat production system has been harmful to human
health and the environment. The internalisation of costs,
restoration of ecosystems and education of the public----among
other strategies----can help create a new food system that is more
efficient, equitable and climate-compatible.
- Biodiversity: The rate at which
species are becoming extinct is estimated to be up to 1,000 times
higher today than in pre-industrial times. Efforts such as the
Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
are needed to better understand and reverse the erosion of nature's
resiliency.
- Valuation of ecosystem services: The
human ecological footprint has grown so large that progress is now
constrained more by limits on natural resources and ecosystem
services than by limits on infrastructure or technology. Ecosystem
services help evaluate the benefits derived from ecosystems by
assigning a monetary or physical unit to those benefits, which can
in turn help to better facilitate natural resource management.
- Local governance: Decisions at the
local level can be the greatest catalysts for progress because they
contribute directly to poverty reduction, job growth, gender equity
and environmental protection. As a result, the development of local
democratic procedures that are transparent and reliable is critical
to global sustainable development.
'There won't be much point in revisiting the Rio+20 conference
in another 20 years to try to figure out what went wrong,' says
Worldwatch president, Robert Engelman. 'We know enough right now
about the state of the world to see clearly that we have to change
the way we live and the way we do business. Working out new paths
towards true sustainability will take much more than a conference
of governments, though such a gathering can help. The task begins
with the recognition that perpetual economic and demographic growth
aren't possible on a finite planet. We can work with the hope that
ecological stability is possible, along with a good life based on
health, literacy, strong communities and access to 'enough' rather
than ever more.'
The State of the World 2012 report is accompanied by
other informational materials including policy briefs, videos and a
discussion guide, all of which are available at www.sustainableprosperity.org. The project's
findings are being disseminated to a wide range of stakeholders,
including government ministries, Rio+20 participants, community
networks, business leaders and the nongovernmental environmental
and development communities.
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