Donella Meadows' The Global Citizen, August 19, 1999
How Many Experts Do We Need Before We Heed Earth's Warnings?
Dr. Jane Lubchenco, a marine ecologist from Oregon State University, has
received many scientific honors, one of which was the presidency of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science. For her presidential
address, she looked straight out at the huge assembly of scientists and
delivered an unapologetic warning:
"During the last few decades, humans have emerged as a new force in nature. We
are modifying physical, chemical and biological systems in new ways, at faster
rates and over larger spatial scales than ever recorded on Earth. Humans have
unwittingly embarked upon a grand experiment with our planet. The outcome of
this experiment is unknown, but has profound implications for all of life."
What responsibility do scientists have, she asked, both to transmit this
message and to help deal with the problem?
Actually, scientists and others, even economists, have been transmitting
similar messages lately, with clarity and urgency. Here are just a few
excerpts from a long and growing list:
- World Resources Institute, 1998:
- "Most high-quality agricultural land is
already in production, and the environmental costs of converting remaining
forest, grassland and wetland habitats to cropland are well recognized. ...
Much of the remaining soil is less productive and more fragile. ... One
analysis of global soil erosion estimates that ... topsoil is being lost 16 to
300 times faster than it can be replaced."
- International food Policy Research Institute, 1999:
- "The period since World
War II has seen remarkable growth in agricultural production ... in the
developing world. While in many farming areas this growth has apparently been
sustainable, in others it derived from two unsustainable processes: the
clearing of new lands of lower productive potential or higher vulnerability,
and the intensification of production by mining or destroying the soil resource
base."
- U.N. Comprehensive Assessment of the Freshwater Resources of the World, 1997:
- "Water resources constraints and water degradation are weakening one of the
resource bases on which human society is built. Water shortages and pollution
are causing widespread public health problems, limiting economic and
agricultural development and harming a wide range of ecosystems."
- World Commission on Forests and Sustainable Development, 1999:
- "There has
been a clear global trend toward a massive loss of forested areas. ... The
current trends are toward an acceleration of the loss of forested area, the
loss of residual primary forests, and progressive reduction in the internal
quality of residual forest stands. ... Much of the forest that remains is being
progressively impoverished, and all is threatened."
- World Scientists' Warning to Humanity, 1992:
- "Our massive tampering with the
world's interdependent web of life -- coupled with the environmental damage
inflicted by deforestation, species loss and climate change -- could trigger
widespread adverse effects, including unpredictable collapses of critical
biological systems whose interactions and dynamics we only imperfectly
understand. Uncertainty over the extent of these effects cannot excuse
complacency or delay in facing the threats."
- Two oil-industry geologists, Colin J. Campbell and Jean H. Laherrere, sobered
everyone by saying in Scientific American in 1998:
- "Our analysis of the
discovery and production of oil fields around the world suggest that within the
next decade, the supply of conventional oil will be unable to keep up with
demand ... Global discovery peaked in the early 1960s and has been falling
steadily ever since. ... There is only so much crude oil in the world, and the
industry has found about 90 percent of it."
- Another industry voice, Robert Shapiro, CEO of the Monsanto Corporation:
- "The
Earth can't withstand a systematic increase of material things. If we grow by
using more stuff, I'm afraid we'd better start looking for a new planet."
- The following statement was signed by 2000 economists, including six Nobel
laureates, in 1997:
- "The balance of evidence suggests a discernible human
influence on global climate. As economists, we believe that global climate
change carries with it significant environmental, economic, social and
geopolitical risks, and that preventive steps are justified."
- Ecological Society of America, 1991:
- "Environmental problems resulting from
human activities have begun to threaten the sustainability of Earth's life
support systems."
- The British Royal Society and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, 1992:
- "The future of our planet is in the balance. Sustainable development can be
achieved, but only if irreversible degradation of the environment can be halted
in time. The next 30 years may be crucial."
Short of yelling and screaming, which scientists are trained not to do, I don't
see how these august people could be more clear.
None of their reports concludes that there is nothing to be done, that we must
stupidly submit to the consequences of our overconsumption of our own resource
base. They are full of constructive, commonsense, affordable, doable
suggestions by which human needs could be met without destroying the planetary
sources and sinks that maintain us.
The scientists are doing their part. When will television start harping on
major tragedies we can prevent, instead of minor ones we can only grieve over?
When will politicians start thinking and talking and doing something about the
really important issues of the coming century? When will citizens insist that
they do?