I think this position/policy statement from ESA is a much better approach to bringing these types of concerns about neoclassical economic growth into greater prominence with regards to our national/global political/societal dialogue because it does not include mention of a "population policy" explicitly. As I said (typed) previously, I think it's politically self-defeating to suggest (even vaguely, but certainly outright) population control. The word "population" only occurs once in the policy statement at the very outset, and does not suggest limiting people's reproductive freedoms/rights/privileges/abilities, which - I think - gives it a much better chance to have a widespread political impact.
I do think it's important for politicians (and everyone) to realize that population growth also plays a role in our cumulative ecological impact and that our planet cannot sustain an infinite human population - to that end, and in that it addresses a lot of the same issues discussed in the position statement below, I think S. Carpenter's letter has its merit, but its suggestion/implication of population control as a national policy is a really difficult thing to swallow - even though his supporting suggestions about how to go about that don't really imply population control similar to China's "one child" mandate, I think that will come into a lot of people's minds when they read the words "population policy." -----Original Message----- From: Czech, Brian [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2008 11:26 AM To: Chalfant, Brian; [email protected] Subject: RE: [ECOLOG-L] Co-sign LETTER TO OBAMA FROM ONE OF EARTH'S LEADING ECOLOGISTS (Stephen R. Carpenter) The letter to Obama is a great idea, and hopefully will have some effect, short-term at least. Meanwhile, a professional society position statement carries more weight and is relatively timeless in effect, so this ECOLOG discussion is probably a good context for revisiting the proposed ESA position on economic growth. Policy Statement on Economic Growth Proposed for Adoption by the Ecological Society of America on July 12, 2007 List of Proposers Updated March 20, 2008 Proposed by ESA Members Warren Aney, Paul Angermeier, Robert Baldwin, Randy Bangert, Alice Bard, Terry Bowyer, Mark Boyce, Cara Lin Bridgman, Jim Brown, Joel Brown, Peter Brussard, David Bryant, John Cairns, Joseph Cech, Jameson Chace, Dana Coelho, Christopher Craft, Brian Czech, Dominick DellaSala, David Ehrenfeld, Elmer Finck, Dan Fiscus, Curt Flather, Edward Gates, Joseph Gathman, Brian Halstead, Rod Heitschmidt, Jeff Houlahan, Nancy Johnson, Evan Kane, Rick Knight, Nicola Koper, Erika Latty, Josh Lawler, Chris Lepczyk, Karin Limburg, Richard Lindroth, Michael Lowe, Michael Marsh, Carl McDaniel, Eliot McIntire, Guy McPherson, David Mech, Chris Papouchis, Andrew Park, Mary Price, Kenneth Raedeke, Heather Reynolds, Todd Rinaldi, Winston Smith, Nicholas Stowe, Teresa Tibbets, Stephen Trombulak, Gerald Van Amburg, Skip Van Bloem, Ashwani Vasishth, Robert Wagner, Mohan Wali, David Walls, Nick Waser, Jake Weltzin, John Yunger, Richard York, and Patricia Zaradic. Background Economic growth is an increase in the production and consumption of goods and services. It requires increasing population and/or per capita production and consumption. It is indicated by measures of production, income, and expenditure, most notably gross domestic product (GDP). Economic growth is a function of land, labor, and capital. Capital may be real or financial. Real capital includes natural capital, manufactured capital, and human capital. Natural capital may take the form of raw materials (e.g., oil, timber, fish) or services (e.g., solar radiation, water filtration, climate regulation). Manufactured capital includes the infrastructure, plant, and machinery that are used in the production of consumer goods or additional manufactured capital, or in the performance of services. Human capital refers to various aspects of the human condition that allow for higher productivity; for example, education, information, and health. The economic production process entails the conversion of natural capital into manufactured capital (including service facilities) and consumer goods and services by the application of labor, manufactured capital, and human capital. Some services may be performed with little manufactured capital, but natural capital in the form of energy and/or agricultural commodities are nevertheless required for such performance. Essentially, the human economy has a sectoral structure that reflects the trophic structure of the ecosystem. The ecosystem comprises an economy of nature that is founded upon the producers, or plants, which produce their own food in the process of photosynthesis. Among the animals, primary consumers eat plants, secondary consumers eat primary consumers, etc. In some ecosystems more than five distinct trophic levels may be identified. Omnivores consume in more than one trophic level, and many species are omnivorous to some extent. Some species, such as pollinators, detritivores, and scavengers, are aptly characterized as service providers in the economy of nature. The human economy is also founded upon producers, most notably the agricultural and extractive sectors. Surplus production in these sectors is what allows for the division of labor. Laborers and other individuals consume products from the agricultural sectors for sustenance, and manufacturing sectors transform energy and raw materials from the extractive sectors into consumer goods and manufactured capital. Service sectors, such as janitorial, transportation, and financial services, are an integral component of the full economy, as with the service providers in the economy of nature. Macroeconomic Policy and the Environment Of primary concern to the Ecological Society of America is the relationship of economic growth to the functional integrity and sustainability of the ecosystem, which in turn has implications for the sustainability of the economy itself. The Ecological Society of America is also concerned with the lack of public policy dialog on the implications of macroeconomic policy to ecological integrity and economic sustainability. Furthermore, in the limited dialog that does occur, there appears to be confusion about limits to economic growth and the tradeoffs between economic growth and environmental protection. The Ecological Society of America believes ecologists have a unique conceptual toolkit, as a result of their training and research, for helping to build understanding and awareness about the ecological effects of economic growth and for identifying policy tools conducive to ecological integrity and economic sustainability. To wit, the Ecological Society of America takes the position that: * There is a limit to economic growth, based upon the laws of thermodynamics and principles of ecology. The availability of matter and energy are limited in accordance with the first law of thermodynamics. The efficiency with which matter and energy may be converted into goods and services is limited in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics. Just as energy and biomass is lost in the economy of nature from one trophic level to the next, energy and materials are lost in the human economy from one sector to the next. For example, it takes more than 100 kilotons of vegetation to produce 100 kilotons of rabbits, and it takes many more kilotons to produce (via rabbits and other prey) 100 kilotons of foxes. This ecological principle is grounded in the second law of thermodynamics and is referred to as "ecological efficiency." Likewise, it takes more than 100 kilotons of iron ore to produce 100 kilotons of steel, and more yet to produce 100 kilotons of auto chassis. The efficiency with which consumer goods and services are produced from natural capital is called "productive efficiency." * Assessing the limits to growth at local, regional, and national levels is complicated by the prospects for importing labor and capital. The ultimate limit to economic growth on Earth manifests at the global level because all labor and capital is accounted for at the global level. * The human economy grows as an integrated whole. Although particular processes and sectors may wax and wane as a function of technological progress, the basic collection of agricultural, extractive, manufacturing, and service sectors tend to grow and recede in unison. Furthermore, there is a limit to the proportion of services that comprise the human economy because of the land, capital, and consumption requirements of the service providers. Additionally, most services are used by or with other economic sectors such that growth in those service sectors requires growth in the other economic sectors. * Economic growth ultimately requires more agricultural and extractive surplus, resulting in the liquidation of natural capital. Increased productive efficiency may allow some economic growth to occur with less environmental impact per unit production, but efficiency is limited to less than 100% pursuant to the second law of thermodynamics. * Regarding the size of an economy, the basic alternative trends are growth, recession, and steady state. Because an economy may neither grow without limit nor recede into negative production, only a steady state economy is sustainable in the long run. * There is a fundamental tradeoff between economic growth and environmental protection, where environmental protection refers to the maintenance of ecosystem characteristics conducive to human welfare. These characteristics include but are not limited to: purity of air and water, soil productivity; naturally occurring biological diversity; capacity to buffer communities from natural disasters such as hurricanes, and composition of atmospheric gases associated with climates that humans and other species have adapted to and evolved with. This tradeoff is practically irrelevant for economies with abundant natural capital and ecological integrity, but becomes more policy-relevant as the economy grows, natural capital is liquidated, and ecological integrity is compromised. * Because of the tradeoff between economic growth and environmental protection, which is necessary for human welfare including economic sustainability, continued economic growth is certain to exceed a socially optimum level. The fact that such a level may be difficult to ascertain precisely, or may fluctuate as a matter of natural cycles or events, does not render the concept of optimum size less relevant to public policy. Given an adequate understanding of the tradeoff between economic growth and environmental protection, most citizens and policy makers will be capable of recognizing if an economy is far beyond the socially optimum size. Moving toward the optimum size or an acceptable range of an economy's size should be a policy goal of the polity. * The economies of some localities, regions, and nations may have already surpassed optimum size. Ecological evidence for this exists in the form of water shortages, soil erosion and degradation, high levels of biodiversity loss, and lack of wild areas and "green space," among other things. Broader evidence, including but not limited to ecological parameters, is found by using various indicators of human welfare, such as the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare and the Genuine Progress Indicator, which in some nations have been declining while GDP has been increasing. It behooves nations and other political units to adopt alternative indices of welfare and monitor them along with GDP, attempting to parse out the net effects of economic growth, whether beneficial or detrimental. * In nations for which it is apparent that economic growth has proceeded beyond the optimum, in which case the expanding production process may more accurately be designated "uneconomic growth," various policy tools should be carefully and gradually applied toward the goal of a more optimally sized economy. Many of these tools already exist, including fiscal, monetary, and trade policies. Although these policy tools have most often been used to stimulate growth or increase the growth rate, they may instead be used to lower the growth rate or stabilize the economy. Additional policy tools for achieving a stabilized (mildly fluctuating) steady state economy may be used to supplement the existing policy tools, including cap-and-trade systems in the energy and extractive sectors, graduated consumption taxes, and banking reforms that entail less debt (and therefore less pressure for economic growth) than the current fractional reserve system. For more information about this policy statement, please contact Brian Czech at [EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or 703-901-7190. Brian Czech, Visiting Assistant Professor Natural Resources Program Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University National Capital Region, Northern Virginia Center 7054 Haycock Road, Room 411 Falls Church, Virginia 22043 ________________________________ From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news on behalf of Chalfant, Brian Sent: Thu 2008-11-13 09:17 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Co-sign LETTER TO OBAMA FROM ONE OF EARTH'S LEADING ECOLOGISTS (Stephen R. Carpenter) Just a thought on this letter: is there really a need for the United States of America to have a "population policy?" Why not a "consumption policy?" As noted in the population paragraph, the majorly skewed part of the (population * per capita consumption) term in the U.S.A. is the per capita consumption part. I don't have numbers to back this up, but have heard anecdotally that population growth in most "developed"/materially rich countries is decreasing and/or has leveled off already. I have also heard that the U.S.A., compared to other "developed" nations does have a higher growth rate, but I would venture that much of this can be attributed to immigration (?) especially in recent years/decades. I would love to see some links/facts from someone who knows more about this than I do. Globally, sure there are parts of the world where exploding populations and availability resources to meet the needs of those population concentrations are of great concern, but I - personally - don't think that an administrative "population policy" from Obama (or any of our "leaders") is the most appropriate way to address population growth in other nations that are situated outside our national jurisdiction (if anything is outside of that). To me - when you say "population policy," that will translate to "can't have babies" in a lot of people's minds, which is a political bomb. That is not to say I think it isn't a concern at all for the U.S.A., we definitely need to educate women (as well as the men who fertilize those women) in general and also specifically as to reproductive matters, while working with other nations to address population growth globally, but I think couching that kind of policy in (or introducing that paragraph as) a national population-control sort o! f argument is self-defeating, in political terms. I - personally - think we'd be better off focusing our limited (moreso by the day) resources on the per capita part of our impact term. Also, I think any federally-mandated/presidential policy type of effort will have limited efficacy in any arena without local action, so go hand out condoms, but don't buy as many! ;) Discussion? -----Original Message----- From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chase D. Mendenhall Sent: Wednesday, November 12, 2008 6:11 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Co-sign LETTER TO OBAMA FROM ONE OF EARTH'S LEADING ECOLOGISTS (Stephen R. Carpenter) SIGN This Letter: http://www.gopetition.com/online/23266.html This letter was sent and thought to be received by President-Elect Barack Obama from leading ecologist Stephen R. Carpenter. This petition is simply to support the gravity of Dr. Carpenter's advice to save our life support systems. Please sign and forward on to demonstrate your support for these basic, but necessary national priorities for Brack Obama's presidency. The objective of this petitions is to organize citizens who support Stephen R. Carpenter's position of saving human life support systems, emphasize the urgency of the situation to the Obama administration and draw attention to the seemingly unnoticed 1,300 leading scientists' consensus report. Used with permission of Stephen R. Carpenter. http://www.gopetition.com/online/23266.html November 2008-- Dear President-Elect Obama, Congratulations on your election, which has created a sense of optimism in America that has never occurred before in my lifetime. Yet earth's life support systems have deteriorated more in our lifetimes than in any other era of human history. With earth's population increasing, and consumption per person growing much faster than population, humans are heating the climate, polluting air and water, degrading landscapes and turning coastal oceans to dead zones. America's food supply depends on a few fragile crops, grown using practices that degrade soil, air and water to yield foods of low nutritional value that harm our health. The U.S. is not investing in the education and innovation needed to create agriculture and energy technologies that can get us through the 21st century. Details are found in a consensus report of more than 1300 leading scientists from more than 90 nations including the U.S. (http://www.MAweb.org<http://www.maweb.org/>). These findings support the following priorities for your presidency. Decrease America's dependency on coal and oil and increase the supply of energy from non-polluting technologies: We must decrease emission of greenhouse gases, and the era of cheap oil is over. We must accelerate development of clean energy technologies using wind, sun and tides. These investments must be based on scientific information to avoid bogus remedies, such as grain biofuels, that sound good but do not in fact solve the problem. We must increase conservation through better buildings, efficient transportation, and renewal of industry. We must improve agriculture and forestry practices to reduce energy consumption and increase carbon storage in soil. Stop subsidizing agriculture that destroys land, water and health. Create incentives for agriculture that maintains land and water resources and yields healthy food: Agriculture must shift to practices that use less energy for tillage and transport of food, produce healthy food for local consumption, train more people in diverse farming practices, build soil instead of degrading and eroding it, and maintain clean water and air. These reforms can be accomplished by reforming federal subsidies. Have a population policy: In global impact, the U.S. is the world's most overpopulated nation, mainly because of our high per-capita consumption. Our population is growing rapidly. Global population growth is a key driver of degraded land, water, air and climate. Education of women is a powerful lever to restrain population growth. If all the world's women are educated to high-school level, human impact on our life-support system will be more than 30% lower by 2050. As a father of daughters, it is especially appropriate for you to support education for all of the world's women. Invest in the education and innovation needed to create a society that could thrive in the 21st century and beyond: Even though our universities and research centers are the envy of the world, science education of the general population of the U.S. is weak and must be made stronger. Education must be reformed to encourage creativity. There are enormous opportunities for innovations in agriculture, energy, and infrastructure that will lead to a moderate climate, rich landscapes, and clean air and water into the future. These technological opportunities are being seized by other nations while the U.S. lags behind. We must restore American leadership in creating technology that maintains our life support system while providing the energy, food and shelter that people need. Sincerely yours, Steve Carpenter Stephen Alfred Forbes Professor of Zoology Center for Limnology University of Wisconsin Madison, Wisconsin 53706 USA SIGN THIS LETTER: http://www.gopetition.com/online/23266.html
