The problem – as always is a mixture of monopoly land
ownership and government stupidity and venality.

 

Thus Brazil tries to settle people in the inhospitable
Rainforest even as there is an unused land elsewhere in
Brazil that is larger than Britain, France. And Germany
combined.

 

Here is California, rumbles of serious water problems take
place even as subsidized rice is grown in the hot San
Joaquin Valley where the evaporation from the paddies is
enough to supply all of Los Angeles with water.

 

And the “water rights” of the land-owners which provides
them with water at about 1/100 of the cost to Angelenos.
Drive up Highway 5 in the summer under a hot sun and see the
cheap water flying through the air from irrigation
sprinklers.

 

Heck, it’s cheap – who cares?

 

The fishing grounds –which are always brought up – suffer
because they are a common resource that isn’t managed on our
behalf. If it were, there were would be fishing catches
lasting well into the future. 

 

This is supposedly the job of the UN but governments are
jealous of their “property”.

 

Let me repeat again, our world is closer to empty than full.
The resources of the world are plentiful. It  is this
mixture of government and private venality and stupidity
that could destroy us.

 

Harry

 

******************************

Harry Pollard

Henry George School of Los Angeles

Box 655 Tujunga CA 91042

818 352-4141

******************************

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Darryl or Natalia
Sent: Friday, October 05, 2007 1:12 PM
To: futurework
Subject: [Futurework] Diminishing resources

 

From: HYPERLINK
"http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/Seg/PB2ch01_ss2.htm"http:
//www.earth-policy.org/Books/Seg/PB2ch01_ss2.htm

Support for the belief that a healthy, sustainable
environment must come first.

Natalia


 


THE NATURE OF THE NEW WORLD 


Lester R. Brown

We recently entered a new century, but we are also entering
a new world, one where the collisions between our demands
and the earth’s capacity to satisfy them are becoming daily
events. It may be another crop-withering heat wave, another
village abandoned because of invading sand dunes, or another
aquifer pumped dry. If we do not act quickly to reverse the
trends, these seemingly isolated events will occur more and
more frequently, accumulating and combining to determine our
future.

Resources that accumulated over eons of geological time are
being consumed in a single human lifespan. We are crossing
natural thresholds that we cannot see and violating
deadlines that we do not recognize. These deadlines,
determined by nature, are not politically negotiable. 

Nature has many thresholds that we discover only when it is
too late. In our fast-forward world, we learn that we have
crossed them only after the fact, leaving little time to
adjust. For example, when we exceed the sustainable catch of
a fishery, the stocks begin to shrink. Once this threshold
is crossed, we have a limited time in which to back off and
lighten the catch. If we fail to meet this deadline,
breeding populations shrink to where the fishery is no
longer viable, and it collapses. 

We know from earlier civilizations that the lead indicators
of economic decline were environmental, not economic. The
trees went first, then the soil, and finally the
civilization itself. To archeologists, the sequence is all
too familiar. 

Our situation today is far more challenging because in
addition to shrinking forests and eroding soils, we must
deal with falling water tables, more frequent crop-withering
heat waves, collapsing fisheries, expanding deserts,
deteriorating rangelands, dying coral reefs, melting
glaciers, rising seas, more-powerful storms, disappearing
species, and, soon, shrinking oil supplies. Although these
ecologically destructive trends have been evident for some
time, and some have been reversed at the national level, not
one has been reversed at the global level. 

The bottom line is that the world is in what ecologists call
an “overshoot-and-collapse” mode. Demand has exceeded the
sustainable yield of natural systems at the local level
countless times in the past. Now, for the first time, it is
doing so at the global level. Forests are shrinking for the
world as a whole. Fishery collapses are widespread.
Grasslands are deteriorating on every continent. Water
tables are falling in many countries. Carbon dioxide (CO2)
emissions exceed CO2 sequestration.

In 2002, a team of scientists led by Mathis Wackernagel, who
now heads the Global Footprint Network, concluded that
humanity’s collective demands first surpassed the earth’s
regenerative capacity around 1980. Their study, published by
the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, estimated that global
demands in 1999 exceeded that capacity by 20 percent. The
gap, growing by 1 percent or so a year, is now much wider.
We are meeting current demands by consuming the earth’s
natural assets, setting the stage for decline and collapse.

In a rather ingenious approach to calculating the human
physical presence on the planet, Paul MacCready, the founder
and Chairman of AeroVironment and designer of the first
solar-powered aircraft, has calculated the weight of all
vertebrates on the land and in the air. He notes that when
agriculture began, humans, their livestock, and pets
together accounted for less than 0.1 percent of the total.
Today, he estimates, this group  accounts for 98 percent of
the earth’s total vertebrate biomass, leaving only 2 percent
for the wild portion, the latter including all the deer,
wildebeests, elephants, great cats, birds, small mammals,
and so forth. 

Ecologists are intimately familiar with the
overshoot-and-collapse phenomenon. One of their favorite
examples began in 1944, when the Coast Guard introduced 29
reindeer on remote St. Matthew Island in the Bering Sea to
serve as the backup food source for the 19 men operating a
station there. After World War II ended a year later, the
base was closed and the men left the island. When U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service biologist David Kline visited St.
Matthew in 1957, he discovered a thriving population of
1,350 reindeer feeding on the thick mat of lichen that
covered the 332-square-kilometer (128-square-mile) island.
In the absence of any predators, the population was
exploding. By 1963, it had reached 6,000. He returned to St.
Matthew in 1966 and discovered an island strewn with
reindeer skeletons and not much lichen. Only 42 of the
reindeer survived: 41 females and 1 not entirely healthy
male. There were no fawns. By 1980 or so, the remaining
reindeer had died off. 

Like the deer on St. Matthew Island, we too are
overconsuming our natural resources. Overshoot leads
sometimes to decline and sometimes to a complete collapse.
It is not always clear which it will be. In the former, a
remnant of the population or economic activity survives in a
resource-depleted environment. For example, as the
environmental resource base of Easter Island in the South
Pacific deteriorated, its population declined from a peak of
20,000 several centuries ago to today’s population of fewer
than 4,000. In contrast, the 500-year-old Norse settlement
in Greenland collapsed during the 1400s, disappearing
entirely in the face of environmental adversity. 

Even as the global population is climbing and the economy’s
environmental support systems are deteriorating, the world
is pumping oil with reckless abandon. Leading geologists now
think oil production may soon peak and turn downward.
Although no one knows exactly when oil production will peak,
supply is already lagging behind demand, driving prices
upward. 

Faced with a seemingly insatiable demand for automotive
fuel, farmers will want to clear more and more of the
remaining tropical forests to produce sugarcane, oil palms,
and other high-yielding biofuel crops. Already, billions of
dollars of private capital are moving into this effort. In
effect, the rising price of oil is generating a massive new
threat to the earth’s biological diversity.

As the demand for farm commodities climbs, it is shifting
the focus of international trade concerns from the
traditional goal of assured access to markets to one of
assured access to supplies. Countries heavily dependent on
imported grain for food are beginning to worry that buyers
for fuel distilleries may outbid them for supplies. As oil
security deteriorates, so, too, will food security.

As the role of oil recedes, the process of globalization
will be reversed in fundamental ways. As the world turned to
oil during the last century, the energy economy became
increasingly globalized, with the world depending heavily on
a handful of countries in the Middle East for energy
supplies. Now as the world turns to wind, solar cells, and
geothermal energy in this century, we are witnessing the
localization of the world energy economy.

The world is facing the emergence of a geopolitics of
scarcity, which is already highly visible in the efforts by
China, India, and other developing countries to ensure their
access to oil supplies. In the future, the issue will be who
gets access to not only Middle Eastern oil but also
Brazilian ethanol and North American grain. Pressures on
land and water resources, already excessive in most of the
world, will intensify further as the demand for biofuels
climbs. This geopolitics of scarcity is an early
manifestation of civilization in an overshoot-and-collapse
mode, much like the one that emerged among the Mayan cities
competing for food in that civilization’s waning years. 

You do not need to be an ecologist to see that if recent
environmental trends continue, the global economy eventually
will come crashing down. It is not knowledge that we lack.
At issue is whether national governments can stabilize
population and restructure the economy before time runs out.


  

Adapted from Chapter 1, “Entering a New World,” in Lester R.
Brown, HYPERLINK
"http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB2/index.htm"Plan B 2.0:
Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2006), available for free
downloading and purchase at HYPERLINK
"http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB2/index.htm"www.earthpo
licy.org/Books/PB2/index.htm. 

This Earth Policy Institute Book Byte follows: HYPERLINK
"http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/Seg/PB2ch01_ss4.htm"Learn
ing from the Past.

 

Released October 2, 2007 

  


 

  

        
Earth Policy Institute 
Email: HYPERLINK
"mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]"[EMAIL PROTECTED]

  

                






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