FYI:
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www.nytimes.com/2011/06/08/opinion/08friedman.html?_r=3&src=me&ref=general

Op-Ed Columnist

The Earth Is Full

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN           Published: June 7, 2011


You really do have to wonder whether a few years from now we'll look 
back at the first decade of the 21st century --- when food prices 
spiked, energy prices soared, world population surged, tornados plowed 
through cities, floods and droughts set records, populations were 
displaced and governments were threatened by the confluence of it all 
--- and ask ourselves: What were we thinking? How did we not panic when 
the evidence was so obvious that we'd crossed some 
growth/climate/natural resource/population redlines all at once?

  "The only answer can be denial," argues Paul Gilding, the veteran 
Australian environmentalist-entrepreneur, who described this moment in a 
new book called "The Great Disruption: Why the Climate Crisis Will Bring 
On the End of Shopping and the Birth of a New World." "When you are 
surrounded by something so big that requires you to change everything 
about the way you think and see the world, then denial is the natural 
response. But the longer we wait, the bigger the response required."

Gilding cites the work of the Global Footprint Network, an alliance of 
scientists, which calculates how many "planet Earths" we need to sustain 
our current growth rates. G.F.N. measures how much land and water area 
we need to produce the resources we consume and absorb our waste, using 
prevailing technology. On the whole, says G.F.N., we are currently 
growing at a rate that is using up the Earth's resources far faster than 
they can be sustainably replenished, so we are eating into the future. 
Right now, global growth is using about 1.5 Earths. "Having only one 
planet makes this a rather significant problem," says Gilding.

This is not science fiction. This is what happens when our system of 
growth and the system of nature hit the wall at once. While in Yemen 
last year, I saw a tanker truck delivering water in the capital, Sana. 
Why? Because Sana could be the first big city in the world to run out of 
water, within a decade. That is what happens when one generation in one 
country lives at 150 percent of sustainable capacity.

"If you cut down more trees than you grow, you run out of trees," writes 
Gilding. "If you put additional nitrogen into a water system, you change 
the type and quantity of life that water can support. If you thicken the 
Earth's CO2 blanket, the Earth gets warmer. If you do all these and many 
more things at once, you change the way the whole system of planet Earth 
behaves, with social, economic, and life support impacts. This is not 
speculation; this is high school science."

It is also current affairs. "In China's thousands of years of 
civilization, the conflict between humankind and nature has never been 
as serious as it is today," China's environment minister, Zhou 
Shengxian, said recently. "The depletion, deterioration and exhaustion 
of resources and the worsening ecological environment have become 
bottlenecks and grave impediments to the nation's economic and social 
development." What China's minister is telling us, says Gilding, is that 
"the Earth is full. We are now using so many resources and putting out 
so much waste into the Earth that we have reached some kind of limit, 
given current technologies. The economy is going to have to get smaller 
in terms of physical impact."

We will not change systems, though, without a crisis. But don't worry, 
we're getting there.

We're currently caught in two loops: One is that more population growth 
and more global warming together are pushing up food prices; rising food 
prices cause political instability in the Middle East, which leads to 
higher oil prices, which leads to higher food prices, which leads to 
more instability. At the same time, improved productivity means fewer 
people are needed in every factory to produce more stuff. So if we want 
to have more jobs, we need more factories. More factories making more 
stuff make more global warming, and that is where the two loops meet.

But Gilding is actually an eco-optimist. As the impact of the imminent 
Great Disruption hits us, he says, "our response will be proportionally 
dramatic, mobilizing as we do in war. We will change at a scale and 
speed we can barely imagine today, completely transforming our economy, 
including our energy and transport industries, in just a few short decades."

We will realize, he predicts, that the consumer-driven growth model is 
broken and we have to move to a more happiness-driven growth model, 
based on people working less and owning less. "How many people," Gilding 
asks, "lie on their death bed and say, 'I wish I had worked harder or 
built more shareholder value,' and how many say, 'I wish I had gone to 
more ballgames, read more books to my kids, taken more walks?' To do 
that, you need a growth model based on giving people more time to enjoy 
life, but with less stuff."

Sounds utopian? Gilding insists he is a realist.

"We are heading for a crisis-driven choice," he says. "We either allow 
collapse to overtake us or develop a new sustainable economic model. We 
will choose the latter. We may be slow, but we're not stupid."

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on June 8, 2011, on page A23 
of the New York edition with the headline: The Earth Is Full.
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