There are 7.7 billion humans living
today. Experts predict the earth will have 11-12 billion people by 2100. Maybe.
Unless we fall prey to the exhaustion of resources and mass extinction that we
have already caused and which continues to accelerate. A United Nation
comprehensive report on biodiversity, released on May 6th, the first
of its kind, presents a somber view of man’s severe crush on nature… a horrible
but not irreversible dynamic.
Over 500 expert scientists worked on this study: “Three years in the making, this global
assessment of nature draws on 15,000 reference materials, and has been compiled by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy
Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). It runs to 1,800
pages… The brief, 40-page ‘summary for policymakers,’ published today [5/6] at
a meeting in Paris, is perhaps the most powerful indictment of how humans have
treated their only home.” BBC.com, May 6th.
“Nature is in more trouble now than
at any other time in human history, with extinction looming over 1 million
species of plants and animals… It’s all because of humans, but it’s not too
late to fix the problem, according to the United Nations’ first comprehensive
report on biodiversity.
“‘We have reconfigured dramatically
life on the planet,’ report co-chairman Eduardo Brondizio of Indiana University
said at a news conference…. Species loss is accelerating to a rate tens or
hundreds of times faster than in the past, the report said. More than half a
million species on land ‘have insufficient habitat for long-term survival’ and
will probably go extinct, many within decades, unless their habitats are
restored. The oceans are not any better off.
“‘Humanity unwittingly is attempting
to throttle the living planet and humanity’s own future,’ said George Mason
University biologist Thomas Lovejoy, who has been called the godfather of
biodiversity for his research. He was not part of the report… ‘The biological
diversity of this planet has been really hammered, and this is really our last
chance to address all of that,’ Lovejoy said.” Los Angeles Times, May 7th.
We eat too much, waste too much,
pollute too much and grow too much. Indeed, there is a core question that
humanity must face. Is economic growth a positive human value? Can there be
growth without expanded consumption of resources? Adjust that sentence a bit,
and ask, if there can be growth with the expanded consumption of non-renewable
resources? More importantly, can we actually survive as a species at the
current increasing rate of resource consumption? Do plants stop generating
enough oxygen for us to breathe? Does reasonably accessible potable water
remain in sufficient quantities to sustain human life? Do portions of the earth
become so hot that they no longer support life? Or at least the higher forms of
life? What exactly does the human species add to the planet? Does artificial
intelligence suggest a less intrusive replacement for human beings anyway?
“More than a third of marine mammals
and more than 40% of amphibian species are threatened, according to the report,
compiled over three years by hundreds of experts for the UN’s leading research
body on nature, who drew on over 15,000 other studies and sources to compile
the report. Human activity has
significantly altered three-quarters of the Earth’s land and around two-thirds
of the marine environment. The changes aren’t just a loss for wildlife. They
pose a significant risk for our own life-support systems. Hundreds of billions
of dollars’ worth of crops are at risk from the loss of bees and other
pollinators. As many as 300 million people face a higher risk of floods and
hurricanes because of the loss of coastal ecosystems. And as forests disappear,
we’re losing one of the best tools we have to combat climate change.
“‘This is a wake-up call to the world
that we need to address the biodiversity crisis,’ says Andrew Deutz, director
of international government relations for the nonprofit The Nature Conservancy. ‘We are depleting nature faster than we ever have as
a human species, and faster than nature is regenerating itself. So we’re
running down our natural capital at a time when the world’s population is
expanding and economic development is expanding. We need to actually reverse
the trend and help restore nature if it’s going to provide the goods and
services that we count on for our health and prosperity.’
“There are a few key drivers of
biodiversity loss, including changing land use and, over a slightly longer time frame, climate change. Companies, which are
responsible for many of these impacts, will need to fundamentally change to
solve the problem. The report looked at the impacts to nature over the last
five decades and several scenarios going forward; only transformational change,
it says, can shift the negative trends. The food sector will have to make some
of the biggest changes. More than a third of the world’s land is now devoted to
crops or livestock production. From 1980 to 2000 alone, 100 million hectares
[one hectare = about 2.5 acres] of tropical forests were lost to cattle
ranching and growing crops like palm oil.” FastCompany.com, May 6th.
Reading the report, discussing the
exhausted forests, the overfished seas, the annihilation of species, the
explosive devastation of climate change… you might think all is lost. But.
There is hope. There are choices we still can make, as a society and as
individuals. We may not be able to stem all the devastation, but we can begin
to reverse our profligate ways.
“There are some small signs of
progress. Many of the largest food companies have committed to ending deforestation in their supply chains–though
they’re still struggling to fully eliminate it. Hershey, for example, is working to
protect forests near its cocoa plantations in Africa, in part because it recognizes that
forests play a crucial role in fighting climate change, which threatens cocoa
and other ingredients crucial to its operations. Companies like Impossible
Foods are working on
realistic meat alternatives in part because of meat’s particular connection to deforestation.
Some other companies, like Apple, are investing in
forests outside of their own supply chains. That type of funding can help fill a critical gap; a
Credit Suisse report found that the world needs around $300
billion to $400 billion of conservation funding each year, but the actual number allocated
is only around $50 billion. ‘To close that gap, most of the money’s going to
come from the private sector,’ says Deutz.
“Some businesses are beginning to
recognize and even quantify the value of nature. Dow, for example, worked with
The Nature Conservancy to restore a wetland near one of its manufacturing
plants by the Gulf of Mexico when it realized that the wetland could help
protect the factory from flooding (previously, it had planned to pave over the
wetland). The project helped the company save on insurance costs, because it
was able to show its insurer how much the wetland helped reduce risk.”
FastCompany.com. We can and we must stop killing ourselves. What we see in
nature today is a reflection of our own inevitable tomorrow.
I’m Peter Dekom, and think about what you
might change in your own life to make even a small but positive difference.
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