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Shaping a Sustainable Future

Shaping a Sustainable Future. Ian Lowe 22 February, 2007. The fundamental premise. Future not somewhere we are going, but something we are creating Many possible futures We should be trying to shape a sustainable future.

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Shaping a Sustainable Future

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  1. Shaping a Sustainable Future Ian Lowe 22 February, 2007

  2. The fundamental premise • Future not somewhere we are going, but something we are creating • Many possible futures • We should be trying to shape a sustainable future

  3. How could we create unsustainable futures ? • Exponential population growth • Growing consumption per person • Deplete mineral resources, e.g. Oil • Over-use fisheries, forests, water • Disrupt the global climate • Base economy on resource use • Widen inequality • Embrace materialism

  4. “Our present course is unsustainable - postponing action is no longer an option”- GEO 2000 [UNEP 1999]

  5. Oil, gas resources • Oil peak 2009 _+ 6 years ? • Gas peak ~ 2040 ? • [ no energy shortage ]

  6. Other resource issues • Water • Productive land • Forests • Fisheries

  7. Economic futures • Increasing resource use • Degradation of natural systems • Value-adding, innovation crucial • So education, research investments • Sustainable economic future ? • Beyond growth to steady state ? • Link to quality of life ?

  8. Social cohesion • World becoming less equal • Increasing tension within and between societies • All of us should be able to realise our potential – physically, intellectually, emotionally • UNDP: all could have shelter, food, water, health care and education for about 5 % of global military budget !

  9. Millennium Assessment Report • Released March 2005 • Experts and Review Process • Prepared by 1360 experts from 95 countries • 80-person independent board of review editors • Reviewed by 850 experts and governments • Governance • Called for by UN Secretary General in 2000 • Authorised by governments through 4 conventions

  10. Finding #1 • Over the past 50 years, humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly and extensively than in any comparable period of time in human history • This has resulted in a substantial and largely irreversible loss in the diversity of life on Earth Millennium Assessment Report 2005

  11. Significant and largely irreversible changes to species diversity • Humans have increased the species extinction rate by as much as 1,000 times over background rates typical over the planet’s history • 10–30% of mammal, bird, and amphibian species are currently threatened with extinction Millennium Assessment Report 2005

  12. Increased likelihood of non-linear changes There is established but incomplete evidence that our impacts on ecosystems are increasing the likelihood of non-linear changes … with important consequences for human well - being Millennium Assessment Report 2005

  13. An example of non-linear change Millennium Assessment Report 2005

  14. The Knowledge Base • Much damage done by applying narrow knowledge to part of the system • Develop a much better understanding of complex natural systems, including links between local and global processes • Use this improved understanding to reduce the impacts of human activities on the natural world

  15. Sustainability science “a growing body of evidence and experience suggests that the needed understanding must encompass the interaction of global processes with the ecological and social characteristics of particular places and sectors…” Kates et al, 2001

  16. Sustainability Science • Explicitly recognises our ignorance of complex self-organising systems • Works at multiple scales of organisation • Knowledge provisional, subjective • Includes social, ecological characteristics of place or region • Requires new styles of organisation • Promotes social learning

  17. Some possible futures • Market forces - growing inequality and worsening environmental problems • Fortress world - keep order by force ? • Breakdown - collapse of support systems • Political response - but where is the will to take the hard decisions ? • “Great transition” to sustainable world driven by new values

  18. Collapse: Diamond • Societies choose to fail or survive • Problems can be resolved • Cultural values, social institutions determine if concerted response • “declining standard of living in a steadily deteriorating environment” • Signs of hope: new thinking • Survival: new values, practices

  19. The underlying drivers • Population growth • Consumption per person • Societal values

  20. New suite of values • Domination of nature becomes ecological sensitivity • Consumerism replaced by quality of life • Individualism -> human solidarity

  21. Sustainable community will: • Have stabilised its population & footprint • Use resources sustainably to produce a dynamic, flexible economy • Be approaching a zero waste society • Have drastically cut carbon emissions • Require developments biodiversity +ve • Be committed to improving equality • Therefore serious TBL assessments • Process for difficult decisions

  22. HEALTHIER futures • Humane • Ecocentric Approach • Long Time Horizon • Informed • Efficient • Resourced

  23. Utopian? • 1800: end slavery • 1900: universal franchise • 1987: Berlin Wall South Africa without apartheid lap-tops, mobile phones good coffee, civilised licensing laws in Queensland • Practically all features of modern life

  24. There are always excuses for not taking action and without a genuine popular mandate for change, we cannot be surprised or outraged if courage fails and progress is minimal. Our responsibility is to help change that popular motivation and so give courage to our leaders. Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury, 2005

  25. Prendre des chemins de courage!

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