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Why we need to use a tool
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Deflating the Bubble Economy Before it Bursts
From Earth Policy Institute
Thursday, September 18, 2003
Lester R. Brown
"We are creating a bubble economy--an economy whose output
is artificially inflated by drawing down the earth's natural
capital," says Lester R. Brown in his new book, PLAN B:
RESCUING A PLANET UNDER STRESS AND A CIVILIZATION IN TROUBLE.
(Available for FREE downloading in PDF format http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/index.htm)
"Each year the bubble grows larger as our demands on
the earth expand. The challenge for our generation is to deflate
the global economic bubble before it bursts," says Brown,
President and Founder of the Earth Policy Institute, a Washington,
D.C.-based independent environmental research organization.
Throughout most of human history, we lived on the earth's sustainable
yield--the interest from its natural endowment. But now we are
consuming the endowment itself. Our existing economic output
is based in part on cutting trees faster than they grow, overgrazing
rangelands and converting them into desert, overpumping aquifers,
and draining rivers dry. On much of our cropland, soil erosion
exceeds new soil formation--slowly depriving the land of its
inherent fertility. We are taking fish from the ocean faster
than they can reproduce.
"We are releasing carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere
faster than the earth can absorb it, creating a greenhouse effect.
Rising atmospheric CO2 levels promise a temperature rise during
this century that could match that between the last Ice Age and
the present," notes Brown in PLAN B, which was funded by
the U.N. Population Fund.
Bubble economies are not new. American investors got an up-close
view of one when the bubble in high-tech stocks burst in 2000
and the NASDAQ, an indicator of the value of these stocks, declined
by some 75 percent. The Japanese had a similar experience in
1989 when the real estate bubble burst, depreciating stock and
real estate assets by 60 percent. As a result of the bad-debt
fallout and other effects of this collapse, the once dynamic
Japanese economy has been dead in the water ever since.
The bursting of these two bubbles most directly affected people
living in the industrial West and Japan. But if the bubble that
is based on the overconsumption of the earth's natural capital
bursts, it will affect the entire world.
Thus far the consequences of most excessive natural capital consumption,
such as aquifer depletion, collapsing fisheries, and deforestation,
have been local. But in sheer number and scale these events are
now reaching a point where they may soon have a global effect.
Food appears to be the economic sector most vulnerable to
setbacks, largely because the impressive production gains of
recent decades were partly based on overpumping and overplowing.
Overpumping is historically recent because powerful diesel and
electrically driven pumps have become widely available only during
the last half-century or so. Aquifers are being overpumped in
scores of countries, including China, India, and the United States,
which together account for nearly half of the world grain harvest.
Overpumping creates a dangerous illusion of food security
because it is a way of expanding current food production that
virtually ensures a future drop in food production when the aquifer
is depleted. In the past, the effects of aquifer depletion on
food production were confined to less-populated countries, like
Saudi Arabia, but now they are becoming visible in China.
After a remarkable expansion from 90 million tons in 1950
to its historical peak of 390 million tons in 1998, China's grain
harvest dropped to 330 million tons in 2003. This drop of 60
million tons exceeds the grain harvest of Canada. Thus far China
has offset the downturn by drawing on its vast stocks of grain.
It can do this for perhaps another year or two, but then it will
be forced to import massive quantities of grain.
Turning to the world market means turning to the United States,
the world's largest grain exporter, presenting a potentially
delicate geopolitical situation in which 1.3 billion Chinese
consumers, with a $100-billion trade surplus with the United
States, will be competing with U.S. consumers for U.S. grain,
driving up food prices.
Water shortages, such as those in China, are becoming global,
crossing national boundaries via the international grain trade.
Countries facing water shortages often import water in the form
of grain. Since it takes 1,000 tons of water to produce 1 ton
of grain, this is the most efficient way to import water. Grain
has become the currency with which countries balance their water
books. Trading in grain futures is now in a sense trading in
water futures.
Farmers may now also face higher temperatures than any generation
since agriculture began. The 16 warmest years since recordkeeping
began in 1880 have all occurred since 1980. With the three warmest
years on record--1998, 2001, and 2002--coming in the last five
years, crops are facing record heat stresses. Crop ecologists
at the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines
and at the U.S. Department of Agriculture have developed a rule
of thumb that each 1-degree-Celsius rise in temperature during
the growing season reduces grain yields by 10 percent.
Falling water tables and rising temperatures help explain
why the world grain harvest has fallen short of consumption in
each of the past four years, dropping world grain stocks to their
lowest level in a generation. If grain shortfalls continue, they
will lead to price rises that could destabilize governments and
impoverish more people than any event in history.
"Plan A--business as usual--is not working. It is creating
a bubble economy. PLAN B describes how to deflate the economic
bubble before it bursts," says Brown. "This involves,
for example, reducing the demand for water to the sustainable
yield of aquifers by quickly raising water productivity and accelerating
the shift to smaller families. With most of the nearly 3 billion
people to be added by 2050 to be born in countries already facing
water shortages, pressure on water supplies will mount. If population
is not stabilized soon, the water situation in some countries
could become unmanageable."
Accelerating the shift to small families and population stability
means providing women with reproductive health care, filling
the family planning gap, and investing heavily in education to
ensure that the U.N. goal of universal primary education by 2015
is reached. The more education women have, the more options they
have and the fewer children they bear. We now have the wealth
and knowledge to eradicate the poverty that fuels rapid population
growth.
"Avoiding the damaging effects of higher temperatures
on crop yields means moving quickly to stabilize climate. In
PLAN B," says Brown, "I suggest cutting global carbon
emissions in half by 2015. This is entirely doable, as a number
of recent studies have suggested. If higher temperatures shrink
harvests, public pressure to replace coal and oil with natural
gas, wind power, and hydrogen will intensify worldwide."
A simple measure, such as replacing old-fashioned incandescent
light bulbs with highly efficient compact fluorescent bulbs would
enable the world to close hundreds of coal-fired power plants.
Replacing nonrefillable beverage containers, such as aluminum
cans, with refillable bottles can cut energy use by up to 90
percent. If all U.S. motorists shifted from their current vehicles
with internal combustion engines to cars with hybrid engines,
like the Toyota Prius or the Honda Insight, gasoline use could
be cut in half. Cutting carbon emissions in half is less a matter
of technology and more a matter of political leadership.
"Not only do we need to stabilize population, raise water
productivity, and stabilize climate, but we need to do it at
wartime speed. The key to quickly shifting from a carbon-based
energy economy to a hydrogen-based one is to incorporate the
costs of climate change, including crop-damaging temperatures,
more destructive storms, and rising sea level, in the prices
of fossil fuels. We need to get the market to tell the ecological
truth."
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has calculated
the costs to society of smoking a pack of cigarettes, including
both the costs of treating smoking-related illnesses and losses
in employee productivity, at $7.18 a pack. Is the cost to society
of burning a gallon of gasoline more or less than that of smoking
a pack of cigarettes?
"Unfortunately," says Brown, "since September
11, 2001, political leaders and the media worldwide have been
preoccupied with terrorism and, more recently, the invasion of
Iraq. Terrorism is certainly a matter of concern, but if Osama
Bin Laden and his followers succeed in diverting our attention
from the environmental trends that are undermining our future
until it is too late to reverse them, they will have achieved
their goal in a way they have not imagined."
One of the keys to deflating the bubble is redefining security--recognizing
that military threats to our future are being eclipsed by environmental
threats such as falling water tables and rising temperatures.
Redefining the threat means redefining priorities, shifting resources
from the military to population and climate stabilization. Unfortunately,
the United States continues to invest heavily in an ever-stronger
military as though that were somehow responsive to the new threats
that are shaping our future.
The $343-billion defense budget in the United States dwarfs
the defense budgets of other countries--allies and others alike.
U.S. allies spend $205 billion a year; Russia spends $60 billion;
China, $42 billion; and Iran, Iraq, and North Korea combined
spend $12 billion. As the late U.S. Admiral Eugene Carroll astutely
observed, "For 45 years of the cold war, we were in an arms
race with the Soviet Union; now it appears we are in an arms
race with ourselves."
The urgency facing the world today is at least as great as
that which faced the United States as it mobilized for war during
the early 1940s. Not only was the economy restructured within
a year or so at that time, but the automobile industry--then
the largest concentration of industrial power in the world, producing
3 million cars a year--was closed down and converted to the production
of tanks, armored personnel carriers, and aircraft.
Today the stakes for the entire world are even higher. We
study the archeological sites of earlier civilizations that were
based on the overconsumption of natural capital.
"Advances in technology and the accumulation of wealth
enable us to build a new world," says Brown, "one far
more stable and secure than the one we now have. We can lead
a richer, more satisfying life today without jeopardizing the
prospects for future generations."
"We can stay with business as usual and be the generation
that presides over a global bubble economy that keeps expanding
until it bursts," concludes Brown. "Or we can be the
generation that stabilizes population, eradicates poverty, and
stabilizes climate. Historians will record the choice, but it
is ours to make."
Further consider groundbreaking
State of Planet
Earth Reports
The Great Unifier: An antidote for destructive relationships
Integrity 101 Learning With
Nature: a free internet course
http://www.ecopsych.com/integrity101.html
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