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The Ecological Crisis Social Ecology: World Sustainability Michael R. Edelstein, Ph.D.

The Ecological Crisis

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The Ecological Crisis. Social Ecology: World Sustainability Michael R. Edelstein, Ph.D. Paradigm Theory Robert Kuhn. Cultural Groups Develop “insider” views of the world: shared sets of assumptions, jargon, definitions, Methods Paradigms cause Insiders to see the world similarly and - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Ecological Crisis

The Ecological Crisis

Social Ecology: World Sustainability

Michael R. Edelstein, Ph.D.

Page 2: The Ecological Crisis

Paradigm Theory Robert Kuhn

Cultural Groups Develop “insider” views of the world:

• shared sets of assumptions, • jargon, • definitions, • Methods Paradigms cause• Insiders to see the world similarly and• Outsiders to see the world differently

Page 3: The Ecological Crisis

Anomaly

Defense

CrisisDefinition

of New Paradigm

Revolution

SustainabilityS Curve

Stages of Paradigm Change

after Kuhn

ModernityJ Curve

PARADIGM CHANGE

Paradigm Shift

Page 4: The Ecological Crisis

Raising the Alarm in the 1960s

Murray Bookchin (aka Lewis Herbert) Our Synthetic Environment, 1962

“to suggest that pesticides, food additives, chemicalized agriculture, burgeoning urbanization and nuclear energy were harmful was regarded not merely as “reactionary” but as a national heresy” given the sentiment “characteristic of the country as a whole---the equating of progress with mindless growth and the technocratic ideal of `progress above all.’”

Page 5: The Ecological Crisis

Raising the Alarm in the 1960s

Rachel Carson Our Silent Spring 1962“the controversy that exploded around Rachel Carson’s book….highlights the extent to which American public opinion, orchestrated by corporate interests and government agencies, adhered to a “grow or die” economic mentality and a domineering attitude toward the natural world.” [Bookchin, X11]

Page 6: The Ecological Crisis

Carson vs Modern Paradigm

“…the question is whether any civilization can wage a relentless war on life without destroying itself and without losing the right to be called a civilization [p99]….The “control of nature” is a phrase conceived in arrogance…when it was supposed that nature exists for the convenience of man….” and a Neanderthal science, in turning its weapons against insects, has also turned them against the earth [297].

Page 7: The Ecological Crisis

Criticism of Carson

Miss Rachel Carson's reference to the selfishness of insecticide manufacturers probably reflects her Communist sympathies, like a lot of our writers these days. We can live without birds and animals, but, as the current market slump shows, we cannot live without business. As for insects, isn't it just like a woman to be scared to death of a few little bugs! As long as we have the H-bomb everything will be O.K. P.S. She's probably a peace-nut too.

Page 8: The Ecological Crisis

Criticism of Carson

The National Agricultural Chemicals Association spent over $250,000 on PR firm to malign book and author.

President of the Montrose Chemical Corporation, DDT manufacturer: Carson wrote not "as a scientist but rather as a fanatic defender of the cult of the balance of nature."

Velsicol threatened to sue Houghton-Mifflin; Audubon and New Yorker also threatened.

Page 9: The Ecological Crisis

Rachel Carson’s Meta Connections

Biomagnification

Ecological Integrity Damaged

Human Health Impacts

Human Caused Impacts

Synthetic Society

Paradigm Challenge

Page 10: The Ecological Crisis

Progression of Anomaly Recognition

• Synthetic Environment (Carson, 1962, Bookchin, 1962)

• NEPA, CWA and CAA, FIFRA, TSCA (1970 and circa)

• CERCLA 1980--- PRP: polluter pays

• Contaminated Communities (Edelstein, 1988,2004)

• Our Stolen Future (Theo Colborn et al, 1997)

• Living Downstream (Steingrabber, 1997)

• End of Nature (McKibben, 1999)

• IPCC

• Anthropocene (Crutzen and Stoermer, 2000)

Page 11: The Ecological Crisis

http://vimeo.com/55073825

Page 12: The Ecological Crisis
Page 13: The Ecological Crisis
Page 14: The Ecological Crisis

Systems Theory

Von Bertalanffy:General Systems Theory

Through-put

output input

SYSTEM: CLOSED OR OPEN

Throughput

Page 15: The Ecological Crisis

Limits to Growth 1972The Club of Rome

The world first confronts the reality that resources limits constrain growth:

Club of Rome---an international organization of scholars, industrialists and scientists from 25 nations http://www.clubofrome.org/ ---funded Dennis and Donella Meadows to run a computer model projecting conditions in 2100 from known data from 1900-1970.

Page 16: The Ecological Crisis

The World ModelJay Forrester MIT

• Model complex systems and project outcomes given specified assumptions

• Overcome humans’ limited ability to handle complexity and large number of variables.

• Example of simple linear extrapolation:

Herman Kahn The Year 2000 (Hudson Institute) failed to anticipate energy, pollution or population problems. Assumed economic and technological growth would handle all problems.

Page 17: The Ecological Crisis

Modeling Complex Systems Cont.

• Complex systems have multiple feedback loops

• Short run, linear decision making fails to anticipate unexpected results ex. Iron rule of highways.

• Each variable affects all

• Synergistic interactions 2 + 2 = 5 ex. Drug interactions

• Time Delay ex. Ozone hole, climate change

Page 18: The Ecological Crisis

Forrester Assumed that Social Systems:

• Engage in counterintuitive behavior

• Welfare of system contradicted by subsystems with different goals

• The actions of one subsystem affect all

• Short term improvements conflict with long term perspectives because invariably lead to degradation

• Insensitive to policy changes intended to change the system’s behavior.

Page 19: The Ecological Crisis

System Dynamic Computer Modeling

•Assume key variables, trends and weighting of factors plus interactive factors.•Use mathematical equations to simulate multiple interactions and non-linear relations among variables.•Clearly specify assumptions. Can change as new information comes to light. •Test different scenarios.

Not predicting the future. Project current trends to see consequences and allow for correction.

Page 20: The Ecological Crisis

5 Key Variables Dynamically Interacted

• Population

• Pollution

• Natural Resources

• Industrial Output per capita

• Food per capita

Page 21: The Ecological Crisis

Limitations

Examples:

Omitted many types of pollution and focused only on long lived types.

Resources lumped all together.

Assume resources last 250 years at 1970 use rates.

Page 22: The Ecological Crisis

6 Major Assumptions

1.Finite stock of exploitable, non-renewable resources

2.Finite amount of land to grow food

3.Finite capacity of environment to absorb pollution

4.Technological change is incremental assuming money and environmental technology to allow.

5.Finite yield of food from any unit of arable land

6…..

Page 23: The Ecological Crisis

Thomas Malthus

• 1798 Malthus published On Population.• Imbalance between population and resources

is inevitable because o Food increases arithmeticallyo Population increases geometrically

“God created a world in which the power of the eater to reproduce himself is of a superior order than that of the earth to produce food because fear of starvation stimulates men to be industrious.”

Page 24: The Ecological Crisis

Assumptions Continued

6. Exponential growth of population, pollution and industrial output as long as resources and their interaction permit.• Ex. World Population is increasing at 1.7% -

1.8%.• Population increased more than 6x in 200

years.• http://www.poodwaddle.com/Stats/

Page 25: The Ecological Crisis

1 billion in 1800

4 billion in 1975

2 billion in 1920

6.5 billion in 2005

World Population (billions)

Source: UN Population Division 2004; Lee, 2003; Population Reference Bureau

Page 26: The Ecological Crisis

Exponential Growth

When a quantity changes exponentially, its value will double (or halve) in regular time intervals.

The time it takes to double depends on the annual percent of growth. You calculate doubling time by dividing this annual growth rate into 70.

Doubling time in years = 70/growth rate or 70/1.8=39 years.

Page 27: The Ecological Crisis

$1 trillion in 1900

$10 trillion in 1967

$52 trillion in 2003

World GDP (trillion 1990 dollars)

Source: DeLong 1998

Page 28: The Ecological Crisis

Overshoot = Crash

S curvecrash

Page 29: The Ecological Crisis

Phantom Capacity & Overshoot

Catton: carrying capacity illusions x reality

Prosthetic/Tech Fix

Unlimited CC

cc CC

load loadload

Unrealisms: Phantom or Ghost Capacity

realism

Page 30: The Ecological Crisis

Overall Findings of Limits to Growth

• If population and industrial growth continue to J curve, sometime after 2000, nonrenewable resources will be depleted and a population crash will follow de to scarcity of food and medicine.

• If assume technological advance doubles all resource reserves and you allow 75% recycling, there will be a sharp increase in pollution increasing death rates and causing a population crash.

Page 31: The Ecological Crisis

Improving Standard of Living with Population Increase

• World averages 2 children per family

• World industrial output/capita stabilizes at 1975 levels

• Reduce resource consumption and pollution to ¼ of 1970 levels

• Shift consumption from material goods to services

• Direct capital toward food production, soil enrichment and erosion control

• Industrial capacity is built to last much longer.

Page 32: The Ecological Crisis

Criticisms of Limits to Growth

• Not Assume technology and ingenuity increases to solve all problems

• Not assume people can adapt to all conditions• Not objective; computer replaces humans• Failure assured given exponential growth and finite

resources• Fatalistic---lessen hope, self fulfilling prophesy• Lumps unique regions of the globe together• See

http://www.clubofrome.org/archive/publications/van_Dieren_Doors_of_Perceptions.pdf

Page 33: The Ecological Crisis

Mankind at the Turning PointMessarovic and Pestel 1974

To address criticism that world regions differ2nd study divided world into ten regions.Despite assuming technological optimism, more pessimistic.1.Unless economy and growth redistributed from rich to

poor nations, 2.Resources and food will collapse by 2050 in poor

nations causing a population crash3. Interdependency means regional collapse will pull all

down. Ex. Asian Flu 1998

Page 34: The Ecological Crisis

Neo-Malthusian view

Beyond population, increased resource use is problem

Recognize World System---interconnected

Differences between poor and rich countries

West plus Japan and Russia --- ¼ population and 80% resource use

US 5% world population, 1/3 resource use and 1/3 pollution

Page 35: The Ecological Crisis

Global 2000 July 1980

May 1977, Pres.Carter ordered study world population and natural resources thru 2000

Done by US CEQ and DOS

US govt. no tradition of long term planning

Trend projection using long term global data and models employed by federal agencies.

Page 36: The Ecological Crisis

Global 2000 Conservative Bias

• Used existing long term data and models of US government

• Data on population, GNP, resources and environment taken sequentially 1977-1979

• Thus, not interact factors• Allocate resources repetitiously• Assume continued growth of earth’s goods

and services without maintenance or higher costs

Page 37: The Ecological Crisis

Assumptions of Global 2000

• Continuation of public policy• Continuation of rapid technological

development without resistance (ex. Continually increasing crop yields)• Assume that shortages of resources cause

rising prices which will drop demand • International trade not disturbed by war,

politics or economics, etc.

Page 38: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000

• As population increases, the gap between the rich and poor will widen

• Food production increase 90% 1970-2000 assuming constant climate and environment o Due to energy intensive farming not new land

Fertilizer, pesticide, machines, irrigationo Only a 15% per capita increaseo Costs of food doubleo Increase food importationo Bulk of food go to richo # of malnourished triple to 1.3 billion

Page 39: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000 #2Food Cont.

• 1 hectare of arable land (2.5 acres) support 1970 ---2.6 people

• 2000 ---4 people LDC 5.5 people• Soil loses yearly size of Maine; by 2000 lose 1/3

world’s arable land• Increased use of grain for alcohol fuels

• Contradiction—increase production from Green Revolution ignores degradation from soil loss

Page 40: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000 #3Soil Destruction is constraint to food

growth:• Higher yields at cost of soil integrity:o organic humus—nutrients, water absorptiono inorganic clay and salts---infertileo rock pieces, bedrock

• Desertification: barren land ex. Sahelo 3x 1970-2000 o overgrazing, farming on marginal landso Drought cycles

Page 41: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000 #4Threats to Arability

• Waterlogging, salinization, alkalinizationo Asia, S. America, Californiao collapse of Mesopotamia and Upper Nile

• Deforestration---increased flood and erosion

• Erosion---corn and marginal land farmingo Loss of organic matter and largest CO2 sink

• Development---urbanization of river valleys, industrialization, sprawl

Page 42: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000 #5Other factors affecting food:

1.Monocultures2.Loss of diversity3.Use of hybrids and designer crops4.Fuel subsidies to agriculture5.Pollution from pesticides, fertilizers, etc.

Net effect: shift farming from renewable to non-renewable and unsustainable basis!!!!

Page 43: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000 #6Other Conclusions:

• Fisheries overexploited• Loss of forests ½ California/year

o Particularly in LDCs (40% by 2000), Trop RF• Severe Water shortages

o doubling with population, irrigation• Mineral resources no reserves, more $, inequity• Global Climate Change by 2050• Loss of 20% of all species as habitats vanish• Toxics cause health problems• Oil reach maximum capacity despite higher prices

Page 44: The Ecological Crisis

Sample Findings Global 2000 #7The case of Fuel Wood

• ¼ use wood for fuel “Poor man’s oil”• By 2000, need exceed supply by 25%• In Sahel (Sahara border) fuel wood gathering

full time---20-30% family income• No trees left 50-100 k around cities• Deforestation, erosion, desertification, higher

costs, less fuel, and substitution of dung and crop residues.

Page 45: The Ecological Crisis

Refutations of Global 2000“A Resourceful Earth”

Julian Simon Heritage Foundation Herman Kahn Hudson Foundation

“The year 2000 will be less crowded (with more people), less polluted, more stable ecologically, less vulnerable to resource supply disruption. People will be richer and have more food.”

Page 46: The Ecological Crisis

Refutations of Global 2000Assumptions made by Simon and Kahn:

• No water shortages• Spread of cheap nuclear power• Air & water pollution overblown problem• US farmland not being urbanized signif.• More than enough farmland• No rapid species loss• More food to feed the hungry• Birth rate down while life expectancy is up

Page 47: The Ecological Crisis

Refutation of Global 2000Simon and Kahn’s Magic:

• Resource problems become opportunities inviting entrepreneurs to solve them with ingenuityo Wood crisis-coal, coal crisis-oil, whale oil-oil

• They spur increases in knowledge which spurs growth

• Solutions to problems leave us better offo Ex. Rail to haul coal

• Need stimulus for discovery

Page 48: The Ecological Crisis

Refutations of Global 2000

Simon & Kahn: People are not just the cause of problems but with training, the means to solve these problems: WE NEED MORE AND BIGGER PROBLEMSSteven Bardwell “The World Needs 10 Billion People” Fusion Sept. 1981:• “Qualitative innovations in technology must be

planned on but cannot be planned for” • fusion energy allows more people and consumption

Page 49: The Ecological Crisis

Refutation of Global 2000 Bardwell:

Convert J curve of productivity to linear curve because:• Higher population leads to increased labor

division, ingenuity, ideas, increased productivity

• Complex technologies can support more people

• More people are required for complex technologies

Page 50: The Ecological Crisis

Our Common Future: World Commission on Environment and Development

Brundtland Commission) --- 1984-1987

• Can’t separate economic development from environmental issues

• Inequality is main env. & devel. Problem• Problem of the rich over consumption• Problem of the poor natural disaster over time

o exploit resources for export, debt, dumb aid, militarization, increase population, unemployment and cities, loss farmers, loss soil, drought and flood

Page 51: The Ecological Crisis

Our Common Future 2

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT:Meeting the needs of the present without

compromising future generations.

• Need for lifestyles within the planet’s ecological means; population size and growth in harmony with environment.

Page 52: The Ecological Crisis

Ecological FootprintSource:http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/page/world_footprint/

Page 53: The Ecological Crisis

Ecological Footprint U.S.Global Footprint Network

http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/page/trends/us/

Page 54: The Ecological Crisis

U.S. 2005 FootprintGlobal Footprint Network

http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/page/trends/us/

Page 55: The Ecological Crisis

NEOMALTHUSIAN INEQUITY

We live in a world where• 1/5 of people and 1/3 of children are hungry• 1/5 of people lack clean water• 1/5 of people lack adequate housing• 1/3 of people lack health care and fuel• ½ of people lack sanitation• ¼ of adults cannot read and write

Page 56: The Ecological Crisis

U.S., Russia, China and India

Page 57: The Ecological Crisis

U.S., Russia, China and India

Page 58: The Ecological Crisis

U.S., Russia, China and India

Page 59: The Ecological Crisis

Sierra Leone, Rwanda and U.S.

Page 60: The Ecological Crisis

Source: http://www.footprintnetwork.org/en/index.php/GFN/page/ecological_debtors_and_creditors/

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Sierra Leone, Rwanda and U.S.

Page 62: The Ecological Crisis

UN Conferences

• 1972 Stockholm conference on the environment, consensus on problems of development.

• 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment and Development---Rio o Agenda 21o Emergence of Civil Society and Governmental

Paths to Sustainability• 2002 World Summit on Sustainable

Development---Johannesburg

Page 63: The Ecological Crisis

RIO+20 Brazil June 2012: The World We Want

Shift to Social and Economic Sustainability:• Equity• Green Economy• Renewable energy• Hunger (Millennium Ecosystem Goals• Culture (i.e., First Nations)• Happiness indicators• Bien Vivier : Right of Nature to Life• Recognize next generations as key

stakeholders

Page 64: The Ecological Crisis

Lovins: Soft Energy Paths

• Renewable energy flows (energy income)• Diverse (many small contributors)• Flexible and low tech• Resilient/ decentralized• Match in scale and geographic distribution

to end use needs• Match in environmental quality to end use

needs

Page 65: The Ecological Crisis

Web Sources:

• The (2005) Millennium Ecosystem Assessment • http://www.millenniumassessment.org/en/

Products.Synthesis.aspx• Koffi Annan “We The Peoples: The Role of

United Nations in the 21st Century.” • Chapter 4 : “Sustaining Our Future.”• http://www.un.org/millennium/sg/report/ch4.pdf• Al Gore. An Inconvenient Truth.

http://www.climatecrisis.net/