Showing posts with label Ecosystem services. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecosystem services. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

One of our carbon "sinks" has been overestimated...

according to research at Stanford University, et.al.

 https://earth.stanford.edu/news/one-earths-biggest-carbon-sinks-has-been-overestimated#gs.xl3lt0

If these findings remain solid vis-a-vis other studies, the management of grassland and forest ecosystems may be significantly altered/impacted.  Furthermore, how we manage soil might be changed.

Soil is a highly complex, crucial system that too often is ignored or marginalized by politicians, planners, policy makers, and the petrochemical industry.  Hopefully, that will change for the better, and soon.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

More on Ecosystem Services... Plus, More on Ecosystems

 http://uknea.unep-wcmc.org/EcosystemAssessmentConcepts/EcosystemServices/tabid/103/Default.aspx

At the link above is a concise and comprehensive rendering of the important concept of ecosystem services.

On the left side of the page are more links to all aspects of ecosystems, e.g., ecosystems & biodiversity, ecosystem functioning, etc.

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Be Well

Friday, July 3, 2020

An Alternative to the Obsession With GDP

Preface

Mainstream economics is obsessed with gross domestic product (GDP) growth.  Those who measure GDP growth are convinced that any amount of it is a good sign for the economy, and that's how it's presented to the public.  Furthermore, any economy is considered to be separate from Nature (or worse, Nature is only a small part of the economy); also, sustainability of natural resources is rarely ever considered.  The only resources taken into account during the bulk of economic planning are artificial--- railways, trucks, factories, ships, etc.--- or are humans (labor).  A bit of consideration is given to natural resource availability, but usually not in any holistic way.  To be more concise, mainstream economists value Nature only for what can be extracted from it, and for the amount of wastes that can be dumped back into it.

Note---  these topics are not "flashy", but understanding them is crucial to the continued organized existence of human beings.  The path we're still on is leading to species suicide.  That's not hyperbole.
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The Flaws in Mainstream Economic Thinking

1.  Herman Daly and other Steady-State economists astutely have pointed out the probability of growth beyond an optimal scale that is uneconomic.  In other words, growth in which the costs outweigh the benefits.  Mainstream economists don't agree.  That's because they don't know the overall practical value of Nature to economics and human well-being.  Nor do they appear to understand the true costs of ecosystem damage inflicted by human mainstream economic activity.  To them, ecosystems merely are a tiny part of the economy.  That's especially true now that financialization has become a larger part of economies.  So, I imagine this quip from a mainstreamer:  "We don't need Nature.  To increase GDP, all we have to do is shuffle more papers (so to speak).".

2.  The practical value of natural capital and ecosystem services is often somewhat invisible to, and thus vastly underestimated or ignored by, mainstream economists.  Here's a short introduction to the topic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wMIUglBligI .
Here's another, with E.O. Wilson:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=duOzXGTuUrA .

3.  Mainstream economists fail to recognize that GDP as a measurement of  economic health (and human well-being) is incomplete in the long run, and thus misleading.

Gross Ecosystem Product (GEP) Approach

From the Natural Capital Project at Stanford U.---
https://naturalcapitalproject.stanford.edu/news/accounting-nature-economies
For those of you who may be at a more advanced level regarding this subject, here's the link to the full study--- (which also is embedded at the link above as "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences").
https://www.pnas.org/content/117/25/14593 .
This ecological approach, developed by the Natural Capital Project, already is being tested in China.  The EU has something similar:  Mapping and Assessment of Ecosystems and their Services (MAES).
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Conclusion

The philosophy and policies of neoliberalism/mainstream economics have brought us to where we are today:  environmental degradation; little to no concern for the importance of ecosystem services; little concern for industrial waste disposal (especially if it's into the atmosphere); the unsustainable use of natural capital; and a false belief in unlimited growth, overconsumption, GDP as a complete measure of economic health, and corporatism.  If all that isn't bad enough, we're on the brink of the largest, most severe ecodisaster in human history.  Meanwhile, the Super-Rich are laughing all the way to the bank, most politicians are doing a lot of talking and not much else, and the corporatist propagandists are running amok.

A ray of hope---
A shift to ecological economics, as well as the continued development of the GEP approach to economic measurement, and the adoption of ecoethics is the best path forward... and it's all possible.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Saturday, June 13, 2020

A Brief Introduction to Ecological Economics - The Sane Path Forward

Preface

If we are to avoid an ecological catastrophe, then a relatively rapid paradigm shift must occur in a number of key areas.  One of those areas is economics, specifically, the neoliberal/neoclassical economic system that currently is dominant worldwide.  In this essay, I'll explain why I think the shift should be to ecological economics (EE).  The Intro here shall be bare bones; subsequent posts will cover in some depth various aspects (including criticisms) of the subject.

For two-plus decades, I've been puzzled (baffled, really) as to why neoliberal thinking views the economic system as separate from Nature.  Any economic system is embedded in the natural world - in ecosystems, in biogeochemical cycles, and is subject to the Laws of Nature, so to speak.  Do we not extract timber, other plant products, common minerals, rare earth minerals, water, fish, etc. from the natural world?  Do we not all breathe air?  Are not all businesses (and consumers) sometimes subject to the whims of flooding, storms, droughts, natural vectors of disease, and the like?  Obviously, the answer to each question above is YES.  Consequently, it makes no sense to me for anyone to believe that any economic system is not a smaller piece of the natural world.  In a very real sense, even though this planet has innumerable ecosystems, Earth itself is one giant ecosystem.  No artificial system is separate from or larger than that.
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Why Ecological Economics (EE) is the Sane Path Forward

William Rees, founding member and past president of the Canadian Society for EE, wrote a brilliant piece five years ago for the Great Transition Initiative:   https://greattransition.org/publication/economics-vs-the-economy  In that essay, he makes the point that EE recognizes the economy as "an open, wholly dependent subsystem of the ecosphere...".  [Emphasis added.]   Natural resources are extracted from, and wastes are injected back into, Nature.  Any material transformations in these processes are subject to Natural Law (e.g., the Laws of Thermodynamics).  In other words, any economy is not outside of or separate from the natural world.

The neoliberal economic paradigm operates as if the opposite were true.  As a result, our world is now mired in a plethora of ecological disasters:  loss of biodiversity, which is damaging ecosystem services to humanity and nonhuman life; habitat destruction causing (among other things) disease proliferation; crucial ecosystem damage (e.g., to wetlands & their critical functions of flood control and removal of toxic substances from water); acidification of the ocean; the sixth mass extinction event on Earth; air pollution; water pollution, and unsustainable use of water; climate disruption; and more.

EE also takes into consideration the concept of ecological constraints on what Bucky Fuller long ago called "Spaceship Earth".  Except for incoming solar energy (and some meteorites), we live in a finite, closed habitat.  It's not growing larger.  Fortunately for life here, there are many, many ongoing regenerative and biogeochemical cycles of materials on this ship.  When we interfere with those cycles beyond sustainability, we threaten our life support system's proper functioning.  When we do not properly manage industrial wastes, and when we overharvest natural resources beyond sustainability, essentially we are committing species suicide.  EE recognizes these problems, but neoliberal economics mostly ignores them.

In addition to those mentioned above, key elements of EE include the following:
1.  a transition to a steady-state (not stagnant), sustainable economy, rather than the current unlimited growth model;
2.  the incorporation and evaluation of natural capital and ecosystem services in the economic system;
3.  socially fair distribution of goods & services;
4.  sustainable development and growth;
5.  local/regional procurement of goods & services whenever possible;
6.  reduction of material "throughput" in the economy;
7.  a transition away from fossil fuels; and,
8.  the incorporation of ecoethics into economics and the economy in general.
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Conclusion

As we navigate through the Anthropocene geologic time period, we must face up to a few facts that we've been avoiding.
1.  As Rees and others have pointed out:  the finite ecosphere in which we live has highly variable, but limited, regenerative and waste assimilating capacities.
2.  Our current economies around the globe, and all the activities associated with them, are destroying significant sections of our natural life support system.
3.  That destruction primarily is due to the pursuance of unlimited growth, unlimited development, and over-consumption.
4.  The main driver of the above pursuits is essentially unlimited population growth.
5.  Despite some positive applications, our technology has not slowed the pace toward impending, massive ecocatastrophe.  Arguably and overall, it has instead increased that pace.
6.  To avert disaster, we are in need of a rapid cultural and ethical evolutionary change in our thinking and behavior.
7.  A significant part of that change should be the shift away from neoliberal economics.
8.  After much examination of the factors involved, I believe we should adopt and implement some version of ecological economics in as many countries as possible.  That would be a big step toward improving and preserving organized human existence on Spaceship Earth.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Monday, May 18, 2020

Corona, Climate Disruption, and Biodiversity - All Connected


Here's why ecosystems are important, biodiversity is crucial, and Climate Disruption must be addressed immediately.

https://www.propublica.org/article/climate-infectious-diseases
At the very least, read the first few paragraphs.
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Why BIODIVERSITY is crucial to the well-being of humanity---
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCH1Gre3Mg0
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For your ecological glossary---

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem

Ecosystem Services and their value---
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6luBEJfi3s
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An important point to remember:  ecosystems are dynamic, always adjusting, always striving for a type of homeostasis (balance).  When we humans interfere with the functioning of them, we should do so with the least damage possible under the particular circumstances.  Why?  Because:  1) they all, directly or indirectly, contribute to our health, prosperity, & well-being; and 2) human existence is not possible without the functioning of natural cycles, and those cycles are found in ecosystems.  Even if you're in artificial surroundings all day and night, you still need clean air, clean water, decent food, shelter, protection from floods, disease, etc.  That all is provided by properly functioning ecosystems.  Everything is connected to everything else.  [Barry Commoner's first law of ecology.  https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/barry-commoner-scientist-activist-radical-ecologist ]
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well