Showing posts with label Natural Resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natural Resources. Show all posts

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Land Use RE: Energy and Mining Resource Extraction Footprints

 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800921001646?dgcid=raven_sd_via_email

In case the link doesn't work---

From the journal, Ecological Economics, Volume 187 -
"Energy matters: Mitigating the impacts of future land expansion will require managing energy and extractive footprints".

High Tech (& Tech in general) gobbles up such a large amount of natural minerals, and all of us gobble up such a large amount of fossil fuel energy, that those two categories have an ecological footprint almost as large as agriculture when it comes to the disruption of natural habitats.  This is one of the main reasons that biodiversity is rapidly plunging.

The authors of the above article propose mitigation actions for the future.

The human land use dilemma is growing, and overconsumption plays a major role.  Here's only one example:  no one really needs a new cell phone every year or two.  The production of just ONE phone uses up about 500 pounds of natural resources, and that requires more & more extraction from the land.

As to energy, nearly all of us in highly developed countries use too much of that.  The situation must undergo a paradigm shift if the world is to achieve sustainability.

The entire downhill slide we're on as a species is driven by the rat race of unlimited growth and too much consumption.  From what I've seen, too many people seem to believe we can continue on with both of those if we just convert to a Green Economy.  That's erroneous thinking.  Many studies have shown it to be so.  Links to some of them have been posted on this venue for the past year-plus.  "Going Green" and continuing on with the growth & consumption of the past decades simply are not compatible.

Ecological economics and the concept of a Steady State Economy have been around for years and years.  They've been marginalized and denigrated by the "growth" Establishment, particularly by the Plutocrats (both private and public).

If we are to survive and thrive, it's time for a major change.  To overcome the Establishment propaganda, education - formal & informal - and activism are key.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Monday, May 10, 2021

Is Biodiversity Offsetting Working as it Should?

 Plus, what are the ethical objections to such practice?
https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cobi.13603
Commodification of Nature is a path requiring delicate navigation, and care must be taken to ensure an ethical, successful outcome.

Offsetting exploitation impacts seemingly is a great idea; however, certain problems need to be addressed.  The article at the link above, found in the journal, Conservation Biology, is a good start.  In particular, see the Abstract and Table 3.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well




Saturday, April 17, 2021

The real reason why we're still in Afghanistan...

and never will leave completely unless we undergo a paradigm shift in economics.

https://campbellmgold.co.uk/archive_blowing_in_the_wind/afghanistan_mineral_riches.pdf  [Article by James Risen.]

Almost fifteen years ago, the USGS and the Pentagon discovered the probability is extremely high that Afghanistan is awash in mineral riches totaling about one trillion dollars.  Not only common minerals such as iron and copper are buried there, but those crucial to modern day industry (e.g., lithium) as well.

The world is at a point where mineral resources - especially rare earth minerals - are more and more difficult to access.  Afghanistan has never been mined to any significant degree.  Done in 2007, the USGS used highly sophisticated aerial survey equipment in a study which shows the country is ripe for extremely productive mining.

World leaders who are not pursuing sustainability are prone to believe that when it comes to critical natural resources, it's a "dog-eat-dog" world.  Sometimes such thinking results in long-term planning involving resource wars, or financial wars, or best case - diplomacy.  For decades, we've had all the above on planet Earth.

One way or another, the richer countries are going to get access to needed natural resources.  That's especially true when the country is on an unsustainable path, which currently is the case in the USA and many other well-off nations.

Sustainability is one of the keys to a peaceful future.  Ecological economics is the best path forward.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well


Monday, October 5, 2020

RE: Sustainability - Proposed Policies for Correcting the Human Predicament

 https://theconversation.com/limits-to-growth-policies-to-steer-the-economy-away-from-disaster-57721

The essay at the link above covers the following subjects:
1.  measuring progress,
2.  resource caps,
3.  work and time,
4.  public spending,
5.  banking and finance (and the built-in "growth imperative"),
6.  the population question,
7.  poverty (a rising tide will SINK all boats),
8.  hindrances.
Though the discussion is somewhat brief on each item above, many links to related pages are embedded in the article.

The piece is thought-provoking and, in my view, should be considered by all who are interested in mitigating the current human predicament.
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Not only my opinion.  Be Well
p.s.  Diagram is from the Millennium Alliance for Humanity and the Biosphere (MAHB) at Stanford University.  https://mahb.stanford.edu/

Friday, September 18, 2020

"The economy as if people mattered..." 2020

The open access articles at the links below are enlightening and much needed admonitions regarding the current misuse of "Green" terminology (circular, bioeconomics, Green New Deal, etc.), and the ethical problems inherent in the "Growth" (neoliberal) economy.  Neoliberal economics is attempting to paint itself green, thus supposedly justifying the continuation on the path of unlimited growth.

 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14747731.2020.1761612#aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cudGFuZGZvbmxpbmUuY29tL2RvaS9wZGYvMTAuMTA4MC8xNDc0NzczMS4yMDIwLjE3NjE2MTI/bmVlZEFjY2Vzcz10cnVlQEBAMA==

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800918317178?via%3Dihub

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It is abundantly clear by now that mainstream/neoliberal economics, more than any other relevant factor, is responsible for the disasters of:  the multi-faceted ecological crisis; rampant social & income inequality; an egregiously fragile economy; and a race to worldwide neofeudalism.  In addition to all that, neoliberals currently would have us believe:  the solution to all our problems is more & more efficient growth; and, with recycling, we don't need to worry about running out of natural resources.  Really?  No worries?

The above scenario is not the Bioeconomics of Georgescu-Roegen.  Not even close.  He emphasized biophysical limits, entropy, and finally, degrowth.  [Ever-changing "development" doesn't have to be "growth".]
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Saturday, June 20, 2020

Unlimited Growth, Overconsumption, Equity, and Ecological Economics

Preface

It should be axiomatic that the concept of perpetual, unlimited economic growth and consumption on a finite planet is delusional thinking.  Instead, that concept appears to be the unquestionable mantra of mainstream/neoliberal economics around the world.  I believe it came to be that way because it started when our world was relatively empty of humans, and relatively full of natural resources.

Even later, when I was a freshman at Colorado State U. (1961), the human population was only three billion.  Perceptions of future, unlimited possibilities were quite different then.  Even though it was fairly pervasive, environmental degradation largely was unrecognized by most people.  Natural resources seemed to be super abundant, and in a perpetually unlimited supply.  Overall, the biophysical world appeared to be almost limitless.  The idol of unlimited economic expansion was "worshipped" around the world.

In 1968, a book by Paul R. Ehrlich & his wife, Anne, The Population Bomb, was published.  It was a best-seller, and made the points that this planet is finite, the natural environment will be degraded even more significantly, and the availability of resources will not keep pace with overpopulation.  The book was attacked rather viciously by believers in unlimited growth.

In 1972, after a two-year study by M.I.T. researchers (utilizing a large, mainframe computer), the results were published in a book titled, The Limits of Growth.  Like the Ehrlichs' book, it was a best-seller.  And it was attacked even more fiercely.  This is a fascinating story, and the author, Christopher Ketcham, is one helluva writer.  See the details here---
https://psmag.com/magazine/fallacy-of-endless-growth .
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The Ignorance & Neglect by Economists of Biophysical Constraints

It appears to me that most mainstream economists have little to no higher education in the natural sciences.  In the essay at the link above, Ketcham quotes a number of them, as follows.
1. Oxford U. economist, W. Beckerman:  "[There's] no reason to suppose that economic growth cannot continue for another 2,500 years.".
2.  Harvard economist, C. Kaysen:  "[Some studies show] the Earth's available matter and energy could support a population of 3.5 trillion...".
3.  J. Simon (deceased), University of Illinois economist, stated in 1992:  "We now have... the technology to feed, clothe, and supply energy to an ever-growing population for the next 7 billion years.".
Those beliefs are, of course, sheer nonsense.  I can surmise only that they are due to an almost total ignorance of natural science.

In contrast, ecological economics fully recognizes biophysical constraints, and the negative impacts on our natural life support systems of pursuing unlimited growth.  From An Introduction to Ecological Economics (1997), by Robert Costanza, Herman Daly, et.al.:  "The basic problems...include:  ...highly entropy-increasing technologies that deplete the earth of its resources and whose unassimilated wastes poison the air, water, and land... ".

Unlimited Growth and Overconsumption

I recently watched a 2011 British documentary, "Consumed - inside the belly of the beast".  It effectively illustrated humanity's cultural evolution to the stage at which we find ourselves now:  lost in materialism, consumerism, short-term shallow thinking, the pursuit of unnecessary prestige, and trying our best to ignore the destruction of the ecosphere.  It also put forth the proposition that this stage is a temporary glitch in the development of the species, Homo sapiens.  The makers of the film see a future shift to sustainability and ecoethics.  Let's all hope that's the case for our species.

The film detailed how, over decades, we've been molded by advertising and propaganda to believe that consumer goods can bring us meaning, prestige, contentment, fulfillment, and the big kahuna, happiness.  The key is to buy more and more goods.  Over the years, as we've come to realize ultimately none of that is true, our discontent, anxiety, and emptiness all have increased.  During the same time, we've been trained (in a sense) to seek instant gratification, all the latest tech gizmos (to be replaced every year or two), and to desire having "the latest thing".  Now, we're at the point of a line from an old Rolling Stones' song:  "I can't get no satisfaction.".  On top of all that, too many people seem to believe that Nature is nice, but not especially important... and not really necessary.

In recent years, both mainstream economists and corporate America have used all the above to double-down on their promotion of perpetual, unlimited growth.  Any problems regarding natural resource depletion or ecosphere damage, they say, can be handled by new technology and/or the substitution of one resource for another.  Some mega corporations even have advertised their new "green" initiatives concerning corporate operations.  There's one big problem with all these solutions:  they are all within the framework of continuing unlimited economic growth and consumption... on a finite planet.

Ever-increasing economic growth means ever-increasing throughput. "Throughput" is the total flow of resources from the Earth ecosystem to the economic subsystem... and then back to the ecosystem as waste.  One doesn't have to be a genius to understand that more & more & more of such a system is unsustainable.  It's folly to believe that undiscovered, new technology and/or substitutable resources will prevent the collapse of our natural life support system.  That collapse already has started.  Much more than we've been trying to, we need to mitigate it NOW.  We must undergo a major shift in ethical and cultural values.  The old paradigm is killing us... literally... and both directly & indirectly.  It's time to implement steady-state, ecological economics.

Equity

It's all well and good to say, in the developed world countries we have a democratic system which ensures everyone's chance to pursue happiness and fulfillment; however, the reality is as follows.
1.  The playing field too often is not level; it's not even close to level.
2.  Resources (including financial resources) often are not allocated fairly.
3.  Many countries (including the USA) don't appear to understand the value of having all citizens educated to the highest degree that their capabilities and desires allow.  Some other, more enlightened nations provide access to universal higher education at (for the most part) no cost to the student.
4.  Adequate health care for many people (including many in the USA) is not available, or is too expensive.
5.  Neoliberal politics and corporatist policies (both public and private) greatly favor the Upper Class.  The excuse given is that the Rich supply jobs to everyone else.  Wealth supposedly "trickles down".  That's more often not true than it's true.  Even when it does happen, the jobs too often are temporary and/or part-time, and/or low-paying.
6.  Too many poor people often are relegated to living in neighborhoods which are much too close to the "sinks" of economic throughput wastes.  The resulting exposure to air pollution, water pollution, and land/soil pollution negatively affects their physical health, mental health, and general well-being.
7.  Perpetual wars and insanely bloated defense budgets siphon limited funds away from infrastructure repair/replacement and from social safety nets.  Primarily, they benefit Mega Banks and other Mega Corporations.  The wars often are the result of shrinking natural resources.  Stronger countries want guaranteed access to them.

Conclusion

Pursuing unlimited economic growth, overconsumption, a lack of equity, perpetual wars, essentially unlimited population growth, and neoliberal policies in general have resulted in:
1.  an ecological crisis probably never before imagined (shrinking natural resources, damaged or destroyed ecosystems, disease proliferation, an excess of greenhouse gases, increasing pollution in general, a loss of necessary biodiversity, etc.);
2.  gross social and income inequality (due to a lack of equity and ethics);
3.  a growing discontent with both public and private institutions; and,
4.  an increasing sense of despair over the condition of humanity.

It's time for a significant change in present-day economics, equity, and ethics.  Ecological economics is one part of a sane, sustainable, and much needed path forward.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well