Showing posts with label Spaceship Earth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spaceship Earth. Show all posts

Monday, August 30, 2021

A Pioneer in Systems Theory and Sustainability for Spaceship Earth

Boulding's work goes all the way back to the 1960's.

 https://www.inspiringquotes.us/author/3917-kenneth-e-boulding

A sample of his thoughts---

-- Kenneth E. Boulding



Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Saturday, October 31, 2020

In 2020: On the Circular Economy, Infrastructure, and Sustainability

 The two journal articles at the links below give great insights regarding present and future efforts toward a sustainable world.  [Again, sorry about the copy-and-paste-on-another-page links, but I have no control over that.  As far as I know, that's a Google-Blogger-Blogspot glitch.]
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1.  Title - "Circular Futures: What Will They Look Like?"
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S092180091931972X

2.  Title - "Infrastructure Is Key to Make Cities Sustainable"
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8308/htm
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I've noticed on Twitter and elsewhere online that some environmental activists don't understand what's taking so long in regard to a shift to sustainability.  They are a bit frustrated.  I'm guessing these are mostly young people.  No offense intended.  As an old man who has been in this and a couple of related fields for many years (starting in 1970), I offer the following.

First, along with many others, I fully recognize that time - relative to the socio-ecological-economic CRISIS we're in - is short.  The pace of research reflects that; the pace of implementation in most areas of the world does not.  There are many reasons as to why.  In my opinion, here are only two of those reasons, as follows.

1.  Changing Spaceship Earth to genuine sustainability requires a major shift in attitudes, ethics, lifestyle, production, and consumption.  Resistance abounds.  Ignorance abounds.  Propaganda abounds.  Overcoming all that requires patience, and most of all, persistence.

2.  One of the biggest obstacles (perhaps THE biggest) is the fact that mega money largely controls politics.  The overwhelming majority of national politicians are selected, groomed, and financed by the Super-Rich Upper Crust.  Surely by now this is common knowledge.  Unfortunately, most of the Super-Rich are faux "Green".  They've more or less been forced to talk the talk, but have little to no interest in anything ecological or sustainable.  They're short-term thinkers.  Until we get big money out of politics, little will change other than the Crisis getting worse and worse.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well, & Persist

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Preventing the Circular Economy (CE) Concept From Disintegrating

 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921344917302835?dgcid=raven_sd_recommender_email

In the journal article at the link above, the authors maintain that the CE concept may be in danger of collapse due to a lack of agreement among scholars & practitioners as to exactly what it means.  As a result, they say, certain important elements (e.g., social equity, sustainable development) of CE are slighted in planning.  [Keep in mind, this article was published almost three years ago.]

 After a detailed description of the paper's research methods, the article then presents "the first comprehensive and systematic analysis of CE definitions...".  Essentially--- solicited, written, and qualitative definitions of 114 CE terms/elements were coded, analyzed, and quantified.

Section "4. Conclusion" reveals the important results, and should be read by those working with the CE concept.  A few examples of the results follow:
1.  a much needed definition of CE;
2.  the suggestion that some of the authors of the solicited definitions have no idea what CE is really about; and,
3.  some of those authors entirely equate CE with recycling.
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In my view, the article contributes to reducing the lack of coherence in the CE arena.  I still maintain, though, that CE appears to be solidly wedded to the concept of "unlimited economic growth".  As such, it ignores the role of entropy in the biophysical world, and the common sense observation that Spaceship Earth is finite.  Relying on Julian Simon's contention that human inventiveness and production efficiency will overcome any obstacles is not realistic.  Nevertheless, given current political climates around the world, CE may be a good FIRST STEP (& only that) toward a genuinely sustainable habitat.  But first, CE researchers, policy makers, and practitioners need to cohere on what constitutes the Circular Economy.  If they don't, the concept likely will dissolve, fade away, or become nothing more than circularity for the sake of circularity.
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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/

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

"An urgent call for circular economy advocates to acknowledge its limitations in conserving biodiversity"

 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0048969720321185?via%3Dihub

All I have access to is the Abstract... found at the link above.
Below is a graphic from the Abstract---

As mentioned in previous posts, the Circular Economy (CE) concept is fairly popular in various parts of the world.  It's a mistake, however, to think that it's the best ecological approach to solving our multi-faceted Eco-Crisis.  It's not even close to that.  In fact, it's only slightly "greener" than the "circular" concept claimed by neoclassical/neoliberal economics years ago... which wasn't circular at all.

As cited in other article links previously posted on this blog, CE has numerous problems in the ecological arena.  Biodiversity impact is one of them.

In my view, only non-ecologists would believe that Tech innovations and "substitutions" eventually will "decouple" an economy from reliance on natural resources found in highly complex (and irreplaceable) ecosystems.  I imagine it can be done to some limited degree, but not without disastrous impacts on the Mother of all Ecosystems (so to speak), Spaceship Earth.  Such an attempt on a global scale would be folly.

The CE concept is in need of some adjustments, and in need of collaboration with Bioeconomists, Ecologists, and others in similar fields.  A greener version of Neoclassical Economics is not going to save organized human existence on this finite planet.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

"...Promising the radical, delivering the familiar"

A sneak peek at an upcoming November journal article - all I have is the Abstract, which is telling (link below).  It's looking more & more as though the CIRCULAR ECONOMY (CE) concept is not what it's cracked up to be.  At least, at the present time it's not.

So, why is that important?  1)  CE currently is highly popular in academic and governmental policy making circles.  2)  It's being viewed as an ecological solution to the ongoing Eco-Crisis.  3)  It appears to adhere to the neoclassical/neoliberal false belief that increased efficiency and substitutes can ameliorate the negative environmental "externalities" of unlimited economic growth.  4)  It also appears to ignore the impact of entropy regarding economic throughput and recycling.  5)  And finally, it appears to not take seriously enough the existence of biophysical limitations on Spaceship Earth.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0921800920306091

The CE paradigm is in need of a transformative shift which includes abandoning the idea of unlimited growth and overconsumption on a finite planet.  That path has proven to be disastrous.  It's precisely why the world now is seeking an alternative.  Wrapping a Green ribbon around a neoliberal package is not an adequate solution.  The CE model is not Bioeconomics, Ecological Economics, Donut Economics, or Steady State Economics.  It seems to be merely a greener version of neoliberal economics.

In any case, much more dialectical discourse regarding the details of CE needs to occur.  Our lives, our future depend on that process.

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Not only my opinion.  Be Well

Validity Challenges: The Circular Economy Concept

Here's the question:  is the current version of the Circular Economy (CE) genuinely transformational, or merely refurbished and presented as CE 3.0?  More to the point:  does it seriously consider socio-ecological problems involving biophysical limitations in the economic sphere?

The answers are not clear at this point, but the articles at the links below examine the questions in great detail.  CE is not yet crystallized, and could go in any one of a few different directions.  More research and dialectical discourse are needed in order to give the concept a final grounding and direction.

 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921344920302354?dgcid=raven_sd_recommender_email#bib0192

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921344917302756

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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Tuesday, July 14, 2020

What is Earth Telling Us?

Preface

As we humans continue deforestation in tropical areas, massive air pollution in temperate regions, and numerous other ecocide activities all over the world, our planet (which is a dynamic ecosystem) is reacting in various ways.  The reactions in total are sending a message which is clear to anyone with either an academic ecological background, or anyone with an intuitive sense of ecology, and anyone with both.
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The Message

Professor William E. Rees deftly explains it here:
https://thetyee.ca/Analysis/2020/04/06/The-Earth-Is-Telling-Us-We-Must-Rethink-Our-Growth-Society/

Yes, humanity has done many amazing, wonderful, and productive things in the past 5,000 years or so.  There's no denying that.  Plus, in approximately the last 200 years, we've made advances in technology, health, food production, and more that are nothing short of miraculous.  Those accomplishments continue up through present day.

Unfortunately, however, for the last 50 years or thereabouts, we also have been on a path of species suicide.  We have been adhering to an ideology which preaches unlimited growth and overconsumption.  For all practical purposes, it's essentially the largest religion in developed countries.  [See the post immediately prior to this one.]

The disease, cancer, provides an instructive lesson.  What is the overriding characteristic of cancer?  It's unlimited growth.  That occurs in a finite body, and eventually kills the body.  In a certain sense, that's what some of our activities are doing to our habitat; and those particular activities are the result of the economic religion to which we are adhering.
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Conclusion

The article cited above is dated April 6, 2020.  It deals with current problems, and suggested solutions.  It broaches subjects about which too many of us have had our heads in the sand for too long.  If we keep treating the symptoms of ecological problems rather than the root causes, organized human existence soon will be in dire straits... much worse than we already are.
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Not only my opinion.  Stay Well

Sunday, July 5, 2020

"Economics for a Full World", & a Sustainable World

Preface

This isn't only about economics.  It's also about ethics, respect for and appreciation of the biosphere/ecosphere, respect for all sentient beings, and a path to a sustainable, mostly peaceful world.

At the links below, Professors Herman Daly and William Rees give masterful, concise explanations of ecological economics.  The Daly essay is a longer, illustrated read, but both require your full attention in order to comprehend them.  The Rees piece (the link was posted previously on this blog) includes a brilliant comparison to neoliberal/mainstream economics (aka, neoclassical economics).

Both essays do a great job of weaving the larger ethical, political, and ecological contexts into the discussions.
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https://greattransition.org/publication/economics-for-a-full-world

https://greattransition.org/publication/economics-vs-the-economy
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Conclusion

For anyone desiring to understand the best solution to a large part of our ongoing problems on Earth, the essays above are a must-read.  Study them as if our lives depended on it... because they do.  Then, do whatever you can to support and promote these concepts.  Thanks, and my grandkids thank you as well.  😊
p.s.  I recommend reading the Rees piece first - Economics vs. the Economy.
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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