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The risk of collapse

New report: the pandemic signals breaching of planetary ‘tipping point’ by global economy
The risk of collapse

The Covid-19 pandemic is a symptom of global industrial civilisation’s breach of key planetary boundaries, which are critical to maintaining a safe operating space for human survival on the planet.

This is the conclusion of a new study by a top advisor to an EU-backed scientific research programme.

It states that the Covid-19 crisis is an urgent early warning signal for how industrial civilisation is rapidly eroding the very conditions of its own existence.

A lifeboat economy

The global economy, the study warns, has now entered a volatile new phase of chronic instability which can only be resolved through a transition to a ‘lifeboat economy’.

This must involve debt-free financing for the renewable energy transition and nationalisation and winding down of fossil fuel industries, as well as ecological restoration for clean manufacturing and agriculture.

But most of all, we have to roll back the dangerous trajectory of deforestation through a radically different approach to commodities like palm oil to transition to sustainable production.

That requires a new global pact on deforestation premised on ensuring that major commodities from beef to soy are produced within planetary boundaries based on consistent global standards.

Reframing Covid-19

The new report, ‘Deforestation and the Risk of Collapse: Reframing Covid-19 as a Planetary Boundary Effect’, is published in the journal System Change by the Schumacher Institute for Sustainable Systems, an independent think tank in the UK which has led the European Commission’s Converge research programme.

‘The Covid-19 pandemic is not just a pandemic. When looked at in the context of a wide range of scientific data about the escalating human footprint on the planet, the pandemic represents the passing of a major civilisational tipping point into a dangerous new era of converging ecological emergencies. The Covid-19 crisis is an urgent early warning signal for how industrial civilisation is rapidly eroding the very conditions of its own existence.’

DR NAFEEZ AHMED
Report author and Research Fellow at the Schumacher Institute

Consumption and deforestation

The Covid-19 pandemic has exposed structural fragilities and interdependencies across global systems, the new report says.

But at the heart of these fragilities is the increasing dependence of industrial consumption on processes that are accelerating deforestation.

The solution is to enforce sustainable practices by producers in the South while at the same time curtailing demand in the North.

The probability of a global pandemic was dramatically increased by relentless and unregulated industrial expansion, which has destabilised ecosystems critical for planetary life support.

The same processes are driving other ecological crises which threaten to permanently undermine the health of the global economy.

A deeper crisis

The report concludes that without a transition to a ‘lifeboat economy’ where markets are ‘recalibrated’ to protect public health and natural systems, humanity faces a heightening risk of cascading breakdowns across interconnected social, economic and political systems.

‘Policymakers need to pay attention to the fact that the public health crisis is a symptom of a deeper crisis: a civilisation degrading the very conditions of its own existence.

‘There is now a clear body of scientific data suggesting that industrial civilisation has crossed a major tipping point by simultaneously driving interlinked crises across climate change; our fossil fuel dependent energy system; industrial agriculture; the rate of species extinction; and deforestation.

‘The Covid-19 pandemic is an early symptom of these increasing dangers we face. The synchronicity between all these crises threatens to overwhelm our institutional capacity to respond. Unless we draw back our economies to operate within planetary boundaries, we will face a future of deepening economic crisis and social upheaval.’

DR NAFEEZ AHMED
Report author and Research Fellow at the Schumacher Institute

Dr Nafeez Ahmed sits on the Board of Stakeholders of the European Commission’s Horizon 2020-funded MEDEAS research programme, Guiding European Policy toward a low-carbon economy.

A world-renowned systems theorist and environment journalist, Dr Ahmed is executive director of the System Shift Lab, a trans-disciplinary network of natural and social scientists working on strategies for system change, and is a commissioner for Cambridge University Press’ Sustainability Commission on Scaling Sustainable Behaviour Change.

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