Week 2: The Big Picture - Post 1

Week 2 -The Big Picture - Notes 


Introduction
Planetary boundaries-
Critical biophysical boundaries that we need to stay within to avoid unacceptable change with serious potentially disastrous consequences for societies.
Close to, or beyond 4 planetary boundaries:
Climate change, rate of biodiversity loss, nutrient loading (pollution), and ocean acidification
The Challenge: We need a global transition to a sustainable economic development, a sustainable growth and development within the safe operating space of a stable earth system.

Anthropocene- We, human beings, have become our own geological epoch—the Anthropocene. Where human action is now influencing every aspect of the Earth, at a scale akin to the great forces of nature.
There are now so many of us using so much resources, and changing so profoundly the living ecosystems on Earth that we're disrupting the grand cycles of biology, chemistry, and geology. Almost all of planet's ecosystems bear the marks of our presence. Unsustainable patterns of production, consumption, and population growth are challenging the resilience and the stability of the planet to support human activities.

Reasons to be optimistic-
Knowledge: We are the first generation to know that we've become a threat to our own existence as a modern civilization. Denial and doubt are no longer an option.
Human Adaptability: We humans are remarkably adaptable, innovative, and good at cooperation. Scientific findings, emerging technologies, innovations, and existing know-how implies unique opportunities for us to embark on the most challenging and exciting journey ever. A transition to a world that reconnects our society and well-being to the biosphere, and generates human prosperity within safe planetary boundaries

Week 1 – The Big Picture
Lecture 1:
Environmental Change Globalization- In real time, if someone goes to work emitting carbon dioxide in one part of the world it has, in real time, effects on livelihoods for other individuals in other parts of the world.

3 Pillars of Sustainable Development: Social, economic, and ecological development but…
Redefine Development: providing wealth, development, livelihoods, human prosperity, within the safe, resilient life support systems on Earth.
Examples today of impacts of global environmental change on society:
The Arab Spring is an example of how social and environmental changes interplay at the large regional scale causing sudden, abrupt social shifts. We have the evidence from Australia that twelve years of drought actually affects even global food prices, and certainly policy in that part of the world. And finally when Hurricane Sandy, one and a half years back, suddenly veers in from the Atlantic right in over Manhattan, putting even the Wall Street three meters underwater. A kind of a sarcastic reminder that even a financial system is connected to the environmental system in the world.

The Great Acceleration: over just the last 100 years, we have moved from being a relatively small world on a large planet to a situation where we today, with a lot of empirical evidence, can say that we've now become a large world on a small planet. And that this shift is actually very recent, it's just over the past fifty years.

Overall: Either we continue on an unsustainable path, or we transition into a sustainable pathway, which we'll be defining in the following way: as human development within the safe operating space of a resilient and stable planet. And we're excited about this because science has advanced so much that we can now define the safe operating space by identifying planetary boundaries.

The Anthropocene is the proposed new geological epoch where humans are the main driver of earth system processes (global environmental changes) at the planetary scale. The International Stratigraphic (geological) Commission, part of the International Union of Geological Sciences is currently reviewing the evidence and will soon determine whether we are in the Anthropocene based on the geological evidence. The final decision will likely be made in 2015. *2018-Anthropocene Confirmed

Lecture 2:            
The driving forces that explain why we've ended up in this new juncture with rising global environmental risks.- And it arises from what I've called a planetary squeeze, originating from four different large driving forces, the so-called quadruple squeeze from the world on planet Earth. This squeeze arises from four different areas.

Population Pressure + Affluence
Climate Pressure/Human Caused Climate Change
Ecosystem Crisis
The United Nations Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, the first global health control of the world's ecosystems, show very clearly that over the past fifty years we've lost approximately 60% of the ecosystem functions and services that not only support human well being directly, but also which regulate the capacity of the Earth system to buffer, for example, climate change.

Surprise/ Tipping Points

Population/Affluence 












Climate Change













Ecosystem Crisis:
On ecosystems, I'm just taking one example here, which is showing the risks of deforestation. We're learning more and more for rainforests, and this is an example from the Amazon rainforest, that if we cut down large tracts of rainforest, that combined with climate change, means that we dry out the entire system. And that is very dangerous for rainforests because the majority of the rain in rainforests is self-generated. You need a very, very large canopy of trees, which evaporate water, self-generates rainfall. But when you open up these systems they self-dry and can cross the tipping point and become savannahs. So this is an example of the risks we take because this undermines freshwater supply to big cities, it undermines the ability to produce food, and therefore is an enormous risk with regards to livelihoods. It also makes us lose one of the large global carbon sinks.
Tipping Points:

Finally the risk of tipping points, which is moving from this example of a beautiful biodiverse marine coral reef system, supplying livelihoods for hundreds of millions of people in coastal regions worldwide, which we know today can abruptly shift over and become dead zones. For example, triggered by long, long periods of overfishing, eutrophication, sediments from agriculture, global warming, the system loses resilience slowly but surely, becomes vulnerable, but then a trigger, such as a linear event means that the whole system due to bleaching topples over and becomes permanently locked in a desertified state.

Lecture 3:
 The scientific story of the Great Acceleration:
















*So this is the drama, that the Great Acceleration is based not on theory or models, it's based on real world observations of the exponential rise of pressures on essentially every parameter that matters for our own human well-being.

*Warning - Rachel Carson (Silent Spring)
*We are in fact the first generation to know that we're undermining the ability of the Earth system to support human development. This is a profound new insight.
*And this is where the real excitement arises, that sustainable solutions exist to be able to carry out that transition.

So there's an enormous amount of evidence to support the conclusion that we are in the Great Acceleration, and need a great transformation.
So it's a complex again where we need to understand in an integrated way the social, ecological, the health, human well-being, and environmental changes we're posing and subjecting ourselves to in this situation of a Great Acceleration.

*So the first giant that we now need to face is the recognition that these pressures translate increasingly to risks of abrupt tipping points that the Earth system may respond by suddenly and irreversibly undermining the ability, for example, of forests, land areas, and oceans to deliver to the economy. But the second giant, which is colliding right as we speak, is something that we often underestimate. The global curves I've showed so far, the exponential rise of pressures have at large been caused by the rich minority on planet Earth, the 1.5 billion affluent people that have been largely part of the Industrial Revolution and its success so far. It is now we're going to scale with the ability of all citizens on the Earth to have a right to development, and that adds up to a completely new magnitude of pressures.

Key Challenges when discussing development:
The right for all inhabitants to have an equal access to the ecological, the remaining ecological space in the world.
 


 













So we have this enormous challenge of a rising demand and use of energy, that we with nine billion people increasingly affluent must increase energy use, and at the same time we need a transition, to a world which is largely free for emissions of carbon dioxide by mid-century to be able to stay below 2 degrees Celsius. This is the grand challenge for humanity to be able to do this transition by bending these exponential curves in the Anthropocene.
 


 













We also have exponential curves of solutions, and, for example, to solve one of the world's absolute largest challenges, the transition of the world's energy system into a sustainable energy future, we are also seeing today almost a surprisingly rapid exponential rise of adoption of renewable energy systems. And in these graphs you see examples of data showing the installations of solar PV systems and wind power systems just over the past twenty years. And up until just ten years back the rises were very slow, and now we're on an exponential rise, which actually shows that for many economies in the world we're starting to go to scale with renewable energy systems














A simple way to estimate the overall impact of the Great Acceleration on the global environment is via the IPAT identity, where the impact is the aggregate of changes in population, affluence (an indicator for consumption) and technology. The volume  of  the  box  in  Fig. 2 depicts  the overall  impact  (I)  and  the  three  axes  represent  the  three drivers (P, A, T). The enormous increase in the volume of the box from 1950 to 2011 relative to  the  1900–1950 period  shows  the  Great  Acceleration.  Also  evident  is  the change in the relative importance of the factors. From 1900 to   1950   population, consumption   and   technology   had roughly  equal  effects,  while  from  1950  to  the  present increases in consumption and technology have become the dominant factors driving environmental impact.

-TED Talk- https://www.ted.com/talks/johan_rockstrom_let_the_environment_guide_our_development

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