Climate Solutions: Chapter 15
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Sustainable Definitions
God forbid that India should ever take to industrialism after the manner of the West ... keeping the world in chains. If our nation took to similar economic exploitation, it would strip the world bare like locusts. —Mahatma Gandhi For the first time in history it is now possible to take care of everybody at a higher standard of living than any have ever known. Only ten years ago the “more with less” technology reached the point where this could be done. All humanity now has the option to become enduringly successful. —R. Buckminster Fuller, 1980 Human beings are social, but approaches to development often emphasize the ways in which people function as individuals rather than in their social context. Human development depends on individual access to assets and opportunities; but, it also depends on the quality of social relationships, which are embedded in cultures. [19] —Amartya Sen The end of extreme poverty is at hand, within our generation, but only if we grasp the historic opportunity in front of us. [17] —Jeffrey Sachs, 2008 What we thought of as isolated pathologies, scarcities of work or hope or security or satisfaction, are not isolated at all, in fact they're intimately related, they're all caused by the same thing, namely the interlocking waste of resources, of money, and of people. —Amory Lovins In recent years, new nations have entered enthusiastically into industrial production, thereby increasing their energy needs. This has led to an unprecedented race for available resources. Meanwhile, some parts of the planet remain backward and development is effectively blocked, partly because of the rise in energy prices. What will happen to those peoples? —Pope Benedict XVI, 2007
Achieving the Millennium Development Goals would serve to stabilize population while also enhancing livelihoods, expanding human rights, and protecting the environment. While the world’s leaders debate how to define sustainable development for all the world’s people, those of us at the grassroots can adopt our own definitions. Diverse definitions of sustainability each attempt to incorporate the thinking of three approaches to measuring progress: economics, social, and environmental. An economic approach focuses on optimal ways to maximize growth of the financial capital and capacity. Environmental and social approaches focus on the durability and health of the living systems of the planet and its inhabitants. These are summarized in Table 15.5.
Table 15.5 The Three Key Approaches to Sustainable Development |
Economic: Maximum flow of income that could be sustained indefinitely, without reducing stocks of productive assets. Economic efficiency ensures both efficient resource allocation in production and efficient consumption that maximizes utility. |
Ecological: Preserving the viability and normal functioning of natural systems, including system health and ability to adapt to shocks across a range of spatial and temporal scales. Defined by a comprehensive, multiscale, hierarchical, dynamic measure describing system resilience, vigor, and organization. |
Social: Maintaining the resilience of social systems and limiting their vulnerability to sudden shocks. Involves building social capital to strengthen cohesion, protecting cultural diversity and values, and improving inclusion and participation—especially of disadvantaged groups. |
Table Source: Adapted from [14] |
A number of different concepts have been suggested to help visualize the relationship between these three domains: pillars, concentric circles, and triangles. Most important, each nation will have to grapple with how the connections between the economy, society, and environment play out in its own culture and its place within the global community.
There is a profound paradox here. On the one hand, the twenty-first century is widely heralded as the era of sustainability, with a rainbow alliance of government, civil society and business devising novel strategies for increasing human welfare within planetary limits. On the other hand, the evidence is that the global human enterprise is rapidly becoming less sustainable and not more. Much has been achieved—but is it enough? Are global trends towards sustainability or away from it? Have the concepts of sustainability and sustainable development offered a coherent basis for change? [1] —W. M. Adams, for the IUCN, 2006
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Bibliography
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Online resources
- Making Development More Sustainable: Sustainomics Framework and Applications (e-book)
- Adaptations to climate change
- Business strategy and climate change
- Tools and methods for integrated analysis and assessment of sustainable development
- Measuring sustainable economic growth and development
- Online Atlas of Millennium Development Goals
- United Nations Millennium Development Goals
- World Bank Millennium Development Goals
- EU Energy Commission Citizen’s Corner
Action items
- Action 14: Engaging China on a Pathway to Carbon Neutrality
- Action 17: Climate Change Adaptation for the Developing World—Expanding Africa’s Climate Change Resilience
- Action 33: Diverse Perspectives on Climate Change Education?— Integrating Across Boundaries
- Action 34: Building People’s Capacities for Implementing Mitigation and Adaptation Actions
- Action 35: Climate Change and Human Health?— Engaging the Public Health Community
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