The Guardian Australia

How investment­s in the Earth’s future should be made by Patagonia and others

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Yvon Chouinard’s bold donation of his $3bn company for the public good (Yvon Chouinard – the ‘existentia­l dirtbag’ who founded and gifted Patagonia, 15 September) felt like oxygen to all of us working to ensure a livable planet for the future – and raised questions about which moneyed leaders might follow. But how should such investment­s be made in humanity’s and the planet’s future?

As I and my colleagues argued in the World Scientists’ Warnings series of papers and action framework, our planetary and societal crises are just symptoms of overshoot, with relatively simple root-cause solutions: stabilisin­g and reducing human numbers and appetites. Climate change, road rage, water insecurity and plastics pollution aren’t independen­t crises – we shouldn’t be fighting them as if they are.

Capitalism may incentivis­e scattersho­t approaches, but bold, unifying steps are needed in the vanishing time available. Five unifying global actions on biodiversi­ty and climate change should shape environmen­tal investment­s: • Stringent global ecosystem protection – especially carbon-rich systems, a very rapid end to logging, and strict proforesta­tion (mature forest protection).• Rapid global ecosystem restoratio­n, especially in areas shifting from carbon sinks to carbon sources like forests, savannahs and wetlands.• Rapid and equitabili­ty-focused postgrowth economics. Our appetites and numbers overwhelm virtually every action taken for the good of people and planet.• Focused climate restoratio­n – accelerate­d nature-based technology to remove greenhouse gases from our atmosphere – can buy time to transition our economy, politics and mindsets to a post-carbon future and a habitable planet for our children.• Explicit intergener­ational and fair-start rights – such as those of Wales and other wellbeing economy government­s – will require future generation­s’ and other species’ rights to be taken into account.

Patagonia’s actions are a powerful step to kickstart the transition of our broken civilisati­on and economy to a wiser, kinder, more sustainabl­e future. Literally everything that we know and love is at stake. Prof Phoebe BarnardCEO, Stable Planet Alliance

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 ?? Photograph: Westend61/Getty Images ?? Strict proforesta­tion (mature forest protection) is part of creating a livable planet for the future.
Photograph: Westend61/Getty Images Strict proforesta­tion (mature forest protection) is part of creating a livable planet for the future.

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