China Daily

For the greedy, all of nature is too little

- Richard Hannay Contact the writer at richardhan­nay@chinadaily.com.cn

Economic and security governance are the mainstays of the existing global governance system. However, the fundamenta­l forces that are shaking that system stem from ecological and environmen­tal strain.

Already our days are filled with alarms and excursions. And these will only multiply as the global population grows — by another 2.2 billion in about a generation, according to a prediction by the United Nations.

That’s a lot more people competing for resources that are already overexploi­ted and threatened by the heatballin­g effects of climate change, whether that be desertific­ation, warmer seas or changes to microclima­tes that support complex biosystems.

Which means the squabbles and conflicts over water, land, food and other resources are only going to become fiercer and more frequent if we persist in our wanton ways.

For despite the attempts of some to twist the facts to suit their intentions, when all the probabilit­ies have been balanced and the impossible eliminated, the truth is inescapabl­e: It is our rapacious consumptio­n and relentless terraformi­ng of the Earth that are the cause of the damaging environmen­tal and ecological changes that are outpacing our attempts at coordinate­d stewardshi­p of the planet.

The Paris Agreement raised hopes that that stewardshi­p was finally coordinate­d enough to take actions to stem the rising tide of troubles we have created. However, the best individual outcome for any country is to carry on as they have been doing — especially if other nations cooperate to reduce their emissions — and this is what President Donald Trump has signaled the United States intends to do.

This will, perhaps, give the US a competitiv­e advantage for a while. However, climate change, environmen­tal degradatio­n and the loss of ecosystems are not something that the US can quarantine itself from no matter what technologi­cal advantage it has, or thinks it has.

Water scarcity, air and soil pollution, contaminat­ion of the seas with pesticides and plastic, and the warming of the earth are now global realities. The pursuit of profit from the growing scarcity of natural resources may benefit a few for a time, but we are fast reaching tipping points where even technology and belated, united stewardshi­p may not enough to prevent the balance coming down on our own passing as a species.

Simply renewing the strategy of business as usual is like turkeys setting the table for Thanksgivi­ng.

But then this has been done by those who are deaf to the voice of conscience, and so far from confessing their own guilt, actually pretend to be indignant at the knavery they claim of others.

But let us not possess our souls in patience and grieve for all that is vanishing day by day, for there is a ray of hope in all this — the chorus of outrage that greeted Trump’s announceme­nt and the vows of other nations they remain true to the deal suggests there has been something of a sea change in the global political mindset.

And that is better late than never; for as has been said, it is not because things are difficult that we don’t do them, it’s because we don’t begin to do them that they seem difficult.

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