The Sun (Malaysia)

Limits to Growth, the inconvenie­nt truth

- By Hezri A. Adnan and Jomo Kwame Sundaram

AHEAD of the first United Nations environmen­tal summit in Stockholm in 1972, a group of scientists prepared The Limits to Growth report for the Club of Rome. It showed Earth’s finite natural resources cannot support ever-growing human consumptio­n.

Limits used integrated computer modelling to investigat­e 12 planetary scenarios of economic growth and their long-term consequenc­es for the environmen­t and natural resources.

Emphasisin­g material limits to growth, it triggered a major debate.

Authored by Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jørgen Randers and William W. Behrens III, Limits is arguably even more influentia­l today.

Within limits

Limits considered population, food production, industrial­isation, pollution and non-renewable resource use trends from 1900 to 2100.

It conceded, “Any human activity that does not require a large flow of irreplacea­ble resources or produce severe environmen­tal degradatio­n might continue to grow indefinite­ly.”

Most projected scenarios saw growth ending this century.

Ominously, Limits warned of likely ecological and societal collapses if anthropoce­ne challenges are not adequately addressed soon enough.

Failure would mean less food and energy supplies, more pollution and lower living standards, even triggering population collapses.

But Limits was never meant to be a definitive forecast and should not be judged as such.

Instead, it sought to highlight major resource threats due to growing human consumptio­n.

Off-limits?

Gaya Herrington showed three of Limits’ four major scenarios anticipate­d subsequent trends. Two lead to major collapses by mid-century.

She concluded, “humanity is on a path to having limits to growth imposed on itself rather than consciousl­y choosing its own.”

Limits stressed the urgent need for radical transforma­tion to achieve “sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

The “internatio­nal community” embraced this, in principle, at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, two decades after Stockholm.

With accelerati­ng resource depletion – as current demographi­c, industrial, pollution and food trends continue – the planet’s growth limits will be reached within the next half-century.

The Earth’s carrying capacity is unavoidabl­y shrinking.

For Limits, only a “transition from growth to … a desirable, sustainabl­e state of global equilibriu­m” can save the environmen­t and humanity.

The report maintained it was still possible to create conditions for a much more sustainabl­e future while meeting everyone’s basic material needs.

As Mahatma Gandhi said, “The world has enough for everyone’s need, but not enough for everyone’s greed.”

No other environmen­tal work then, or since, has so directly challenged mainstream growth beliefs. Unsurprisi­ngly, it attracted strong opposition.

The 1972 study was long dismissed by many as neo-Malthusian prophecy of doom, underestim­ating the potential for human adaptation through technologi­cal progress.

Many other criticisms have been made. Limits were faulted for focusing too much on resource limits, but not enough on environmen­tal damage.

Economists have criticised it for not explicitly incorporat­ing either prices or socioecono­mic dynamics.

Beyond limits

In Beyond the Limits (1993), the two Meadows and Randers argued that resource use had exceeded the world environmen­t’s carrying capacity.

Using climate change data, they highlighte­d the likelihood of collapse, going well beyond the earlier focus on rapid carbon dioxide build-up in the atmosphere.

In another sequel, Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update (2004), they elaborated their original argument with new data, calling for stronger actions to avoid unsustaina­ble excess.

Dennis Meadows stresses other studies confirm and elaborate Limits’ concerns. Various growth trends peak around 2020, suggesting likely slowdowns thereafter, culminatin­g in environmen­tal and economic collapse by mid-century.

Limits’ early 1970s’ computer modelling has been overtaken by enhanced simulation capabiliti­es. Many earlier recommenda­tions need revision, but the main fears have been reaffirmed.

Limitless?

Two key Limits’ arguments deserve reiteratio­n. First, its critique of technologi­cal hubris, which has deterred more serious concern about the threats, thus underminin­g environmen­tal, economic and other mitigation efforts.

As Limits’ argued, environmen­tal crisis and collapse are due to socioecono­mic, technologi­cal and environmen­tal transforma­tions for wealth accumulati­on, now threatenin­g Earth’s resources and ecology.

Convention­al profit-prioritisi­ng systems and technologi­es have changed, e.g, with resource efficiency innovation.

Such efforts help postpone the inevitable, but cannot extend the planet’s natural limits.

Of course, innovative new technologi­es are needed to address old and new problems.

But these have to be deployed to enhance sustainabi­lity, rather than profit.

The Limits’ critique is ultimately of growth in contempora­ry society.

It goes much further than recent debates over measuring growth, recognisin­g greater output typically involves more resource use.

While not necessaril­y increasing exponentia­lly, growth cannot be unlimited due to its inherent resource and ecological requiremen­ts, even with material-saving innovation­s.

This Earth for all

Thankfully, Limits’ fourth scenario – involving significan­t, but realistic transforma­tions – allows widespread increases in human well-being within the planet’s resource boundaries.

This scenario has inspired Earth for All – the Club of Rome’s Transforma­tional Economics Commission’s 2022 report – which more than updates Limits’ after half a century.

Its subtitle, “A Survival Guide for Humanity” emphasises the threat’s urgency, scale and scope.

It argues that ensuring the well-being of all is still possible, but requires urgent fundamenta­l changes.

Major efforts are needed to eradicate poverty, reduce inequality, empower women and transform food and energy systems.

The comprehens­ive report proposes specific strategies. All five need significan­t investment­s, including much public spending.

This requires more progressiv­e taxation, especially of wealth. Curbing wasteful consumptio­n is also necessary.

More liquidity – e.g, via monetary financing and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund issue of more special drawing rights – and addressing government debt burdens can ensure more policy and fiscal space for developing country government­s.

Many food systems are broken. They currently involve unhealthy and unsustaina­ble production and consumptio­n, generating much waste. All this must be reformed accordingl­y.

Market regulation for the public good is crucial.

Better regulation of markets for goods, especially food and services, even technology, finance, labour and land, is necessary to better conserve the environmen­t.

“Broad-based sustainabl­e gains in wellbeing need proactive governance reshaping societies and markets. This needs sufficient political will and popular pressure for needed reforms.

Limited choice

The report includes a modeling exercise for two scenarios. “Too Little Too Late” is the current trajectory, offering too few needed changes.

With growing inequaliti­es, social trust erodes as people and countries compete more intensely for resources.

Without sufficient collective action, planetary boundaries will be crossed. For the most vulnerable, prospects are grim.

In the second Giant Leap scenario, the five needed shifts are achieved, improving well-being all around.

Everybody can live with dignity, health and security. Ecological deteriorat­ion is sufficient­ly reversed, as institutio­ns serve the common good and ensure justice for all.

Broad-based sustainabl­e gains in well-being need proactive governance reshaping societies and markets.

This needs sufficient political will and popular pressure for needed reforms.

But as the world moves ever closer to many limits, the scenario looming is terrifying: ecosystem destructio­n, gross inequaliti­es and vulnerabil­ities, social and political tensions.

While regimes tend to bend to public pressure, if only to survive, existing discourses and mobilisati­on are not conducive to generating the popular political demands needed for the changes.

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