A Climate For Change

Because climate change is seriously uncool.

UN says case for saving species 'more powerful than climate change'

It seems that the bad news about our environment never seems to end. And, in my opinion, it never will till our Industrial Civilisation is completely destroyed.

Humans in the developed nations have no interest in saving the world from catastrophic climate change (they alone can stop it) and they don’t give a damn about other species either. They just can’t be bothered with such things; it’s all just too much for them to think about. Or, they just can’t be bothered. Surly technology, which is how we got in this mess in the first place, will come up with some miracle and save us all at the last minute?

Our civilisation is like a runaway freight train heading for a cliff; good riddance. It’s just so sad that hundreds of millions or even billions of poor innocent men, women and children will have to die for our lifestyle.

Ronnie Wright
World Change Café

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UN says case for saving species 'more powerful than climate change'

Goods and services from the natural world should be factored into the global economic system, says UN biodiversity report

Juliette Jowit
guardian.co.uk, Friday 21 May 2010 20.00 BST

The economic case for global action to stop the destruction of the natural world is even more powerful than the argument for tackling climate change, a major report for the United Nations will declare this summer.

The Stern report on climate change, which was prepared for the UK Treasury and published in 2007, famously claimed that the cost of limiting climate change would be around 1%-2% of annual global wealth, but the longer-term economic benefits would be 5-20 times that figure.

The UN's biodiversity report – dubbed the Stern for Nature – is expected to say that the value of saving "natural goods and services", such as pollination, medicines, fertile soils, clean air and water, will be even higher – between 10 and 100 times the cost of saving the habitats and species which provide them.

To mark the UN's International Day for Biological Diversity tomorrow, hundreds of British companies, charities and other organisations have backed an open letter from the Natural History Museum's director Michael Dixon warning that "the diversity of life, so crucial to our security, health, wealth and wellbeing is being eroded".

The UN report's authors go further with their warning on biodiversity, by saying if the goods and services provided by the natural world are not valued and factored into the global economic system, the environment will become more fragile and less resilient to shocks, risking human lives, livelihoods and the global economy.

"We need a sea-change in human thinking and attitudes towards nature: not as something to be vanquished, conquered, but rather something to be cherished and lived within," said the report's author, the economist Pavan Sukhdev.

The changes will involve a wholesale revolution in the way humans do business, consume, and think about their lives, Sukhdev, told The Guardian. He referred to the damage currently being inflicted on the natural world as "a landscape of market failures".

The report will advocate massive changes to the way the global economy is run so that it factors in the value of the natural world. In future, it says, communities should be paid for conserving nature rather than using it; companies given stricter limits on what they can take from the environment and fined or taxed more to limit over-exploitation; subsidies worth more than US$1tn (£696.5bn) a year for industries like agriculture, fisheries, energy and transport reformed; and businesses and national governments asked to publish accounts for their use of natural and human capital alongside their financial results.

And the potential economic benefits are huge. Setting up and running a comprehensive network of protected areas would cost $45bn a year globally, according to one estimate, but the benefits of preserving the species richness within these zones would be worth $4-5tn a year.

The report follows a series of recent studies showing that the world is in the grip of a mass extinction event as pollution, climate change, development and hunting destroys habitats of all types, from rainforests and wetlands to coastal mangroves and open heathland. However, only two of the world's 100 biggest companies believe reducing biodiversity is a strategic threat to their business, according to another report released tomorrow by PricewaterhouseCoopers, which is advising the team compiling the UN report.

"Sometimes people describe Earth's economy as a spaceship economy because we are basically isolated, we do have limits to how much we can extract, and why and where," said Sukhdev, who visited the UK WHEN as a guest of science research and education charity, the Earthwatch Institute..

The TEEB report shows that on average one third of Earth's habitats have been damaged by humans – but the problem ranges from zero percent of ice, rock and polar lands to 85% of seas and oceans and more than 70% of Mediterranean shrubland. It also warns that in spite of growing awareness of the dangers, destruction of nature will "still continue on a large scale". The International Union for the Conservation of Nature has previously estimated that species are becoming extinct at a rate 1,000 and 10,000 times higher than it would naturally be without humans.

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Tags: Benefits, Biological, Civilisation, Civilization, Diversity, Economic, Goods, Industrial, Life, Nature, More…Services, Species, System, UN

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Comment by Robert Murphy on May 24, 2010 at 20:59
Thanks for suggesting an interesting article, Ronnie. I'm not sure I agree with all your comments at the start though. Especially 'humans in the developed nations have no interest in saving the world from catastrophic climate change'. If that were true, this website wouldn't exist! I do agree, though, that humans need to become vastly more humble and respectful in our dealings with the natural world and with other species, and that this will involve a revolution in lifestyles, especially in rich countries, but probably everywhere.

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