Is it Too Late for Sustainable Development?
Dennis Meadows thinks so. Forty years after his book The Limits to Growth, he explains why
- Smithsonian.com, March 16, 2012, Subscribe
On March 2, 1972, a team of experts from MIT presented a groundbreaking report called The Limits to Growth to scientists, journalists and others assembled at the Smithsonian Castle. Released days later in book form, the study was one of the first to use computer modeling to address a centuries-old question: When will the population outgrow the planet and the natural resources it has to offer?
The researchers, led by scientist Dennis Meadows, warned that if current trends in population, industrialization, pollution, food production and resource depletion continued, that dark time—marked by a plummeting population, a contracting economy and environmental collapse—would come within 100 years.
In four decades, The Limits to Growth has sold over ten million copies in more than 30 languages. The book is part of the canon of great environmental literature of the 20th century. Yet, the public has done little to avert the disaster it foretells.
To mark the report’s 40th anniversary, experts gathered in Washington, D.C. on March 1. Meadows and Jorgen Randers, two authors of The Limits to Growth, and other speakers discussed the challenges of forging ahead into a sustainable future at “Perspectives on Limits to Growth: Challenges to Building a Sustainable Planet,” a symposium hosted by the Smithsonian Institution and the Club of Rome, the global think tank that sponsored the original report.
I spoke with Meadows, who retired in 2004 after 35 years as a professor at MIT, Dartmouth College and the University of New Hampshire. We discussed the report and why he feels it is too late for sustainable development and it is now time for resilience.
From 1970 to 1972, you and 15 others worked feverishly on The Limits to Growth. What were your goals at the outset of the project?
Jay Forrester, a senior professor at MIT, had created a theoretical model that showed the interrelationship of some key global growth factors: population, resources, persistent pollution, food production and industrial activity. Our goal was to gather empirical data to test his model and elaborate on it. We wanted to understand the causes and consequences of physical growth on the planet over a 200-year time period, from 1900 up to 2100.
According to the “standard run” or “business-as-usual” scenario, you predicted that we would overshoot the planet’s carrying capacity and collapse by mid-21st century. What do you mean by collapse?
In the world model, if you don’t make big changes soon—back in the ’70s or ’80s—then in the period from 2020 to 2050, population, industry, food and the other variables reach their peaks and then start to fall. That’s what we call collapse.
Now, in real life, what would that mean? It is not clear. In a way, it is like being in San Francisco and knowing that there is going to be an earthquake and that it is going to cause buildings to fall down. Which buildings are going to fall down, and where are they going to fall? We just don’t have any way of understanding that. What we know is that energy, food and material consumption will certainly fall, and that is likely to be occasioned by all sorts of social problems that we really didn’t model in our analysis. If the physical parameters of the planet are declining, there is virtually no chance that freedom, democracy and a lot of the immaterial things we value will be going up.
How do you wrap your head around what the planet’s carrying capacity is?
The issue of global carrying capacity is one that is fraught with all sorts of technical, scientific and philosophical problems. But the best effort to deal with these various problems and come up with concrete numbers is the one that has been carried out by [Swiss-born sustainability advocate] Mathis Wackernagel and his colleagues. Mathis has come up with a concept called the global ecological footprint. In its essence, it converts all of the energy and materials that humanity uses every year from nonrenewable sources [such as oil] and makes the assumption that somehow they would come from renewable sources [such as wood or the sun]. Then, it compares our current consumption with what the earth could generate.
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Comments (25)
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It is probably the greatest tragedy in human history (and a whole lot of other species) that the Limits to Growth was not the wake-up call it should have been. However it's my impression that the graph of pollution was overly-optimistic, and so is Lester Brown. The reason is that there is even more denial by agronomists and foresters, who should know better, that persistent, low-level background air pollution is highly toxic to vegetation. Forests are in decline all over the world - all species and ages of trees are dying prematurely, and what's more, they are dying off at a rapidly accelerating rate. A perfect parallel to this unprecedented disaster is the death of coral reefs in the ocean. Amazingly, even though what is happening underwater is less visible, most people are oblivious to the obvious collapse of the ecosystem that is unfolding right in front of them. There have been hundreds of scientific papers written about the pernicious effects of tropospheric ozone on plantlife. It's well established that roots shrink when plants have to repair damge to foliage that absorbs the invisible but highly reactive gas, even before injury can be seen on leaves and needles. As immunity is weakened, opportunistic pathogens attack and so insects, disease and fungus are usually blamed for the underlying weakness that derives from poisonous emissions of burning fuel. The idea that the air is now cleaner is demonstrably false. Precursors to ozone are increasing, particularly from Asia, and fugitive methane from fracking and, who knows, melting permafrost. Links to research here: http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2013/01/29/whispers-from-the-ghosting-trees/
Posted by Gail Zawacki on March 19,2013 | 06:29 PM
I lived for two years with maya indians in the mountains of guatemala,74-76. I lived with them, ate with them, learned to grow their crops and tend their animals. I was in the peace corp as a animal tech. I learned one hell of a lot about subsistence agriculture. I haven`t forgotten it. the disaster predicted for 2030 ought to get some folks worrying about what to do. me, I`d look at the amish, the mennonites and the hutterites. they will feed themselves while the rest of us starves. there is hope. I wish I could back to those mam and quiche indians. but what I learned is still with me. subsistence is all we are going to get. good luck, tom reidy
Posted by thomas reidy on May 16,2012 | 11:44 AM
Why do we confine our selves to one planet? The universe is a big place. It's time we think out of the box. The sooner the better. We either expand off planet while we still have the resources and the will to do it or go the way of the neanderthals who huddled in the back of their caves hoping 'the ice age will just go away' instead of moving South.
Posted by toomey on May 6,2012 | 12:45 AM
Am I missing some thing here? Is this the only planet in the universe? Earth should be turned into one - big - giant - park. A place for us retired folks to live out our old age. A place for vacations and baby sitting the grand kids while their parents get recharged - a place for rich Honey mooners and just plain - home sick people for blue skys. There's a whole universe out there waiting and you young people can start with the Moon by turning it into a planet size space port - Man's doorway to the universe. We're counting on you. Quite hiding in the back of the cave fighting over Earth's limited resources. Find your own Grandpa
Posted by toomey on May 6,2012 | 09:44 PM
The prediction suggests a 'dark age' somewhat like the period that followed the callapse of the Roman Empire in western Europe, only worldwide. The poor and working classes were submerged below a rich and powerful elite who ruled through variations of devine right. I am also reminded of the comment by Louis XV of France who said "apre moi, le deluge". The deluge was the French revolution. The nobility and elite was decimated by the mobs made up of the poor and working classes. The effect of the economic recessions and intervention by governments into the world economy as well as their own national economies work to delay what may be inevitable. This delay may make the potential calapse more severe, when it happens, assuming that no major changes in the world economy and population growth. Alternative energy sources is one area where we may be able to change the paradigm of these predictions. Effective use of solar power, collected above the aymosphere and transmitted to the surface through changing weather patterns is one possible example. Significantly reduced world population growth is another. These changes are not easy or simple, but blindly doing the same thing, over and over, and expecting a different result is one definition of insanity.
Posted by Jim Megrail on May 5,2012 | 11:51 AM
I've noticed that the doomsayers are making predictions about 2100, not 2030 or just a few decades out. By the time their predictions are proven to be wrong, they'll be long gone.
Posted by BeamMeUp on April 23,2012 | 02:17 PM
Didn't we hear predictions like this from Thomas Malthus in the 19th century and from Paul Ehrlich in the 1960s and 1970s? Here are some of Ehrlich's forecasts:
-- "The battle to feed humanity is over. In the 1970s the world will undergo famines and hundreds of millions of people, including Americans, are going to starve to death." (1968)
-- "Smog disasters" in 1973 might kill 200,000 people in New York and Los Angeles. (1969)
-- "I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000." (1969)
-- "Before 1985, mankind will enter a genuine age of scarcity in which the accessible supplies of many key minerals will be facing depletion." (1976)
Yet today, food production is well ahead of population growth, and obesity now kills 300,000 Americans a year. The air in New York and L.A. is cleaner than it has been in decades. England is still very alive and kicking. And Ehrlich lost a wager with the late Julian Simon on the depletion and price of some key resources.
Their doomsday predictions failed to take into account that knowledge about the locations of resources and the technology to use those resources is constantly changing and improving.
Also, like it or not, people are not going to give up their standards of living or their desire to improve them.
It's worth pointing out that pollution is usually worse in urban centers of poor countries than it is in urban centers of developed countries. When I visited Cairo, Egypt, in October 2007, the visibility was no more than 2 miles due to the dust and smog. That pales in comparison to clearier skies over New York, D.C., or even Mexico City (which has a smog problem similar to L.A.).
About the only prediction you can make about doomsayers is that they will never admit they were wrong, and that the top-down central planning mandates they recommend with only make things worse.
Posted by BeamMeUp on April 23,2012 | 10:32 AM
It is clear from some of the preceding comments that a significant part of the population is completely ignorant of the tragedies resulting from unregulated greed throughout recorded history. No respect for science and analysis, only respect for private gain at the expense of others. No quarter is given by anti-government anarchists to those interested in the common good. Some don't even seem to realize that without a strong government business can't thrive - anarchy kills all progress - witness most of Africa. The book describing a world in which corporations rule through taking over government seems ominously prescient. The effectiveness of propaganda over reason in the mind untrained in science is also clear. Older billionaires with some wisdom had better start deploying their resources to back education before the mindless get their way.
Posted by J. G. on April 22,2012 | 08:51 PM
Soylent green.
Posted by Paul Alleman on April 22,2012 | 12:56 PM
There have been no massive new supplies of energy found. Compared to finds from the middle of the last century, these finds are much smaller, of lower quality and require more energy to develop, just as the models predicted. Now the hype is tremendous, because the drillers make as much off of investors as they do from the drilling. The investors are the true pot of gold they are going for. And as to Malthus being wrong, he argued that population levels are tied to the food supply. If the food supply is increased, the population will increase. 1. The food supply increased. 2. The population increased. Looks like he got it right.
Posted by JackD on April 13,2012 | 02:35 PM
Sustainable Development is tyranny and tyranny is always wrong. It is over 200 years too late because America rejected the tyranny of the few who think they know what is best for everyone else. The problems that arise will be solved by the free enterprise so long as it is allowed to do so and not undermined by the left/progressives. Sustainable Development is just as wrong as Malthus was.
Posted by RFH on April 11,2012 | 05:41 PM
Nothing, given human nature and wilful ignorance, will change the set course we have embarked on, unless something truly drastic happens to collapse population numbers before resources run out. Of course, population decline due to natural disaster on a grand scale, world-encompassing nuclear war, or some pandemic with significant mortality rates, would have the effect of suppressing pressure on the planet, allowing survivors breathing space and a larger share of the resource cake. Barring such catastrophes, the only realistic and humane way out would seem to be some form of long-term human global sterility, perhaps induced using some engineered common carrier virus, highly contagious, made so that a generation or two on, the sterility could be reversed. This is of course a horrible suggestion, but without some such involuntary mechanism being put into play, the alternative – letting events flow in their normal way – are more dreadful still.
Posted by Don Tumasonis on April 9,2012 | 10:28 PM
Clearly we cannot rely on governments or business to recognise that we are using up the world's resources at an unstainable rate and that within the current generation we will have to face significant changes to our lifestyle. Secondly to be brave enough, in the context of greed/power and 'growth at any cost', to do anything about it. Paul Gilding in his book 'The Great Disruption' 2011 states "We have come to the end of Economic Growth Version 1.0, a world economy based on consumption and waste, where we lived beyond the means of our planet's ecosystems and resources." Clearly,short of a dramatic world economic collapse, change will have to come from the people, but given the diversity of cultures and economic circumstances, how can such an upwelling of concern, and action, be generated.
Posted by Eeon Macaulay on April 6,2012 | 11:12 PM
When I have finished reading this, I plan to check out the "Private Jet Tours" as touted by Smithsonian Journeys on the right hand side of this page. "Explore some of the most treasured and legendary places on Earth, aboard our private aircrafts". As the notorious Pogo once said: "I have seen the enemy and he is us".
Posted by Robbie Williams on April 6,2012 | 06:08 PM
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