1. Whats Going On - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

1. Whats Going On

Description:

Modernism- philosophical background. 17th /18th Century Enlightenment ... Modernism in the Capitalist Economy ... Is Modernism at Fault? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:55
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: Dewd
Category:
Tags: going | whats

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 1. Whats Going On


1
1. Whats Going On?
  • A view of the context

Based on Welford,R (1997) Hijacking
Environmetalism. Earthscan UK.
2
Modernism- philosophical background
17th /18th Century Enlightenment 19th Century
Industrial Revolution
  • Humans can understand the world as it really is
    through the use of universally valid rational
    methods.
  • Knowledge leads to a rationally grounded future
    of abundance, justice and peace.
  • Knowledge produced by rational means is globally
    significant

3
Modernism in the Capitalist Economy
  • Unbridled development and expansion of
    enterprising industry and commerce will lead to
    growth which will benefit all mankind.

4
Environmental Degradation
  • Human health
  • Global food security (diminishing grain stocks
  • Damaged immune systems
  • Biodiversity
  • Fish stocks in decline
  • Climate change
  • Water shortage Africa, China, North America
  • Social infrastructure
  • Environmental unsustainability, rising demand
    shrinking resources spills into social
    instability - Iraq, Somalia, Rwanda

5
Is Modernism at Fault?
  • Western culture and model of economic development
    permeates the whole world
  • Capitalism, secular culture, liberal democracy.
  • Domination of industry, free trade, neoclassical
    economics, fixation with growth.
  • Belief in the power of science technology.

6
CRISIS OF UNSUSTAINABLE EXPANSION?
7
Millennium Development Goals
  • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
  • Universal primary education
  • Gender equality and empowerment of women
  • Reduce child mortality
  • Improve maternal health
  • Combat HIV/Aids, malaria and other diseases
  • Ensure environmental sustainability
  • Develop a global partnership for development

http//www.un.org/millenniumgoals/
8
Conventional Economics
  • Rising prices for diminishing resources will
    produce greater efficiency in their use and the
    development of alternatives
  • BUT biophysical indicators of scarcity and
    environmental degradation tell a different story
    (Millenium Ecosystem Report 2005)

9
Economics in a Full World
  • Economy is a subsystem of the finite biosphere
    that supports it. Unchecked growth (business as
    usual) leads to uneconomic growth.
  • At some point we must reach a steady state
    not growth but development.

10
Steady State
  • Limit use of all resources to rates that result
    in levels of waste that can be absorbed by the
    ecosystem.
  • Exploit renewable resources at rates that do not
    exceed the ability of the ecosystem to generate.
  • Deplete non-renewable resources at rates that, as
    far as possible, do not exceed the rate of
    development of renewable substitutes
  • Constant throughput

11
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
  • What are the current condition and trends of
    ecosystems, ecosystem services, and human
    well-being?
  • What are plausible future changes in ecosystems
    and their ecosystem services and the consequent
    changes in human well-being?
  • What can be done to enhance well-being and
    conserve ecosystems? What are the strengths and
    weaknesses of response options that can be
    considered to realize or avoid specific futures?
  • What are the key uncertainties that hinder
    effective decision-making concerning ecosystems?
  • What tools and methodologies developed and used
    in the MA can strengthen capacity to assess
    ecosystems, the services they provide, their
    impacts on human well-being, and the strengths
    and weaknesses of response options?

http//www.millenniumassessment.org/en/Products.Sy
nthesis.aspx
12
Of the 100 biggest economic institutions in the
world today over half are corporations, the rest
are nation states
Where does the power lie?
13
Business Practice
  • Profit
  • Efficiency
  • Cost reduction
  • Growth
  • Risk

INERTIA resistance to Change
Unavoidable conflict with sustainability?
14
Corporations vs Governments
Trans-national corporations roam the world at
will, increasing their profits with little regard
for countries, people or the environment?
National governments and international alliances
attempt to legislate and regulate the activities
of corporations to limit damage
15
Capitalism Works No need for Change or
regulation business as usual?
  • Wealth Created?
  • Expansion throughout world can provide for all,
    based on science and technology which will
    provide technical fixes for environmental
    problems along the way?
  • There are no viable alternatives.

16
Governments
  • The only way to halt degradation is through
    legislation and enforcement.
  • But, Privatisation is rampant more power is
    transferred to the private sector.
  • Green ideas not deeply embraced

17
Ensuring natural resources that support existing
corporations are exploited to the full
guaranteeing profits well into the future
Ensuring just enough stability to prevent
dramatic changes whilst leaving companies free
from regulation and responsibility to maximise
their profits
Maximum profits to shareholders by ensuring
business as usual far into the future Ensure
environmental and social costs are not paid by
the corporations themselves but by end users
through taxation
Ensuring science is used effectively in the
pursuit of profit and in the reduction of public
concern about use of different technologies
Ensuring an illusion of participatory systems.
Building a strong a docile consumer base based on
freedom of choice to consume products which
produce maximum profits
http//www.sustainable-development.gov.uk/what/pri
nciples.htm
18
Radical Change in Business Practice and
Government required?
  • Could business become something new?
  • Can capitalism save the planet?

19
Economic growth vs quality of life
  • Economic growth does not create happiness
    unhappiness sustains economic growth

20
This article by Partha Dasgupta from Scientific
American (September 2005) argues that GDP per
capita should be disposed of altogether in favour
of wealth per capita as a starting point for
assessing well-being, with wealth defined very
broadly to include physical, human, and natural
capital so as to capture factors such as the
depletion of natural resources over time. 
http//economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/2
005/08/measuring_human.html
21
Unsustainable Capitalism?
  • Free markets provide the most powerful tool at
    our disposal for fashioning a sustainable
    economy?
  • Capitalism as we know it today would appear to
    incompatible with sustainability

Porrit J (2005) Capitalism as if the world
matters . Earthscan, London.
22
Defining characteristics of Capitalism
  • Markets
  • Profits
  • Private property
  • Free Trade

23
Markets
  • Must be properly regulated state must be
    strengthened
  • Prices must be set in such a way as to reflect
    the true cost of energy and resources

24
Profits
  • Profitability the key measure of corporate
    success fat cats
  • 199-2001 CEOs of 23 US companies under
    investigation took home 1.4billion at a time
    when shares in those companies lost 530billion
  • Need to find some way of limiting concentration
    of wealth.

25
Private Property
  • Is there a fundamental incompatibility with
    sustainability?
  • The land belongs to no one absurd for humans to
    assume the have rights (deep ecologists)
  • Collective ownership? (socialist greens)
  • Market economy founded on private property
    (right-wing)

26
Free trade
  • Corporations capitalize on cheap labour, cheap
    resources and lower environmental and social
    standards anywhere in the world that they can
    find them.
  • Corporations seek to externalise costs on the
    environment, other people, future generations
    etc.
  • Incorrect valuation of resources?
  • Inadequate regulation?

27
Globalisation
  • Is globalisation compatible with sustainability?
  • Can multinationals be re-engineered for
    sustainability?

28
China (and India)
  • China 1.3 billion people 100million mc
  • By 2050 ChinaIndia pop 3 billion (world 9
    billion)
  • 25 years of breakneck growth and resource
    depletion threaten ecological meltdown
  • Airwater pollution costs 8 to 12 of GDP(1.4
    trillion)
  • China must feed 20 of the worlds population on
    7 of the arable land
  • Desertification is a massive problem (Gobi)
  • Drought problems

29
Chinas resource uses
  • By 2020 will be responsible for
  • 40 of all coal burned
  • 10 of oil
  • 13 of electricity
  • 20 of CO2 emissions
  • Economists get rich quick enough to curb
    pollution and clean up the mess

30
Forum for the Future 5 Capitals
  • Natural capital resources and sinks
  • Human capital knowledge skills
  • Social capital structures and institutions
  • Manufactured capital tools, machines
  • Financial capital represents value of other
    capitals (no intrinsic value)

31
Natural Capital
  • Any stock or flow of energy and material that
    produces goods and services. It includes
  • Resources - renewable and non-renewable materials
  • Sinks - that absorb, neutralise or recycle wastes
  • Processes - climate regulation
  • Natural capital is the basis not only of
    production but of life itself!

http//www.forumforthefuture.org.uk
32
Valuing Natural Capital?
  • Cost replacing environmental services
  • Pollination
  • Water supply and regulation
  • Assimilation of wastes
  • Climate regulation
  • Costanza et al(1997) 33 trillion per annum

An Introduction to ecological economics / by
Robert Costanza ... et al.. - Boca Raton, Fla.
St. Lucie Press, 1997. - 1884015727
33
Protection for Profit
  • New York City 1997 invested 1.5 billion to
    rehabilitate their watershed rather than invest
    in costly energy intensive filtration plants.
  • The economy must be compatible with the Earths
    ecosystem

34
Human Capital
  • consists of people's health, knowledge, skills
    and motivation. All these things are needed for
    productive work. Enhancing human capital through
    education and training is central to a
    flourishing economy.

35
Social Capital
  • concerns the institutions that help us maintain
    and develop human capital in partnership with
    others e.g. families, communities, businesses,
    trade unions, schools, and voluntary
    organisations.

36
  • The problem is this a predatory global
    financial system, driven by the single imperative
    of making ever more money for those who already
    have lots of it, is rapidly depleting the real
    capital the human, social, natural and even
    physical capital- upon which our well-being
    depends. Pathology enters the economic system
    when money, once convenient as a means of
    facilitating commerce, comes to define the life
    purpose of individuals and society. Money is not
    wealth. In our confusion we concentrate on the
    money to the neglect of those things that
    actually sustain a good life
  • Korten 1997. http//www.yesmagazine.org/article.as
    p?ID885 (accessed 28/09/06)

37
Denial
  • Values left at home.
  • Some argue that If people today are concerned
    about the future they should reflect this in
    their consumer choices not expect governments to
    regulate the markets.

38
Security
  • Over 1 trillion is annually spent on military
    globally
  • The economic, social and environmental cost to
    the worl of this military procurement and
    development is immense. Much of it is borne by
    poorer countries in Africa, the Middle East and
    Latin America where most of the wars are taking
    place and most of the weapons concentrated
  • Surprisingly modest investments in health,
    education and environmental protection could
    break the vicious circles destabilising the world
    today
  • Programmes to provide clean water and sewage 37
    billion
  • Cut world hunger in half 24 billion
  • Control malaria 3 billion
  • Etc all add up to one third of the money spent
    in Iraq

39
Economic progress environmental damage
  • GDP does not indicate how to include the
    depletion of non-renewable capital?
  • Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare

40
  • There are many aspects of sustainable development
    that cannot be addressed by companies acting
    individually.
  • Many requirements for sustainable development
    depend on changes in market conditions
  • Primary responsibility lies with governments

Porritt J (2005) p220
41
GDP (Gross Domestic Product) or ISEW (Index of
Sustainable Economic Welfare)?
  • Sustain the GDP?
  • The sum of natural and man made capital should be
    maintained?
  • Natural capital should be maintained
    independently strong sustainability.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com