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20 OCT 2008:OPINION
Environmental Failure:
A Case for a New Green Politics
The U.S. environmental movement is failing by any measure, the state of the earth has never been
more dire. Whats needed, a leading environmentalist writes, is a new, inclusive green politics that
challenges basic assumptions about consumerism and unlimited growth.
by james gustave speth
A specter is haunting American environmentalismthe specter of failure.
All of us who have been part of the environmental movement in the United States must now face up to
a deeply troubling paradox: Our environmental organizations have grown in strength and sophistication,
but the environment has continued to go downhill, to the point that the prospect of a ruined planet isnow very real. How could this have happened?
Before addressing this question and what can be done to correct it, two points must be made. First, one
shudders to think what the world would look like today without the efforts of environmental groups and
their hard-won victories in recent decades.
Listen:James Gustave Speth talks with Yale e360 about building a new environmentalism. (27 min.)
However serious our environmental challenges, they would be much more so had not these people
taken a stand in countless ways. And second, despite their limitations, the approaches of modern-day
environmentalism remain essential: Right now, they are the tools readily at hand with which to address
many pressing problems, including global warming and climate disruption. Despite the critique of
American environmentalism that follows, these points remain valid.
Lost Ground
The need for appraisal would not be so urgent if environmental conditions were not so dire. The
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mounting threats point to an emerging environmental tragedy of unprecedented proportions.
Half the worlds tropical and temperate forests are now gone. The rate of deforestation in the tropics
continues at about an acre a second, and has for decades. Half the planets wetlands are gone. An
estimated 90 percent of the large predator fish are gone, and 75 percent of marine fisheries are now
overfished or fished to capacity. Almost half of the corals are gone or are seriously threatened. Species
are disappearing at rates about 1,000 times faster than normal. The planet has not seen such a spasm of
extinction in 65 million years, since the dinosaurs disappeared. Desertification claims a Nebraska-sized
area of productive capacity each year globally. Persistent toxic chemicals can now be found by the
dozens in essentially each and every one of us.
The earths stratospheric ozone layer was severely depleted before its loss was discovered. Human
activities have pushed atmospheric carbon dioxide up by more than a third and have started in earnest
the most dangerous change of all planetary warming and climate disruption. Everywhere, earths ice
fields are melting. Industrial processes are fixing nitrogen, making it biologically active, at a rate equal to
natures; one result is the development of hundreds of documented dead zonesin the oceans due to
overfertilization. Freshwater withdrawals are now over half of accessible runoff, and water shortages
are multiplying here and abroad.
The United States, of course, is deeply complicit in these global trends, including our responsibility for
about 30 percent of the carbon dioxide added thus far to the atmosphere. But even within the United
States itself, four decades of environmental effort have not stemmed the tide of environmental decline.
The country is losing 6,000 acres of open space every day, and 100,000 acres of wetlands every year.
About a third of U.S. plant and animal species are threatened with extinction. Half of U.S. lakes and a
third of its rivers still fail to meet the standards that by law should have been met by 1983. And we have
done little to curb our wasteful energy habits or our huge population growth.
Here is one measure of the problem: All we have to do to destroy the planets climate and biota and
leave a ruined world to our children and grandchildren is to keep doing exactly what we are doing today,
with no growth in human population or the world economy. Just continue to generate greenhouse gases
at current rates, just continue to impoverish ecosystems and release toxic chemicals at current rates,
and the world in the latter part of this century wont be fit to live in. But human activities are not
holding at current levelsthey are accelerating, dramatically.
The size of the world economy has more than quadrupled since 1960 and is projected to quadruple
again by mid-century. It took all of human history to grow the $7 trillion world economy of 1950. We
now grow by that amount in a decade.
The escalating processes of climate disruption, biotic impoverishment, and toxification, which continue
despite decades of warnings and earnest effort, constitute a severe indictment of the system of political
economy in which we live and work. The pillars of todays capitalism, as they are now constituted, work
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together to produce an economic and political reality that is highly destructive environmentally. An
unquestioning society-wide commitment to economic growth at any cost;
All we have to do to destroy the planets climate and biota is to keep doing exactly what we are doing
today.
powerful corporate interests whose overriding objective is to grow by generating profit (including profit
from avoiding the environmental costs their companies create, amassing deep subsidies and benefits
from government, and continued deployment of technologies originally designed with little or no regard
for the environment); markets that systematically fail to recognize environmental costs unless corrected
by government; government that is subservient to corporate interests and the growth imperative;
rampant consumerism spurred by sophisticated advertising and marketing; economic activity now so
large in scale that its impacts alter the fundamental biophysical operations of the planet all combine
to deliver an ever-growing world economy that is undermining the ability of the earth to sustain life.
Are Environmentalists To Blame?
In assigning responsibility for environmental failure, there are many places to lay blame: the rise of the
modern, anti-government right in American politics; a negligent media; the deadening complexity of
todays environmental issues and programs, to mention the most notable. But a number of observers
have placed much of the blame for failure on the leading environmental organizations themselves.
For example, Mark Dowie in his 1995 book Losing Groundnotes that the national environmental
organizations crafted an agenda and pursued a strategy based on the civil authority and good faith of
the federal government. Therein, he believes, lies the inherent weakness and vulnerability of the
environmental movement. Civil authority and good faith regarding the environment have proven to bechimeras in Washington. Dowie argues that the national environmental groups also misread and
underestimate*d+ the fury of their antagonists.
The mainstream environmental organizations were challenged again in 2004 in the now-famous The
Death of Environmentalism. In it, Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus write that Americas
mainstream environmentalists are
Todays environmentalism accepts compromises as part of the process. Ittakes what it can get.
not articulating a vision of the future commensurate with the magnitude of the crisis. Instead they are
promoting technical policy fixes like pollution controls and higher vehicle mileage standards proposalsthat provide neither the popular inspiration nor the political alliances the community needs to deal with
the problem. Shellenberger and Nordhaus believe environmentalists dont recognize that they are in a
culture war a war over core values and a vision for the future.
These criticisms and others stem from the fundamental decision of todays environmentalism to work
within the system. This core decision grew out of the successes of the environmental community in the
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Not everything, of course, fits within these patterns. There have been exceptions from the start, and
recent trends reflect a broadening in approaches. Greenpeace has certainly worked outside the system,
Organizations built to litigate and lobby are not necessarily the best ones to mobilize a grassroots
movement.
the League of Conservation Voters and the Sierra Club have had a sustained political presence, groups
like the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Environmental Defense Fund have developed
effective networks of activists around the country, the World Resources Institute has augmented its
policy work with on-the-ground sustainable development projects, and environmental justice concerns
and the emerging climate crisis have spurred the proliferation of grassroots efforts, student organizing,
and community and state initiatives.
But organizations that were built to litigate and lobby for environmental causes or to do sophisticated
policy studies are not necessarily the best ones to mobilize a grassroots movement or build a force for
electoral politics or motivate the public with social marketing campaigns. These things need to be done,
and to get them done it may be necessary to launch new organizations and initiatives with special
strengths in these areas.
The methods and style of todays environmentalism are not wrongheaded, just far, far too restricted as
an overall approach. The problem has been the absence of a huge, complementary investment of time,
energy, and money in other, deeper approaches to change. And here, the leading environmental
organizations must be faulted for not doing nearly enough to ensure these investments were made.
America has run a 40-year experiment on whether this mainstream environmentalism can succeed, and
the results are now in. The full burden of managing accumulating environmental threats has fallen tothe environmental community, both those in government and outside. But that burden is too great. The
system of modern capitalism as it operates today will continue to grow in size and complexity and will
generate ever-larger environmental consequences, outstripping efforts to cope with them. Indeed, the
system will seek to undermine those efforts and constrain them within narrow limits. Working only
within the system will, in the end, not succeed what is needed is transformative change in the system
itself.
A New Environmental Politics
Environmental protection requires a new politics. RECOOOOOM
This new politics must, first of all, ensure that environmental concern and advocacy extend to the full
range of relevant issues. The environmental agenda should expand to embrace a profound challenge to
consumerism and commercialism and the lifestyles they offer, a healthy skepticism of growthmania and
a redefinition of what society should be striving to grow, a challenge to corporate dominance and a
redefinition of the corporation and its goals, a commitment to deep change in both the functioning and
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the reach of the market, and a powerful assault on the anthropocentric and contempocentric values
that currently dominate.
Environmentalists must also join with social progressives in addressing the crisis of inequality now
unraveling Americas social fabric and undermining its democracy. It is a crisis of soaring executive pay,
huge incomes, and increasingly concentrated wealth for a small minority, occurring simultaneously with
poverty near a 30-year high, stagnant wages despite rising productivity, declining social mobility and
opportunity, record levels of people without health insurance, failing schools, increased job insecurity,
swelling jails, shrinking safety nets, and the longest work hours among the rich countries. In an America
with such vast social insecurity, economic arguments, even misleading ones, will routinely trump
environmental goals.
Similarly, environmentalists must join with those seeking to reform politics and strengthen democracy.
What we are seeing in the United States is the emergence of a vicious circle: Income disparities shift
political access and
The environmental agenda should expand to embrace a challenge to consumerism and commercialism.
influence to wealthy constituencies and large businesses, which further imperils the potential of the
democratic process to act to correct the growing income disparities. Corporations have been the
principal economic actors for a long time; now they are the principal political actors as well. Neither
environment nor society fares well under corporatocracy. Environmentalists need to embrace public
financing of elections, regulation of lobbying, nonpartisan Congressional redistricting, and other political
reform measures as core to their agenda. Todays politics will never deliver environmental sustainability.
The current financial crisis and, at this writing, the response to it, reveal a system of political economythat is profoundly committed to profits and growth and profoundly indifferent to people and society.
This system is at least as indifferent to its impacts on nature. Left uncorrected, it is inherently ruthless
and rapacious, and it is up to citizens, acting mainly through government, to inject values of fairness and
sustainability into the system. But this effort commonly fails because progressive politics are too
enfeebled and Washington is increasingly in the hands of powerful corporate interests and
concentrations of great wealth. The best hope for real change in America is a fusion of those concerned
about environment, social justice, and strong democracy into one powerful progressive force.
The new environmentalism must work with this progressive coalition to build a mighty force in electoral
politics. This will require major efforts at grassroots organizing; strengthening groups working at thestate and community levels; and developing motivational messages and appeals indeed, writing a
new American story, as Bill Moyers has urged. Our environmental discourse has thus far been
dominated by lawyers, scientists, and economists. Now, we need to hear a lot more from the poets,
preachers, philosophers, and psychologists.
Above all, the new environmental politics must be broadly inclusive, reaching out to embrace union
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members and working families, minorities and people of color, religious organizations, the womens
movement, and other communities of complementary interest and shared fate. It is unfortunate but
true that stronger alliances are still needed to overcome the silo effect that separates the
environmental community from those working on domestic political reforms, a progressive social
agenda, human rights, international peace, consumer issues, world health and population concerns, and
world poverty and underdevelopment.
The final watchword of the new environmental politics must be, Build the movement. We have had
movements against slavery and many have participated in movements for civil rights and against
apartheid and the Vietnam War. Environmentalists are often said to be part of the environmental
movement. We need a real one networked together, protesting, demanding action and
accountability from governments and corporations, and taking steps as consumers and communities to
realize sustainability and social justice in everyday life.
Can one see the beginnings of a new social movement in America? Perhaps I am letting my hopes get
the better of me, but I think we can. Its green side is visible, I think, in the surge of campus organizing
and student mobilization occurring today, much of it coordinated by the student-led Energy Action
Coalition and by Power Vote.
If there is a model within American memory of what must be done, it is the civil rights revolution of the
1960s.
Its visible also in the increasing activism of religious organizations, including many evangelical groups
under the banner of Creation Care, and in the rapid proliferation of community-based environmental
initiatives. Its there in the joining together of organized labor, environmental groups, and progressive
businesses in the Apollo Alliance and there in the Sierra Clubs collaboration with the UnitedSteelworkers, the largest industrial union in the United States. Its visible too in the outpouring of effort
to build on Al GoresAn Inconvenient Truth, and in the grassroots organizing of 1Sky and others around
climate change. It is visible in the green consumer movement and in the consumer support for the
efforts of the Rainforest Action Network to green the policies of the major U.S. banks. Its there in the
increasing number of teach-ins, demonstrations, marches, and protests, including the 1,400 events
across the United States in 2007 inspired by Bill McKibbens Step It Up! campaign to stop global
warming. It is there in the constituency-building work of minority environmental leaders and in the
efforts of groups like Green for All to link social and environmental goals. Its just beginning, but its
there, and it will grow.
The welcome news is that the environmental community writ large is moving in some of these
directions. Local and state environmental groups have grown in strength and number. There is more
political engagement through the League of Conservation Voters and a few other groups, and more
work to reach out to voters with overtly political messages. The major national organizations have
strengthened their links to local and state groups and established activist networks to support their
lobbying activities. Still, there is a long, long way to go to build a new and vital environmental politics in
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America.
American politics today is failing not only the environment but also the American people and the world.
As Richard Falk reminds us, only an unremitting struggle will drive the changes that can sustain people
and nature. If there is a model within American memory for what must be done, it is the civil rights
revolution of the 1960s. It had grievances, it knew what was causing them, and it also knew that the
existing order had no legitimacy and that, acting together, people could redress those grievances. It was
confrontational and disobedient, but it was nonviolent. It had a dream. And it had Martin Luther King Jr.
It is amazing what can be accomplished if citizens are ready to march, in the footsteps of Dr. King. It is
again time to give the world a sense of hope.
POSTED ON 20 OCT 2008 INCLIMATECLIMATEENERGYPOLICY & POLITICSPOLICY &
POLITICSSUSTAINABILITYNORTH AMERICANORTH AMERICA
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COMMENTS
Wow. Extremely well said James Gustave Speth!
If you liked this article, then you'll like this too:
http://wakeupfreakout.org/film/tipping.html
Posted byLeo Murray on 22 Oct 2008
I am continually amazed at the basic lack of understanding surrounding the mechanics of how the planet
operates. "All we have to do destroy the planet's climate and biota is to continue to do exactly what
we're doing today"? The biota thrive on increased CO2 concentrations. Optimal CO2 concentrations are
in the neighborhood of 1,000 to 2,000 ppm. It is not even shown that we're the source of the CO2
increases.
If anyone has been paying attention for the past decade, one would notice that the entire modestwarming of the past century has been erased, gone. Further, due to the shrinking heliosphere of the sun
and the current negative Pacific Decadal Oscillation, a large number of credible scientists actually predict
very cool temperatures over the next 30 to 50 years. Our world has been slowly warming over the past
200 years as it pulls out of the last little ice age. The increased temperatures are a boon to civilization
and the increased CO2 (we provide) is welcome by plants due to the increased atmospheric fertilization.
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Posted by Beth on 22 Oct 2008
Beth:
It is possible I'm out of my element. Let me make sure I understand your statement. You content that
CO2 increases alone, decoupled from any increase in temperature, will cause ~25% extinction of all
species on earth?
Posted by Drew Thatcher on 22 Oct 2008
I loved the first part that seem to invite something unexpected in its simplicity and ability to change
minds. Maybe Im just a dilettante, but all this community-organizing work advocated leaves me
unconvinced. Marching in the street (The Civil Rights Movement), attacked by dogs and firehosesnot
terribly appealing. But I agree with the need to rethink America which is tantamount to rethinking the
world. And I would also say that this is an aesthetic and lifestyle issue primarily. Before reading this, I
had been musing on the need for a simplified, holistic paradigm for governance that I think can be
achieved. Im working on it. Todays draft introduction goes as follows:
We can start with Brazil. The greatest travesty of environmentalism is to destroy the Amazon Rainforest
that helps the planet breath in order to produce ethanol fuel to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from
automobiles. The loss of carbon sequestering rainforests accounts for much of the greenhouse gasses
gathering in the atmosphere. But there being relatively little money to be made in preserving them, they
are being destroyed apace. Whats wrong with this picture?
Posted by TRB on 22 Oct 2008
I'll second the notion that Drew lacks the basic understanding of "the mechanics of how the planet
operates" that he accuses the rest of us of lacking. Empirical evidence from a wide range of
observational approaches support the view that the rise in CO2 and other greenhouse gases over the
last 150 years is attributable to the burning of fossil fuels by industrial activities and that at least onehalf of the observed warming over the past century is attributable to that rise in greenhouse gases.
Furthermore, were Drew truly paying attention to the surface temperature record of Earth he would
find that far from "erased" the planet remains nearly 1 deg. C warmer today than it was 100 years ago.
Only the rate of warming has slowed in the current decade owing, probably, to internal variability of
climate.
Posted by Eric on 23 Oct 2008
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I applaud Mr. Speth for his refreshing honesty. I always knew environmentalism was simply an elaborate
trojan horse for socialism, so I am very happy to hear a respected environmentalist explicitly state the
goal of the movement: the end of capitalism. I have often been ridiculed for telling people this, but
having a leader of the environmental movement write this article serves as confirmation of the
watermelon theory: Environmentalists are green on the outside but red on the inside.
Posted by Brooks on 23 Oct 2008
Dr. Speth should be commended for taking a hard look at our movement -- one that he helped to start.
In essence, environmentalism cannot and should not be divorced from economics. We learned this in
the 70's -- when the economy slides downhill, companies engage in "environmental blackmail." Jobs and
family needs will always take precedence. We lose politically. ("Drill baby Drill").
So long as the global economy embraces the consumer-growth paradigm (extraction, production,
consumption, usage with additional energy consumption and disposal, we cannot get where we need to
go. We need to replace this with a different kind of investment and growth strategy, based on human
need and well being economic security, true entrepreneurism and the concept of resilience. We need a
system that has what it takes to absorb purturbation without going haywire -- and one that protects
Mother Nature and the wonderful and free services that she provides!
We need to think broadly. In the current debate on climate change -- some environmentalists havebegrudgingly accepted nuclear power as part of the solution. However, if we look at the economic and
political implications we come up with a different answer. An investment in renewables and energy
efficiency is far wiser.
Renewable is basically inflation proof, safe, and nicely dispersed. You don't need huge amounts of
capital (and vast regulatory bureaucracies, and waste repositories) to put up solar panels or wind
turbines. Such businesses can help to build communities rather than siphonining off their capital.
Furthermore what is democratic not only helps to provide for human need but provides checks to
unbridled power -- checks and balances provide resilience.
Our current system focues on optimizing production efficiency for specific corporations. The resultingconsolidation (as in banks) causes massive instability and increasing distance between communities and
capital (hemorrhaging). The system is inherently unstable and leads increasingly to consequences that
cascade out of control. To paraphrase Naseem Taleb, author of the Black Swan, If you have a lot of small
banks and one of them fails -- thats not so bad. If you have a tiny number of megabanks and one goes
down, this creates a massive and spreading problem.
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We could learn alot through a greater understanding of the resilience of natural systems (e.g.
ecosystems). Nature's economy is about 3.5 billion years old and will continue to do well with or without
humans. We need also to understand the vast amount of free services that Mother Nature provides and
understand that she is big, but finite in her abilities.
In short both economists and environmentalists (and "deciders") need to learn to better ecologists. The
current economic crisis is a golden opportunity for a major paradigm shift in this direction.
Posted byHenry S. Cole, Ph.D. on 23 Oct 2008
Speth seems to miss that the Green Party has already been working hard on the coalescence of issues
that he writes about. The Green Party is already linking war, oil, electoral reform, global warming,
poverty. It is just old school folks like Speth seem to be missing what is going on, wanting to invent
something that we already invented. He should just join the Green Party.
Posted by greg gerritt on 23 Oct 2008
On the subject of extinction of species, a bounding estimate of 15% to 40% species extinction with a
mean of 25% is not supported by existing studies (and does not say a lot about the total propagated
error of the estimates). To me, it seems like the jump from studies of adaptation and migration (where
the species original territory generally appears to have expanded) to computer simulation of future
events appears to be missing a beat. I would hope we are in agreement that plant growth increases in
response to increases in carbon dioxide and that heat tolerance also increasesalmost withoutexception. There are a huge number of papers that support this assertion. I believe that part of the
future estimates of species extinction also hinges on a corresponding increase in temperatures over the
next century. It should be clear that after four successive iterations of the IPCC, their model runs cannot
accurately predict future temperature trends (and the error terms obviously do not account for all
systematic and random uncertainties) and the errors in these GCMs spill over into the modeling for
species depletion as well. These GCMs have not been retrospectively calibrated so why should such
great faith be placed on future estimates? Until the IPCC begins to seriously consider solar and cosmic
influences their estimates will continue to fail, but I digress.
Posted by Drew Thatcher on 24 Oct 2008
Response to H.S. Cole on renewables.
Henry - I'm sure you've done the math, but solar and wind will never add up to more than a few percent
of the total energy budget. Without nuclear fission, I cannot see how we can replace the energy
supplied by fossil fuels. Nuclear fusion, the holy grail, is at least 40 years away. Even if conservation
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yielded a further 10% reduction (and recall that we've been continuously working on efficiency
improvements for 30+ years), one is still left with a vary large gap in production without fossil fuels that
renewables cannot fill.
Eric - the problem with the surface temperature record credibility has been documented. Their utility on
a global scale is highly suspect. Better to rely on satellite data.
Posted by Drew Thatcher on 24 Oct 2008
Poets, Preachers, Philosophers... yes, indeed, how I do remember Rabindranath Tagore's work, Red
Oleanders. If there is one, this is the epic song that sang so evocatively and eloquently the confluence of
socio-enviro-agendas that must be fought together inorder to revolutionalize change... real change for a
brave new world. I here do sincerely encourage everyone - the writer and the commentators here - to
read this great work of Tagore. I personally relish the thought that his is a long awaited call to collective
action to save man from himself! Thanks for your great piece, Mr Speth.
Posted byJoseph Lai on 24 Oct 2008
This piece by Gus Speth is brilliant.
As a lifetime political and environmental activist who has worked with and led international, national
and local environmental and political organizations, I wholeheartedly agree with Gus' charge to the
environmental "movement" that they actually need to rethink what a "movement" really is in this dayand age. It is not a coalition. It is not a collection of single issue activists working toward a legislative
goal.
This is the deceivingly simple question that needs to be put in front of the national group
leaders...again...for examination: what constitutes an environmental "movement," do we need one
(yes!), and how does it get built?
But where is that leadership going to come from?
And yes, it's time for fresh thinking, energy, communications and models for action. The social fabric ofAmerica is changing and our nation's politics are also changing dramatically.
There are inhibiting factors, like tax deductible contributions which don't allow electoral work, built into
organizational structures that limit most groups' ability to be political in the electoral sense. But there is
also political in the strategic sense, and tax deductibility doesn't inhibit that kind of action.
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"Membership" in a group is typically based on a financial contribution, which isn't how a movement is
built - movements are people-powered. Sure, it takes money to fuel the movement, but I believe that
groups need to value "shoe leather" equity as much as financial contributions. By valuing action as much
as monetary contributions, I believe that organizational memberships will become more diverse. And
subsequently, organizational agendas will also become more reflective of the concerns of all Americans.
We need to learn from the few early American "movements" how to direct the activities of a people-
powered movement. What do you do with all these volunteers and activated citizens that makes a
difference? Let's look back at the civil rights movement, the womens' suffrage movement, the Vietnam
war movement, and others to see just how different today's environmental movement is from those
earlier, successful models.
But be aware that intensive "movements" burn so brightly they burn themselves out. So we need a new
model for the 21st century. One based on new technologies, new challenges, and the new realities of
society. The environmental problem will never be finally solved (though we
need to get further down that road), so we need a sustainable movement for sustainability.
Gus, thanks for leading the way on this important discussion. Where do we go from here?
Posted by Deb Callahan on 24 Oct 2008
Deb Callahan: "But be aware that intensive 'movements' burn so brightly they burn themselves out. So
we need a new model for the 21st century."
I agree wholeheartedly. Instead, a cool approach is needed, a master plan that systematically includes
all issues in all places, a spatially oriented vision that calmly knits places together in an ecologically
sensible way.
Since geopolitical divisions of space ignore the prerogatives of the natural world (that are the best
safeguards against planetary meltdown), it is absolutely essential to hold to the following maxim: Land
before people.
Ironically, since a comprehensive world visioning along the advocated lines requires rigorous,
responsible, inclusive and cooperative thinking, the benefits of a land-first paradigm should result inimmediate and substantial relief of human suffering and injustice (the sine qua non for change). There is
no other path to success. The earth made whole again, with the vast store of human knowledge at its
disposal, is what we must strive toward.
Posted by Trevor Burrowes on 25 Oct 2008
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Global human population is rising from more than 6.7 billion, having quadrupled in less than a century.
Every 5 minutes 650 more people are added to human populationthis equals a million person net gain
in just over 4 days and another United States every 3 to 4 years.
If population were a stand-alone issue, reasonable people could honorably disagree about the optimal
population density of a state, a region, a nation and the Earth, and perhaps the numbers listed above
would not be cause for such great concern.
However, as we witness the Earth giving us clear distress signals -- as are being discussed in this valuable
forum, examples being climate change, species extinctions, marine dead-zones and intensifying
desertificationwe no longer have the luxury to view human populations in isolation from the
ecological crisis facing the planet.
Each additional human increases the base of aggregate demand for the Earths natural resources and
open space. Efficiency and technology can mitigate these demands to some extent, but logic tells us that
ever increasing human numbers are an insurmountable obstacle to the urgent need to implement
sustainable development strategies for human communities all over the globe.
Cutting per capita carbon emissions does little if the capita keeps expanding. Reducing groundwater
consumption at the household level does little if the number of households keeps growing. Cutting
personal protein consumption in half makes little difference when a net 650 more protein dependent
people arrive on the planet every 5 minutes.
Many people who are staunch environmentalists have resisted talking about the ideas of human
population stabilization because they don't have a way to talk about them in a human rights framework
-- they rightly fear a continuation of north-south colonialism, patriarchal ownership of women's wombs,
or some sort central planning of human fertility -- all of which would be abominable disasters.
Furthermore, woeful mistakes made in the name of population stabilization in the past, for instance the
forced male sterilizations that took place in India in the mid 1970's, continue to paint population
stabilization ideas with a dingy brush indeed.
This is a momentous problem that must be rectified, because even in a best case scenario, human
population will balloon to 9.1 billion by 2050. Business as usual will result in a population approaching
12 billion. No sustainability advocate can countenance such an increase.
Unless and until population stabilization is seen as a deeply progressive commitment to human rights
and reproductive freedom -- one that will serve the urgent need to implement sustainable living across
the region, nation and worldthe global struggle to attain sustainability will be carrying the tragic
millstone of population expansion, and the bright promising future we all wish to see may be lost.
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Population stabilization ideas must be central to the core cannon of healthy, lasting and vibrant
sustainable development ideas. The world must see that population stabilization is the happy dividend
of investing in the reproductive freedom of all human adults, especially women.
Posted byJoe Bish on 25 Oct 2008
"Population stabilization ideas must be central to the core cannon of healthy, lasting and vibrant
sustainable development ideas. The world must see that population stabilization is the happy dividend
of investing in the reproductive freedom of all human adults, especially women."
But is population increase a cause or an effect of unsustainable-development programs?
Posted by TRB on 25 Oct 2008
It should be easy to do something about population. According to Marie Stopes, one pregnancy in three
is unintentional; there are only five condoms per man per year in sub-Saharan Africa; there are two
million unsafe abortions annually. The withholding of funds to UNFPA to the tune of $34m annually has
resulted in 2m additional births and disabilitiesand 800,000 unsafe abortions with the attendant
maternal deaths. Let alone all the politics, simple humanity demands that something should be done
about this. As an individual concerned about this, one could at least support Marie Stopes or
International Planned Parenthood Federzation
Posted by Roger on 25 Oct 2008
Perhaps to understand why the environmental movement has failed we need to ask what basic value of
the early environmental movement has been forgotten or, out of political correctness, pushed aside.
Of course the environmental movement is failing and that harkens directly back to early key
environmentalists such as Sen. Gaylord Nelson, a founder of Earth Day. Key to the early years of the
movement was the knowledge that population growth is a key driver of environmental degradation at
EVERY level. In my lifetime, the planet's population has muchroomed from roughly 2 billion to today's
number that approaches 7 billion even as the silence from the environmental community as women all
over the planet are denied fundamental access to family planning (except back street abortions) is
deafening.
In the United States a nation that Nelson called part of the population problem our numbers
(despite a replacement-level birth rate since about 1975) have exploded and passed 300 million in 2006,
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making us today one of just 3 nations with more than 300 million.
If anyone believes we are going to solve global warming, the largest species extinction since the die off
of the dinosaurs or any other environmental problem while the population explodes, perhaps that
individual needs some reading time on the topic from the environmental movement's founders.
Posted by Kathleene Parker on 25 Oct 2008
The Erlichs at least factored in overconsumption (lifestyle) along with the population explosion as the
cause of environmental degradation. To uncouple these two issues (as well as a host of otherslike
sustainable, just community development) is to get exactly nowhere.
Posted by Trevor Burrowes on 25 Oct 2008
My initial post serves as an assertion that out of the many narrative strands that will come to define a
successful "new environmentalism," one of those strands will be a stabilized human population
practicing sustainable living scenarios.
To over-simplify, over-consumption needs to evolve to sustainable living; and, a population in overshoot
needs to be stabilized.
Removing barriers to fertility regulation across the Earth is no more or no less urgent than cutting
carbon emissions -- they are, along with the myriad other obstacles to an authentic sustainability, allurgent.
We should all follow our passions and skill sets to address whatever sustainability thread most appeals
to us, while supporting each other and not letting our egos make us believe our own issue is THE issue.
We don't have time for that.
Posted byJoe Bish on 26 Oct 2008
The environmental movement has compromised itself to the point of almost irrelevancy and is
effectively impotent. The baby boomers were the last generation that either remember living on a farm
or had parents and grandparents that lived on a farm. This gave them a connection with the land even
after they moved to the big cities. Up until the end of the 1970s, most city dwellers could drive less than
20 miles to enjoy high quality fishing and hunting opportunities, there was still a lot of real wilderness to
experience and people engaged in these activities with regularity. In contrast, most people now have no
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connection with the land. Food comes out of a package from the store. Wild animals are to be feared.
Few people can imagine butchering animals for food or appreciate the sacrifice that was made for the
meat in their meal. Most people now spend their free time in front of some type of electronic screen
where, if they get any connection with the environment at all, it is either about the quality of their air or
water and not about the loss of wild areas, even those close to their homes. Few people make the
connection between population and our current environmental condition. I really cannot see how to
engage people now in the monumental task of turning our environmental condition around. It would
mean making a fundamental change in how we live our lives and Americans at least are not prepared to
do that.
Posted by Kris on 27 Oct 2008
I am amazed that so few of the comments deal with economics -- especially at a time that we are in the
midst of a crisis and probably at the edge of a severe recession.
This is a rare opportunity to put forth a different vision of an economy -- one that is more like and more
compatible with nature's highly successful and long-lived system of interconnected economies -- and
one that can provide for human needs without devastating the free life support system we get from
nature.
Lets start talking economics -- the rest will follow.
Posted byHenry S. Cole, Ph.D. on 29 Oct 2008
Re: Kathleene Parker's comment on international family planning: "In my lifetime, the planet's
population has mushroomed from roughly 2 billion to today's number that approaches 7 billion
even as the silence from the environmental community as women all over the planet are denied
fundamental access to family planning (except backstreet abortions) is deafening."
I must differ with your analysis about the environmental community's silence about family planning
funding. When I headed the League of Conservation Voters from 1996 to 2006, we put a vote on
international family planning funding on our National Environmental Scorecard every year. And I lobbied
on that issue on Capitol Hill many times in my tenure. I mentioned our support for family planningfunding in press conferences, speeches, etc.
Many members of Congress criticized us for our consistent support of international family planning
funding, saying family planning, or even abortion were not environmental issues (and we always pointed
out that abortion and family planning dollars should not be confused, but it was convenient for some
right to lifers to confuse the issue).
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In particular, John McCain was quite memorable in his animosity on the issue. He once said to an
assembled group of national environmental CEOs that "he wasn't even sure that we should support
family planning because the more people in the world there are, the more Christians there will be in the
world." True story. And shocking. Not to mention that his math is a little off if he looks at the
proportionality of Christians to Muslims or certain other faiths.
Nonetheless, some of my national environmental colleagues were as consistent as clear as LCV was in
fighting for family planning funding. It's important to give credit where credit is due, and not make
uninformed criticisms.
Posted by Deb Callahan on 30 Oct 2008
We should all follow our passions and skill sets to address whatever sustainability thread most appeals
to us, while supporting each other and not letting our egos make us believe our own issue is THE issue.
THE issue: Health care, energy, transportation, war, economy, infrastructure, education are among the
top agenda items for a new president and Congress. They are traditionally dealt with as single,
unconnected items. I doubt that population control as a single item will be getting attention any time
soon. Many other crucially important issues will similarly be sidelined owing to their having to compete
for limited funds and political will to be tackled in the usual disjointed manner.
Mr. Speth advocates, and I agree, that the people need to organize a new kind of movement that will
actually begin to slow and ultimately reverse environmental degradation. He also advocates that ourissues be linked, although I didnt get clear how he thought that should be done. As things stand, the
term environmentalism is probably inadequate. Within the field of environmentalism alone, there are a
variety of issues which are currently in competition!
Deforestation, air and water quality, loss of topsoil, loss of species are among environmental issues that
are usually tackled in isolation of each other. As are the development issueseconomic policy,
industrial practices, energy sources, built environment, trade, population density that exacerbate
them. The resulting lack of coordination or wholeness contributes to public apathy and confusion.
We need an environmental movement simple enough for everyone to feel a part of. The firstphotographs of earth from far space made many see the planet in a new wayas the seamless earth,
devoid of artificial geopolitical discontinuities. I believe that sustainability requires that we make the
wholeness of the space view of Earth into a reality on the ground.
I have long been struck with the need to connect issues, but not in the tossed-salad sense of connection.
The tools are there for connecting issues in a systemic fashion. I hope there are some on this forum who
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can help toward this endeavor that requires so much work and thought.
City General Plans and other kinds of geopolitical land-area plans offer fruitful ways to begin integrating
issues. This is because these plans are comprehensive in scope, and lend themselves to the
development of synergies between issues. General Plans are often comprised of elements that include:
infrastructure, economic development, land use, housing, circulation, conservation, open space, health
policy, transportation, scenic routes, air quality, parks and recreation, arts and culture, design, noise,
safety, historic preservation, among others. And the law usually requires that there be internal
consistency between elements.
Beyond local planning lies regional plans. This from the city of Los Angeles: When preparing or revising
a general plan, cities and counties should carefully analyze the implications of regional plans for their
planning area. General Plans are required to include an analysis of the extent to which the general plan's
policies, standards, and proposals are consistent with regional plans. Regional plansprovide the legal
basis for allocating state and federal funds, as in the case of transportation and water quality facilities.
Other regional plans, such as air quality plans, spell out measures which local governments may institute
in order for the region to meet state and federal standards.
So planning tools exist, though still very inadequate, to promote sustainable development within given
parts of the earths surface. A new US administration might well set in motion a survey of such plans in
the US and elsewhere toward seeing what potential consistency and integration exists between them. I
believe that everyone can comprehend why land-area plans everywhere should be relatively integrated.
Economic restructuring must also be aligned with planetary sustainability. The international community
must fund programs that contribute to global sustainability and climate stabilization.
Off the top of my head are the following: Preserving the Amazon Rainforest; coal sequestration (or
something analogous) in China and India; Congo peace-keeping and habitat preservation; micro loans
and economic development; international structures that promote sustainability; and family planning.
International aid must be tied to green development that might include the above issues among many
others.
Sustainability thus sanctioned by the international community could do much to reduce ethnic, religious
and national tensions throughout the world. Rather than hoping these can simply be removed, we need
to have a compelling substitute for them. Reaching for the big global picture that everyone can grasp is
the best way to do it.
Writer Tom Friedman has been a major voice for the kind of environmentalism I think we need. In his
view, environmentalism and nation building are one and the same thing. Green development is the hub
of the wheel of governance, not one of its many spokes. A green-development philosophy affects every
aspect of governance. Imagine a health-care system that had no synergistic relationship with air-quality
control. Or an economic program that had no relationship with either.
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consequences that we humans and all our relations are feeling, many dying from them.
Environmentalists, community organizers, small businesses and workers do need to unite and the Green
Party is a very good place to do that. The fact that they haven't already is their biggest mistake. Trusting
the current winner-take-all system, and I mean that not just in terms of the political but the economic
and social system as well. (Perhaps Gus left out the "workers" since it is such a buzz word for the anti-
social among us?) From all the recent events in the financial sector it should be clear that the current
system is a socialist system for the wealthy and a capitalist system for the poor, so those who charge
that it is socialist to be anti-capitalist are misinformed. People care about their families and quality of
life, they care about clean water, healthy food, a place to live, clothes to wear and care about those who
they perceive might help them get that. Names of the ideologies? ...not so much. We should be looking
at the Transition Towns movement which is about decentralizing the system and transitioning from a
growth economy to a highly efficient static economic system. To achieve that the current system needs
to be challenged in the policy making arena instead of just feeding at the edges as the non-profit
environmentalist and social activist communities do. The time, I agree, is now. Support Malik Rahim for
US Congress from New Orleans, join your local GP chapter, go to GP.org to find it or start it and help
your town become a Transition Town.
And, to one of the commenters here; Brazil is NOT cutting down the rain forest to produce ethanol, that
is part of the APIs campaign against ethanol which in a decentralized economy is the liquid fuel of
choice, a mere by-product of an efficient food growing system. Lets not ignore the technologies we have
that can get us there now. No more studies, no more waiting on research, the time is now.
Posted byHoward Switzer on 11 Nov 2008
Gus Speth used to be the administrator of the UN Development Programme. Why was he not saying
these things when he had the chance to make a radical difference? How about leveraging Yale Forestry's
position to get more of this stuff going? How about a modest mea-culpa before dumping on the failings
of environmentalists?
How many times have bureaucrats - end-career - started to hark on about the power of social
movements. Gus: you should have been in the streets, then, instead of in New York/UN Headquarters.
Posted by John M on 16 Dec 2008
Quoting from drew above,
I am also taking from the post is basically saying that the incline in CO2 will cause ~25% extinction of all
species on earth - however this seems not possible to me.
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Posted byManny Pacquiao on 10 Feb 2009
The only good question I saw the author pose was, "Are environmentalists to blame?"
The answer is YES, in part because environmentalism has become a religion. It's not enough to be green,
you have to suffer, you have to feel guilty, you have to sacrifice for sacrifices' sake, regardless of what
the outcome of your sacrifice will be. And in part because greens actually caused some of the messes
they cry about.
Greens have done as much if not more damage to this planet than any oil company. What the author
sites as a success, "the 70's environmental movement" basically prevented the building of any more
nuclear power plants in this country, which resulted in a boom in coal plants. Which also gave us Acid
Rain, mercury in our fish, and particulate pollution which conservatively kills 10,000 Americans a year.
Not to mention that American power plants have for years been the single largest segment of co2producer's in the world.
Posted byf1fan on 10 Mar 2009
Since reading The Limits to Growth in the early 70s I have been aware of humanities mad rush toward
the collapse of the health of the planet's environment. It has also become clear to me and many others
who are better informed that the primary force driving this degradation is the increasing numbers of
humans.
No matter how Spartan our life styles there is no conceivable way that the earth can sustain 6 billion
people let alone the projected 9 billion by the end of this century. No matter how successful we are in
any areas of conservation (planting trees, reduced consumption, etc.) all will result in failure without
effectively bringing our numbers within sustainable limits. How many people the earth can sustain will
depend upon how soon we stop the degradation (a healthy planet can support more people than a sick
one) and how small the environmental footprint of each person. If we all want to drive Hummers and
have huge homes the number may be less than 1 billion. If we all use only what we need we may be able
to sustain 3 billion.
If humanity does not face the laws of carrying capacity they will be imposed upon us by nature. Ideology
will not be the deciding factor, reality will be. Unfortunately we are not in agreement on what reality is
but eventually it will smack us square in the face. I do have great hope that humanity will some day
come to its senses but I fear it will only be after some very hard lessons. We are in the last stages of "the
good life" and these may fade even more quickly than those of us who are now predicting very difficult
times in the not so distant future.
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Posted by Cebrun Gaustad on 22 Apr 2009
A great article.
In the Uk the climate camp movement are making progress and have helped force the scrapping of a
new coal fired power station at Kingsnorth.
Aidesep the network of indigenous people in the amazon have used non violent direct action to stop the
rainforests being logged and used for oil extraction.
Best of all the great Elinor Ostrom has won the Nobel Prize for economics, she is on record as saying
economic decisions should be based on the indigenous principle of making sure they respect the next
seven generations.
In a world of fakes she is a superb ecological economist with her work on the commons.
Be great if people took notice of Elinor and the indigenous.
Posted byDerek Wall on 08 No
With increasing catastrophes like oil and chemical spills environmentalists pressed for laws to protect
air, water, farmland, and endangered species. (Credit:marinephotobankvia Flickr)
By David Suzuki
Environmentalism has failed. Over the past 50 years, environmentalists have succeeded in raising
awareness, changing logging practices, stopping mega-dams and offshore drilling, and reducing
greenhouse gas emissions. But we were so focused on battling opponents and seeking public support
that we failed to realize these battles reflect fundamentally different ways of seeing our place in the
world. And it is our deep underlying worldview that determines the way we treat our surroundings.
Subscribe to Science Matters
We have not, as a species, come to grips with the explosive events that have changed our relationship
with the planet. For most of human existence, we lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers whose impact on
nature could be absorbed by the resilience of the biosphere. Even after the Agricultural Revolution
10,000 years ago, farming continued to dominate our lives. We cared for nature. People who live close
to the land understand that seasons, climate, weather, pollinating insects, and plants are critical to our
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well-being.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the birth of the environmental movement. In 1962, Rachel
CarsonpublishedSilent Spring,which documented the terrible, unanticipated consequences of what
had, until then, been considered one of science's great inventions, DDT. Paul Mueller, who
demonstrated the effects of the pesticide, was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1948. In the economic boom
after the Second World War, technology held out the promise of unending innovation, progress, and
prosperity. Rachel Carson pointed out that technology has costs.
Carson's book appeared when no government had an environment department or ministry. Millions
around the world were soon swept up in what we now recognize as the environmental movement.
Within 10 years, theUnited Nations Environment Programmewas created and the first global
environmental conference was held in Stockholm, Sweden.
With increasing catastrophes like oil and chemical spills and nuclear accidents, as well as issues such as
species extinction, ozone depletion, deforestation, acid rain, and global warming, environmentalists
pressed for laws to protect air, water, farmland, and endangered species. Millions of hectares of land
were protected as parks and reserves around the world.
Thirty years later, in 1992, the largest gathering of heads of state in history met at theEarth Summitin
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The event was meant to signal that economic activity could not proceed without
considering ecological consequences. But, aided by recessions, popped financial bubbles, and tens of
millions of dollars from corporations and wealthy neoconservatives to support a cacophony of denial
from rightwing pundits and think tanks, environmental protection came to be portrayed as an
impediment to economic expansion.
This emphasis of economy over environment, and indeed, the separation of the two, comes as humanity
is undergoing dramatic changes. During the 20th century, our numbers increased fourfold to six billion
(now up to seven billion), we moved from rural areas to cities, developed virtually all of the technology
we take for granted today, and our consumptive appetite, fed by a global economy, exploded. We have
become a new force that is altering the physical, chemical, and biological properties of the planet on a
geological scale.
In creating dedicated departments, we made the environment another special interest, like education,
health, and agriculture. The environment subsumes every aspect of our activities, but we failed to make
the point that our lives, health, and livelihoods absolutely depend on the biosphere air, water, soil,
sunlight, and biodiversity. Without them, we sicken and die. This perspective is reflected in spiritual
practices that understand that everything is interconnected, as well as traditional societies that revere
"Mother Earth" as the source of all that matters in life.
When we believe the entire world is filled with unlimited "resources" provided for our use, we act
accordingly. This "anthropocentric" view envisions the world revolving around us. So we create
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departments of forests, fisheries and oceans, and environment whose ministers are less concerned with
the health and well-being of forests, fish, oceans, or the environment than with resources and the
economies that depend on them.
It's almost a clich to refer to a "paradigm shift", but that is what we need to meet the challenge of the
environmental crises our species has created. That means adopting a "biocentric" view that recognizes
we are part of and dependent on the web of life that keeps the planet habitable for a demanding animal
like us.
Subscribe to Science Matters by emailRSS
Tagged with
climate change,
environment,
governmentAUTHOR
1.Timothy Devinney
Professor of Strategy at University of Technology, Sydney
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
Timothy Devinney receives funding from The Australian Research Council.
Provides funding as aFounding Partnerof The Conversation.
uts.edu.au
UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY, SYDNEY JOBS
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But the real issue that the environmental movements leaders have failed to grasp is that the reason
there is such a lack of corporate and governmental action is that the consumers and general population
do not believe and act like activists. While environmental activists ramp up the rhetoric to a war footing,
ordinary individuals get on with their lives. Unfortunately, it is this ordinary individual to whom the
evil corporate and neutered political representatives are beholden. The environmental movement
has, in a way, declared war on everyone and its representatives.
For example, it is argued that pension funds are a key target of environmental activists because it was
simply unacceptable that pension funds invested money in activities that the owners of the money
would not find acceptable. But my colleagues and I recently finished a series of experimental studies on
pension fund allocation by individuals in the US and Australia (with over 1,500 investors). What we
discovered was rather disheartening. When given the chance, individual (ordinary mom and pop)
investors actually under-allocated their funds to social responsible investment alternatives.
In other words, when faced with investment alternatives with identical risk-and-return characteristics,
the non-social alternative was preferred to the social alternative (mainly because people did not believe
that the investment returns could be sustained). Overall, the social alternative received 20% less
investment than its non-social counterpart.
In addition, in our book,The Myth of the Ethical Consumer,we showed that individuals are highly
unlikely to respond to calls to consume in a more socially responsible manner if there is (a) a price to
doing so, and (b) they believe that to do so compromise product/service performance. While niches of
socially-responsible consumers exist, they always have been, and will remain, niches.
Finally, in a recently released report on the social, economic and political values of Australians, (What
Matters to Australians: Our Social, Political and Economic Valueswe found that concerns about
environmental issues have declined dramatically since 2007. Today, concerns about the environmentare at best a middling issue for people and pale in comparison to concerns about public safety, equality
of opportunities, and basic public services. This is true in all the countries we studied (e.g., Germany, the
US, and the UK so far).
So while it is convenient to declare war on evil corporate criminals and weak-willed and morally
compromised politicians, the reality is that these individuals are actually more representative of the
society than are activists. Indeed, by engaging in extreme activities it is also possible that activist
organizations alienate just the constituency that they need to engage.
Indeed, given our findings, we would argue that a better strategy would not be war but a winning of the
hearts and minds of the average citizen by showing them the materiality of the environmental issues to
their daily lives. Dire warnings of global catastrophe generally do not get through. Publicising how
specific events as will change the daily lives of people is more critical.
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