WE MUST MOVE TO THE SIMPLER
WAY.
THE GLOBAL SITUATION, THE SUSTAINABLE
ALTERNATIVE SOCIETY, AND THE TRANSITION TO IT.
We cannot solve the alarming
global problems confronting us if we continue to be committed to
affluent-consumer lifestyles in growth-forever economies. For decades the argument for this
conclusion has been overwhelmingly convincing, but it has been almost
impossible to get people or governments to attend to it.
There is a way out of the
global situation we are in, and it is attractive, but it rejects affluence and
growth. It will be sketched below.
There are two major faults
built into the foundations of our society, one to do with sustainability and
the other to do with justice.
Fault 1; Sustainability.
The way of life we have
in rich countries is grossly unsustainable. There is no possibility of
the Òliving standardsÓ of all people on earth ever rising to rich world per
capita levels of consumption of energy, minerals, timber, water, food,
phosphorous etc. These rates of
consumption are generating numerous alarming global problems, now threatening
our survival. Yet most people have
no idea of the magnitude of the overshoot, of how far we are beyond a
sustainable levels of resource use and environmental impact.
Consider
some basic aspects of our situation:-
- If all the estimated 9 billion people likely to be
living on earth after 2050were to consume resources at the present per capita
rate in rich countries, world annual resource production rates would have to be
about 8 times as great as they are now.
All estimated potentially recoverable resources of fossil fuels (even
assuming 2 billion tones of coal) would be exhausted in about 18 years.
- If all 9 billion were to have the present US timber
use per person, the forest area harvested would have to be 3 to 4 times all the
forest area on the planet.
- If 9 billion were to have a North American diet 4.5
billion ha of cropland would be required, but there are only 1.4 billion ha of
cropland in use.
- Several geologists have recently begun to claim that
global petroleum supply will peak within a decade, and be down to half the
present level by about 2030. We
are so dependent on liquid fuels this prospect is very alarming.
- If 9 billion people were to use minerals at the
present per capita US rate of use, estimated potentially recoverable resources
then 1/3 of the 36 most used minerals would be completely exhausted in about 30
years.
- ÒFootprint analysisÓ indicates that the amount of
productive land required to provide one person in Australia with food, water,
energy and settlement area is about 7- 8 ha. The US figure is closer to 12 ha. If 9 billion people were to live as Australians do,
approximately 70 billion ha of productive land would be required. However the total amount available on
the planet is only in the region of 8 billion ha. In other words our rich world footprint is about 10 times
as big as it will ever be possible for all people to have.
- The atmospheric scientists are now generally
indicating that the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere must be kept
below 450 ppm, and probably 400 ppm, to prevent global temperature rising more
than 2 degrees. Even a 400 ppm level runs a worrying risk (99 – 16%) of
exceeding this rise. (Baer and
Mastrandrea, 2006.) A 2 degree
rise could have very serious consequences, such as the loss of the Great
Barrier Reef and the Gulf Stream.
These atmospheric concentrations mean annual carbon emissions must be
cut from the present c. 8 GT/y to around 1.5 GT/y. For a world population of 9 billion this would mean a per
capita limit of 170 kg p.a. Yet
the present Australian per capita rate of emission is 7 tonnes! This carbon emissions would have to be
cut to about 3% of our present rich world levels.
What
if most of our energy came from coal with geo-sequestration of the CO2
produced? This would mean finding
safe deposits for tens of billions of tonnes of CO2 every year, and all
probable land sites would be used up in a few decades. (Deep sea sites should
not be used on such a very large scale; effects are unpredictable, and carbon
dioxide will come to the surface again someday.)
The point which such figures
makes glaringly obvious is that it is totally impossible for all to have the
Óliving standardsÓ we have taken for granted in rich countries like
Australia. We are not just a
little beyond sustainable levels of resource demand and ecological impact
– we are far beyond
sustainable levels. Rich world ways, systems and living
standardsÓ are grossly unsustainable, and can never be extended to all the
worldÕs people. Again, few people
seem to grasp the magnitude of the overshoot. We must face up to dramatic reductions in our present per
capita levels of production and consumption. (For the detailed limits case see
Note 1.)
Now add the absurd commitment to economic
growth.
The main worry is not the present
levels of resource use and ecological impact, it is the levels we will rise to given the obsession with
constantly increasing levels of production. The supreme goal in all countries is to raise incomes,
Òliving standardsÓ and the GDP as much as possible, constantly and without any
notion of a limit. That is, the
most important social goal is economic growth.
If we assume a) a 3% p.a.
economic growth, b) a population of 9 billion, c) all the worldÕs people rising
to the Òliving standardsÓ we in the rich world would have in 2070 given 3%
growth until then, the total volume of world economic output would be 60
times as great as it is now.
So even though the
present levels of production and consumption are grossly unsustainable the
determination to have continual increase in income and economic output will
multiply these towards absurdly impossible levels in coming decades.
But what about technical advance?
Such enormous multiples rule
out any possibility that technical advance can enable us to continue the
pursuit of growth and affluence while greater energy efficiency, recycling
effort, pollution control etc. deals with the resulting resource and ecological
impacts. Some "tech-fix"
optimists believes we could cut the resource and ecological costs per unit of
economic output to one quarter of the present levels. But this would be far from sufficient.
Let us assume that present
resource and ecological impacts must be halved (some of the above figures
indicate that they must become much lower than that). Gain if we had 9 billion people on the Òliving standardsÓ
Australians would have by 2070 given 3% growth then total world economic output
would be 60 times as great as it is now.
How likely is it that we could have 60 times as much producing and
consuming going on while we cut resource and ecological impacts to half their
present levels, i.e., a factor 120 reduction?
A crucial assumption made by
those who believe radical change will not be required is that renewable energy
sources can be substituted for fossil fuels. There is a strong argument that this is not correct. (See
Trainer, 2007, for a summary see
Note 2.) For instance even very
optimistic assumptions would not make it possible for global biomass production
to meet more than about 10% of present world liquid fuel demand.
Global problems should be seen in these limits
terms.
This Òlimits to growthÓ
perspective is essential if we are to understand the most serious global problems
facing us:
- The environmental problem is basically due to
the fact that far too much producing and consuming is going on, taking too many
resources from nature and dumping too many wastes into nature. It cannot be solved in an economy that
is geared to providing ever rising production, consumption, "living
standards" and GDP.
- Third World poverty and underdevelopment are
inevitable if a few living in rich countries insist on taking far more of the
worldÕs resources than all could have.
The Third World can never develop to rich world ways, because there are
far too few resources for that. (See Note 3.)
- Conflict and war are inevitable if all aspire
to rich world rates of consumption, and if rich countries insist on growth, on
a planet with limited resources.
Rich countries must support repressive regimes willing to keep their
economies to the policies that enable our corporations to ship out cheap
resources, use Third World land for export crops, exploit cheap labour
etc. We must be ready to invade
and run countries that threaten to follow policies contrary to our
interests. Our rich world Òliving
standardsÓ could not be as high as they are if a great deal of repression and
violence was not taking place, and rich countries contribute significantly to
this. If we are determined to remain affluent we should remain heavily
armed! (See note 4.)
Fault 2: It is a grossly unjust society.
We in rich countries could
not have anywhere near our present Òliving standardsÓ if we were not taking far
more than our fair share of world resources. Our per capita consumption of items such as petroleum is
around 17 times that of the poorest half of the worldÕs people. The rich 1/5 of the worldÕs people are
consuming around 3/4 of the resources produced. Many people get so little that 859 million are hungry and
more than that number have dangerously dirty water to drink. Three billion live on $2 per day or
less. Conditions for the worldÕs poorest are deteriorating.
This grotesque injustice is
primarily due to the fact that the global economy operates on market
principles. In a market need is
totally irrelevant and is ignored
--- things go mostly to those who are richer, because they can offer to
pay more for them. Thus we in rich
countries get almost all of the scarce oil and timber traded, while billions of
people in desperate need get none.
This explains why one third of the worldÕs grain is fed to animals in
rich countries while around 30,000 children die every day because they have
insufficient food and clean water.
Even more importantly, the
market system explains why Third World development is so very inappropriate
to the needs of Third World people.
What is developed is not what is needed; it is always what will make
most profit for the few people with capital to invest. Thus there is development of export
plantations and cosmetic factories but not development of farms and firms in
which poor people can produce for themselves the things they need. Many countries such as Haiti get no
development at all because it does not suit anyone with capital to develop
anything thereÉeven though they have the land, water, talent and labour to
produce most of the things they need for a good quality of life.
Even when transnational
corporations do invest, wages can be 15-20c an hour. Compare the miniscule benefit such workers get from
conventional development with what they could be getting from an approach to
development which enabled them to get all the benefit from their labour,
applied via mostly cooperative local firms to producing the things they most
need. But development of this kind
is deliberately prevented.
The Structural Adjustment
Packages inflicted on poor countries by the World Bank and IMF are now the main
mechanisms forcing them to do things that benefit the rich countries and their
corporations and banks.
ÒAssistanceÓ is given to indebted countries on the condition that they
de-regulate and eliminate protection and subsidies assisting their people, cut
government spending on welfare, etc., open their economies to more foreign
investment, devalue their currencies (making their exports cheaper for us and
increasing what they must pay us for their imports), sell off their public
enterprises, and increase the freedom for market forces to determine what happens. All this is a bonanza for our
corporations and for people who shop in rich world supermarkets. The corporations can buy up firms
cheaply and have greater access to cheap labour, markets, forests and
land. The repayment of loans to
our banks is the supreme goal of the packages. The produce of the Third WorldÕs soils, labour, fisheries
and forests flows more readily to our supermarkets, not to Third World people.
For most Third World people
the effects of Òneo-liberalÓ globalisation are catastrophic. (See note 5 for
many quotes from the vast literature documenting this.) Large numbers of people lose their
livelihood, access to resources is transferred from them to the corporations
and rich world consumers, and the protection and assistance their governments
once provided is eliminated.
These are the reasons why
conventional development can be regarded as a form of plunder. The Third World has been developed into a state whereby its
land and labour benefit the rich, not Third World people. Rich world Òliving standardsÓ could not
be anywhere near as high as they are if the global economy was just.
Conclusions on our situation.
These
considerations of sustainability and global economic justice show that our
predicament is extreme and cannot be solved in consumer-capitalist society. The problems are caused by some of the
fundamental structures and processes of that society. There is no possibility
of having an ecologically sustainable, just, peaceful and morally satisfactory
society if we allow market forces and the profit motive to be the major
determinant of what happens, or if we seek economic growth and ever-higher
Òliving standardsÓ without limit.
Many people who claim to be concerned about the fate of the planet
refuse to face up to these fundamental points.
The Required Alternative; The Simpler Way.
Numerous people have
discussed what would seem to be the inescapable implications from the foregoing
analysis for the form that a sustainable and just society must take. That analysis means we must move to
ways that allow us to live on a small fraction of present resource consumption
and ecological impact. The
argument following is that there is an alternative way that would solve the big
global problems, would work well, and would be attractive and enjoyable. (For the detail see Note 6.) The basic principles must be:-
- Far simpler material living standards.
- High levels of self-sufficiency at household,
national and especially neighbourhood and town levels, with relatively little
travel, transport or trade. There
must be mostly small, local economies in which most of the things we
need are produced by local labour from local resources.
- Basically cooperative and participatory local systems,
- A quite different economic system, one not
driven by market forces and profit, and in which there is far less work,
production, and consumption, and a large cashless sector, including many free
goods from local commons. There
must be no economic growth at all.
- Most problematic, a radically different culture,
in which competitive and acquisitive individualism is replaced by frugal,
self-sufficient collectivism.
Some of the elements within
The Simpler Way are, -- mostly
small and highly self-sufficient local economies with many little firms, ponds,
animals, farms, forests throughout settlements – participatory democracy
via town assemblies –
neighbourhood workshops – many roads dug up – Òedible
landscapesÓ providing free fruit and nuts – being able to get to
decentralised workplaces by bicycle or on foot voluntary community working bees
– committees - town meetings – many productive commons in the town
(fruit, timber, bamboo, herbsÉ) – having to work for money only one or
two days a week – no
unemployment – living with many artists and crafts people – strong
community --small communities making many of the important development and
administration decisions.
Simple traditional
alternative technologies will be quite sufficient for many purposes, especially
for producing houses, furniture, food and pottery. Much production will take
place via hobbies and crafts, small farms and family enterprises. However
modern/high technologies can be used extensively where appropriate, including
IT. The Simpler Way will free many
more resources for purposes like medical research than are devoted to these at
present.
There could be many small
private firms, and market forces could have a role, but the economy must be
under firm social control, via local participatory arrangements. Thus local town meetings would make the
important economic decisions in terms of whatÕs best for the town and its
people and environment. We would
not allow market forces to bankrupt any firm or dump anyone into unemployment.
We would make sure everyone had a livelihood. The town would have to work out
how to adjust its economy in the best interests of all.
Because we will be highly
dependent on our local ecosystems and on our social cohesion, e.g., for most
water and food, and for effective committees and working bees, all will have a
very strong incentive to focus on what is best for the town, rather than on
what is best for themselves as competing individuals. Cooperation and
conscientiousness will therefore tend to be automatically rewarded, whereas in
consumer society competitive individualism is required and rewarded.
Advocates of the Simpler Way
believe that its many benefits and sources of satisfaction would provide a much
higher quality of life than most people experience in consumer society. (See
Note 7.)
The chances of achieving
such a huge and radical transition are remote, but the crucial question is,
given our situation, can a sustainable a just society be conceived other than
as some form of Simpler Way? The
argument here is that in view of the limits and overshoot outlined above, there
is no alternative. This certainly
does not mean that the Simpler Way will be taken.
Over the past 20 years many
small groups throughout the world have begun to build settlements and systems
more or less of the kind required, many of them explicitly as examples intended
to persuade the mainstream that there is an alternative that is sustainable,
just and attractive. The fate of
the planet will depend on how effective this movement becomes in the next two
decades.
Those
who wish to contribute to the transition to The Simpler Way should firstly work
hard at getting this perspective onto the agenda of public discussion. Most
important however is helping to establish aspects of the Simpler Way here
and now in the suburbs and towns where we live, ventures such as community
gardens and workshops, local cooperatives, and community supported small farms
and businesses. Our goal must be
to eventually develop these towards being the new cooperative, self-sufficient
local economies that people can turn to when the mainstream runs into
increasingly serious problems, such as petroleum scarcity. (On how we might get there see Note 8.)
1. http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/06b-Limits-Long.html
2. http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/D100.RE.cant.save.25.7.o6.html
3.
http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/08b-Third-World-Lng.html
4.
http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/13-Peace-Conflict.html
5.
http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/D41GlobalisationASum.html
6.
http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/12b-The-Alt-Sust-Soc-Lng.html
7. http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/D65TW-Benefits.html
8. http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/15-Transition.html
Baer, P, and M. Mastrandrea,
(2006), High Stakes; Designing Emissions Pathways to Reduce the Risk of
Dangerous Climate Change, Institute of Public Policy Research, Nov. www.ippr.olrg.
See Rising Tide Australia; 2007, http://risingtide.org.au/cleancoal
Trainer, T., (2007), Renewable
Energy Cannot Sustain A Consumer Society, Dordrecht, Springer.