Samantha Deacon
1 June 2022
Only one Earth: Enabling transformative change to stay within our planet’s natural boundaries
Humanity is living well beyond its means on our planet, which now faces both climate and biodiversity crises. The challenges - and solutions - are connected. On World Environment Day 2022, we explore the ways forward.
- It omits that some natural resources are finite and cannot be recovered once a limit is reached.
- There is an issue with scale. Some boundaries relate to global issues, such as climate change, but others are only global if local problems are widely replicated, in aggregate, such as nitrogen fertiliser run-off from agricultural land.
- The concept cannot address modern environmental problems, such as oceanic ‘plastic soup’, because they do not pre-date the industrial revolution and therefore have no basis for a boundary threshold.
- The concept of planetary boundaries was published on the cusp of the Nagoya Biodiversity Summit, meant to herald a new era of living in harmony with nature.
- The Global Footprint Network measures how fast we consume resources, such as energy, timber, food, fisheries, land for settlement, and waste generated. It also compares them to the rate nature can absorb our waste and generate new resources. Their findings show that by consuming planetary resources at a rate beyond sustainable levels, we are consuming those resources 1.75 times faster than our planet’s ecosystems can regenerate them.
- This year’s theme for World Environment Day is Only one Earth, which focuses on ’Living sustainably in harmony with nature’.
Want to know more?
Samantha Deacon
Global Lead, Biodiversity and Ecosystems
+44 7740 162333