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Is
our civilization at a tipping point?
Lester
R. Brown
In recent years there has been a growing concern over
thresholds or tipping points in nature. For example,
scientists worry about when the shrinking population of an
endangered species will fall to a point from which it cannot
recover. Marine biologists are concerned about the point
where
overfishing will trigger the collapse of a fishery.
We know there were social tipping points in earlier
civilizations, points at which they were overwhelmed by the
forces threatening them. For instance, at some point the
irrigation-related salt buildup in their soil overwhelmed
the capacity of the Sumerians to deal with it. With the
Mayans, there came a time when the effects of cutting too
many trees and the associated loss of topsoil were simply
more than they could manage.
The social tipping points that lead to decline and collapse
when societies are overwhelmed by a single threat or by
simultaneous multiple threats are not always easily
anticipated. As a general matter, more economically advanced
countries can deal with new threats more effectively than
developing countries can. For example, while governments of
industrial countries have been able to hold
HIV infection
rates among adults under 1 percent, many
developing-country governments have failed to do so and are
now struggling with much higher infection rates. This is
most evident in some southern African countries, where up to
20 percent or more of adults are infected.
A similar situation exists with population growth. While
populations in nearly all industrial countries except the
United States have stopped growing, rapid growth continues
in nearly all the
countries of
Africa, the
Middle East,
and the
Indian subcontinent. Nearly all of the 80 million
people being added to world population each year are born in
countries where natural support systems are already
deteriorating in the face of excessive population pressure,
in the countries least able to support them. In these
countries, the risk of state failure is growing.
Some issues seem to exceed even the management skills of the
more advanced countries, however. When countries first
detected falling
underground
water tables, it was logical to expect that
governments in affected countries would quickly raise water
use efficiency and stabilize population in order to
stabilize aquifers. Unfortunately, not one
country--industrial or developing--has done so. Two
failing states where overpumping water and
security-threatening
water
shortages loom large are
Pakistan
and
Yemen.
Although the need to cut
carbon emissions has been evident for some time, not
one country has succeeded in becoming carbon-neutral. Thus
far this has proved too difficult politically for even the
most technologically advanced societies. Could rising
carbon
dioxide levels in the atmosphere prove to be as
unmanageable for our early twenty-first century civilization
as rising salt levels in the soil were for the Sumerians in
4000 BC?
Another potentially severe stress on governments is the
coming decline in oil production. Although world oil
production has exceeded new oil discoveries by a wide margin
for more than 20 years, only
Sweden
and Iceland actually have anything that remotely resembles a
plan to effectively cope with a shrinking supply of oil.
This is not an exhaustive inventory of unresolved problems,
but it does give a sense of how their number is growing as
we fail to solve existing problems even as new ones are
being added to the list. Analytically, the challenge is to
assess the effects of mounting stresses on the global
system. These stresses are perhaps most evident in their
effect on food security, which was the weak point of many
earlier civilizations that collapsed.
Several converging trends are making it difficult for the
world’s farmers to keep up with the growth in food demand.
Prominent among these are falling water tables, the growing
conversion of cropland to nonfarm uses, and more extreme
climate events, including crop-withering heat waves,
droughts, and floods. As the stresses from these unresolved
problems accumulate, weaker governments are beginning to
break down.
Compounding these problems, the United States, the world’s
breadbasket, has dramatically increased the share of its
grain harvest going to fuel ethanol--from 15 percent of the
2005 crop to more than 25 percent of the 2008 crop. This
ill-conceived U.S. effort to reduce its oil insecurity
helped drive world grain prices to all-time highs by
mid-2008, creating unprecedented
world food
insecurity.
The risk is that these accumulating problems and their
consequences will overwhelm more and more governments,
leading to widespread state failure and eventually the
failure of civilization. The countries that top the list of
failing states are not particularly surprising. They
include, for example,
Iraq,
Sudan,
Somalia, Chad,
Afghanistan,
the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, and
Haiti.
And the list grows longer each year, raising a disturbing
question: How many failing states will it take before
civilization itself fails? No one knows the answer, but it
is a question we must ask.
We are in a race between tipping points in nature and our
political
systems. Can we phase out
coal-fired power plants before the melting of the
Greenland ice sheet becomes irreversible? Can we gather the
political will to halt
deforestation in the Amazon before its growing
vulnerability to fire takes it to the point of no return?
Can we help countries stabilize population before they
become failing states?
We have the technologies to restore the earth’s natural
support systems, to eradicate poverty, to stabilize
population, and to restructure the world energy economy and
stabilize climate. The challenge now is to build the
political will to do so. Saving civilization is not a
spectator sport. Each of us has a leading role to play.
Lester Brown is founder and president of the Earth
Policy Institute.
This editorial was adapted from Chapter 1, “Entering a New
World," and Chapter 6, “Early Signs of Decline,” in Lester
R. Brown, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (New
York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2008), available for free
downloading and purchase at
www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/index.htm..
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