Written by David Steele
The United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) has released their latest Global Environmental Assessment, titled A Future We Choose (1). It was written by 287 experts – from 82 countries with deep knowledge of the natural, social, behavioral and cultural sciences; over 800 additional experts reviewed it. The report also incorporates indigenous- and local knowledge. As the UNEP itself notes, this is “the most comprehensive scientific assessment of the global environment to this day.”
The 1200+ page document outlines the dangerously precarious state our ecosphere has been put into by the intertwined crises of global warming, biodiversity loss, land degradation, pollution and waste. It not only emphasizes the extreme urgency of the situation. It goes further. and lays out powerful strategies that can and would turn it all around.
“Now is the time for courage and creativity,” says António Guterres, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, in the report.
Below are highlights of both some of the dangers enumerated and the opportunities we have to not only eliminate them, but to also make this a far more livable, far more fundamentally prosperous world.
A few of the dangers:
If we continue on our current path, we face – (unless otherwise indicated, likely by 2050):
A glimpse at the opportunities:
Heeding the UNEP’s recommendations would take substantial up front investment – about $8 trillion annually until 2050, but it would payoff with about a 20 trillion dollar annual dividend by 2050. Some might balk at the financial return, but this is far, far from just about money. The payoff in lives and well being would be extreme. We’re talking about preventing ecological and societal collapse! All other investments are moot if we find ourselves in a mostly unliveable world.
That said, we don’t have a lot of time before it’s too late. Continuing on our current path can only lead to catastrophe. The time to act is now!
Let’s heed the UNEP’s expert call and urge all of our representatives to “acknowledge the urgency of the global environmental crises, build on progress made in recent decades, and collaborate in the co-design and implementation of integrated policies, strategies and actions to deliver a better future for all.”
1. UNEP Global Environment Outlook 7: A future we choose – Why investing in Earth now can lead to a trillion-dollar benefit for all https://wedocs.unep.org/items/bba44efd-7715-4054-8432-92b270ee9d67
David is a molecular biologist retired from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia. He has also held faculty positions at Cornell and Queen’s Universities. Dr. Steele is a frequent public speaker and a regular contributor to Earthsave Canada’s publications. He is also an occasional contributor to various other publications.