Field Trips Anywhere
CHO(HAN)Haejoang
Field Trips Anywhere
CHO(HAN)Haejoang

A green reboot after the pandemic

조한 2020.04.12 13:01 조회수 : 468

A Green Reboot

 

 

 

 

COVID-19 reflects a broader trend: more planetary crises are coming. If we muddle through each new crisis while maintaining the same economic model that got us here, future shocks will eventually exceed the capacity of governments, financial institutions, and corporate crisis managers to respond. Indeed, the “coronacrisis” has already done so.

 

https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/covid19-green-deal-by-sandrine-dixson-decleve-et-al-2020-03

 

 

 

 

 

After the Pandemic

  , 

In addition to threatening millions of lives and the global economy, the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated that human societies are capable of transforming themselves more or less overnight. In fact, there's no better time than now to usher in systemic economic change.

NEW YORK – The COVID-19 coronavirus has forced entire countries into lockdown mode, terrified citizens around the world, and triggered a financial-market meltdown. The pandemic demands a forceful, immediate response. But in managing the crisis, governments also must look to the long term. One prominent policy blueprint with a deep time horizon is the European Commission’s European Green Deal, which offers several ways to support the communities and businesses most at risk from the current crisis.

COVID-19 reflects a broader trend: more planetary crises are coming. If we muddle through each new crisis while maintaining the same economic model that got us here, future shocks will eventually exceed the capacity of governments, financial institutions, and corporate crisis managers to respond. Indeed, the “coronacrisis” has already done so.

The Club of Rome issued a similar warning in its famous 1972 report, The Limits to Growth, and again in Beyond the Limits, a 1992 book by the lead author of that earlier report, Donella Meadows. As Meadows warned back then, humanity’s future will be defined not by a single emergency but by many separate yet related crises stemming from our failure to live sustainably. By using the Earth’s resources faster than they can be restored, and by releasing wastes and pollutants faster than they can be absorbed, we have long been setting ourselves up for disaster.

On one planet, all species, countries, and geopolitical issues are ultimately interconnected. We are witnessing how the outbreak of a novel coronavirus in China can wreak havoc on the entire world. Like COVID-19, climate change, biodiversity loss, and financial collapses do not observe national or even physical borders. These problems can be managed only through collective action that starts long before they become full-blown crises.

The coronavirus pandemic is a wake-up call to stop exceeding the planet’s limits. After all, deforestation, biodiversity loss, and climate change all make pandemics more likely. Deforestation drives wild animals closer to human populations, increasing the likelihood that zoonotic viruses like SARS-CoV-2 will make the cross-species leap. Likewise, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns that global warming will likely accelerate the emergence of new viruses.

Governments that succeed in containing epidemics all tacitly follow the same mantra: “Follow the science and prepare for the future.” But we can do much better. Rather than simply reacting to disasters, we can use the science to design economies that will mitigate the threats of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pandemics. We must start investing in what matters, by laying the foundation for a green, circular economy that is anchored in nature-based solutions and geared toward the public good.

Project Syndicate is conducting a short reader survey. As a valued reader, your feedback is greatly appreciated.

TAKE SURVEY

The COVID-19 crisis shows us that it is possible to make transformational changes overnight. We have suddenly entered a different world with a different economy. Governments are rushing to protect their citizens medically and economically in the short term. But there is also a strong business case for using this crisis to usher in global systemic change.

For example, there is no good reason not to be phasing out fossil fuels and deploying renewable energy technologies, most of which are now globally available and already cheaper than fossil fuels in many cases. With the recent oil-price plunge, perverse fossil-fuel subsidies can and should be eliminated, as the G7 and many European countries have pledged to do by 2025.

Shifting from industrial to regenerative agriculture also is immediately feasible, and would allow us to sequester carbon in the soil at a rate that is sufficient to reverse the climate crisis. Moreover, doing so would turn a profit, enhance economic and environmental resilience, create jobs, and improve wellbeing in both rural and urban communities.

Regenerative agriculture features prominently in many of the new economic models that are now being explored by city governments around the world – all of which are based on the principle of living within our planetary boundaries. As one of us (Raworth) argues in advancing her idea of “Doughnut Economics,” the goal should be to create a “safe and just operating space for all of humanity.” In other words, we must work within the planet’s natural limits (the outer boundary of the doughnut) while also ensuring that marginalized communities do not fall behind (into the doughnut hole).

For policymakers responding to the current crisis, the goal should be to support citizens’ livelihoods by investing in renewable energy instead of fossil fuels. Now is the time to start redirecting the $5.2 trillion spent on fossil-fuel subsidies every year toward green infrastructure, reforestation, and investments in a more circular, shared, regenerative, low-carbon economy.

Humans are resilient and entrepreneurial. We are perfectly capable of beginning again. If we learn from our failings, we can build a brighter future than the one that is currently in store for us. Let us embrace this moment of upheaval as an opportunity to start investing in resilience, shared prosperity, wellbeing, and planetary health. We have long since exceeded our natural limits; it is time to try something new.

 

목록 제목 날짜
203 십개월의 미래, 카오스 코스모스 그리고 모계사회 2022.01.01
202 폭군 아버지, 히스테리 엄마 책소개 2022.03.05
201 3/28 아침 독서 한겨레 21 창간 28돌 기념 특별본 2022.03.28
200 협동 번식과 모계사회 2022.01.01
199 고래가 지나가는 곳에서 file 2020.01.27
198 AI 시대 문해력 ppt 수정 file 2022.10.04
197 팬데믹 3년이 남긴 질문: 교육공간 (작은 것이 아름답다 원고) file 2022.05.16
196 고나 그림 -캠브릿지 걷던 길 2021.11.02
195 80,75,71세 노인들의 음악 세션 file 2019.07.28
194 해러웨이 관련 좋은 글 2022.07.13
193 황윤 감독의 신작 <수라> 관객이 만드는 시사회 2023.04.22
192 In this life-Israel Kamakawiwo'ole 2020.02.05
191 한나 아렌트 정치와 법의 관계 2021.08.06
190 우리 할머니는 예술가 2022.04.17
189 트럼프지지자들이 리버럴을 미워하는 이유 2020.02.18
188 영화 세편 2022.06.11
187 도서관 연합회 길위의 인문학 마무리 특강 file 2022.12.01
186 할머니들의 기후 행동- 동네 공원에서 놀기 2022.02.10
185 기운 나는 30분- 장자의 줌 영어 공부 2022.03.28
184 맘모스 3일째 타운 트롤리 그리고 오래된 관계 file 2022.07.19
183 돌봄- 영 케어러 2021.09.13
182 [왜냐면] 나! ‘코로나19 바이러스’ / 김정헌 2020.03.17
181 좋은 글-"바이러스와 인간, 그리고 권력 2020.04.07
180 문학이라는 사나운 팔자와의 동거 2022.12.04
179 사티쉬 쿠마르- 세상은 구하는 것이 아니라 사랑하는 것 2021.09.15
178 우리 동네 중딩과 함께 놀고 배우고 2023.04.22
177 드라마 작가의 노고 2022.05.30
176 댓글 지면, 어떤 순기능을 하는걸까 2022.02.10
175 오늘의 사자 소학 2022.02.28
174 KAIST, 중·고교 ‘온라인 개학’ 지원 나선다 2020.04.07
173 정체성의 정치에 대한 논의 2021.08.25
172 존엄사에 관한 영화- 잘 죽는다는 것 2022.12.01
171 엄기호 애도는 사회의 크기를 결정한다 2022.11.15
170 남성 중심 문명 그 이후 (슬기로운 좌파 생활 서평) 2022.02.01
169 3/28 추천글 쓰기의 기쁨 2022.03.28
168 다 함께 폭력을 몰아내는 춤을 2020.01.25
167 8월 3일 LA 브렌트우드 집의 정원수와 풀들 file 2022.08.05
166 박노해 괘종시계 2021.10.25
165 고정희 기일에 외경 읽기 2022.05.29
164 9월 17일 순자 삼춘 한글 공부 file 2022.09.22