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David Lin

对话 Mathis Wackernagel:如何才能让不同的受众更清楚地理解资源安全的重要性

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Why did you write “Ecological Footprint: Managing Our Biocapacity Budget” now?

Bill Rees and I wrote our first Ecological Footprint book in 1995 at a time when our resource-use estimates were still crude. The book summarized my Ph. D. dissertation, including a presentation of the basic premises of the idea as well as some basic applications. After this first book, I shifted strategy. I started to disseminate Ecological Footprint thinking through other organizations, including WWF, international agencies and national governments, to give it wider visibility and accelerate its mainstream adoption. Now, 25 years later, the time has come to provide an updated introduction to the whole approach. With a clear goal in mind: How to make Ecological Footprint accounting accessible, relevant, and fresh.

What are the main findings since you published the first Ecological Footprint book 25 years ago?

In 1995 we only had a rough estimate for Canada and an overly crude one for humanity. By 1997 we started to do more systematic national calculations. Global Footprint Network started in 2003 with annual updates for (nearly) every country on the planet and time series all the way back to 1961. Those accounts kept getting more and more refined. They are now so refined, as a matter of fact, that we gave them their own independent organization: www.FoDaFo.org. Back in 1995, I was expecting a faster evolution of the sustainability debate than we actually witnessed over the past 25 years. Furthermore, unsustainable trends have continued nearly unabated – from using 1.3 Earths in 1995 to using 1.75 Earths now. Most policy makers still miss or choose to ignore the fact that without resource security, humanity – and every country with it – is putting its own ability to operate at risk. And I am perpetually stunned to observe how hard it is to make this unavoidable reality obvious to wider audiences. So this has been a challenge we set ourselves: how can we make the need for resource security more obvious to diverse publics?

Can you share with us the key 3 take-away messages in this book?

  1. Biocapacity is the ultimate currency. Earth’s renewal capacity is the most limiting of all material resources. That is why mapping all our demands against biocapacity not only makes sense but is imperative. Embracing this biological perspective allows us to clearly distinguish which strategies may be successful and which ones are doomed to fail.
  2. We live in unusual times. Our enormous dependence on fossil fuel seems normal to most of us. After all, “hasn’t it always been this way?” In reality, it is highly abnormal. Of all the fossil fuel ever burnt in the entire human history, 80% was burnt during my short lifetime. The book tells you how much was burnt during yours. It was 46% since Justin Bieber was born.
  3. It is the economy, stupid. That was Clinton’s presidential stump-speech. And he might be right on the money. In fact, we’ve been striving to make the case that embracing sustainability is economically superior and advantageous for humanity at large, starting with those who put their decision-making through a sustainability lens. Without this lens, we put our businesses, our cities, our countries even, into ever more inescapable traps.

What did you learn writing the book?

There is so much we want to tell, but ultimately including too much may not be helpful. It is more important to make the stories digestible. Bert and I challenged ourselves to translate complex ideas into examples that anybody could relate to. And to make sure the book is not just filled with theoretical ideas, but practical examples and applications. Also, when working on the acknowledgments, I started to realize how many people have contributed to this work. That is rather humbling. And I am particularly embarrassed about all the people I forgot to mention.

How confident are you that humanity’s Ecological Footprint can be brought in balance with Earth’s capacity to renew biological resources?

In this instance, I try to avoid thinking about probability – rather I focus on possibility. Is it possible to get out of ecological overshoot by design and not by disaster? The answer is a resounding yes. It is possible if enough people want to. It seems to me, however, that too few of us are convinced that we have personal “skin in the game” – that this context truly matters to our own lives. Fortunately, those high-schoolers boycotting school on Fridays around the world show us the way: they know that climate action is essential for their own ability to choose the life they want to live. They accuse the older generation for having failed them for a reason: too many decision makers – national and regional policy, large scale investments, urban planning – believe indeed that sustainability is merely a noble cause, not a necessary condition for prosperity. I’m afraid they are betting on the wrong horse. I predict that their blindness is undercutting their own chances at being successful. This book explains why.

 

MORE INFO ON “Ecological Footprint: Managing Our Biocapacity Budget

Endorsements

Excerpts

Now you can buy copies directly from the publisher, your bookstores, or from any other distributor. We worked hard to keep the price low so the book is accessible to anybody. All royalties will help support Global Footprint Network.

2014 – 2016 人类生态足迹概要

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OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA, APRIL 25, 2019—The 2019 edition of the National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts tracks the Ecological Footprint and biocapacity of all countries, using U.N. data, from 1961 to 2016. This is two years further than last year’s edition, since U.N. data is becoming available more rapidly.

world ecological footprint and biocapacity per personOne finding is that humanity’s carbon Footprint dropped 1.4 percent between 2014 and 2016, bringing the total Ecological Footprint—a measure of global human demand for biological resources—down 0.5 percent over the same period. Recent data pointing to significant increases in carbon emissions throughout 2017 and 2018 suggest that this trend was short-lived, however.

Because carbon emissions require land covered with forests to be absorbed, they are counted as a competing human demand on the planet in the Ecological Footprint accounts. They compete for land area with demands for food, forest products, fibers, or infrastructure needs such as roads and buildings. In fact, the carbon Footprint accounts for 60 percent of the current Ecological Footprint of humanity. Overall, humanity’s demand for goods and services from ecological systems is currently 75 percent higher than what the planet can renew today.

“Our data show that we use as much from nature as if we lived on 1.75 Earths, yet we only have one. This is not a judgement, just a measurement. In this context, bringing human activity back within the ecological budget of our one planet is not about doing the noble thing or easing our guilty conscience. It is about choosing self-interest and what works. We will move out of ecological overshoot. Why choose to get there by disaster rather than by design?” —DR. MATHIS WACKERNAGEL, Founder and President of Global Footprint Network

All the Footprint and biocapacity data up to 2016 is freely available on the Ecological Footprint Explorer open data platform atdata.footprintnetwork.org. Additionally, “nowcasting” capabilities to forecast results to 2019 and licenses for more detail on countries’ demand by consumer activities are available for a fee.

The shrinking of the total global Ecological Footprint in 2016, the latest year with a complete U.N. data set, is mostly due to a 1.4 percent drop in the carbon Footprint over the 2014-2016 period. This led to an average per-person Ecological Footprint worldwide of 2.8 global hectares (gha), compared to 1.6 gha per person of available biocapacity. (Biocapacity represents the productivity of the Earth’s ecological assets; a global hectare is a biologically productive hectare with world average productivity.)

As of 2016, eighty-six percent of the world’s population lives in a country with an ecological deficit. A country runs an ecological deficit when its residents demand more from nature than the country’s own ecosystems can regenerate. Seventy-one percent of the world’s population lives in a country with an ecological deficit and below world-average income, and therefore are unlikely to be able to buy their way out of the resource crunch.

Highlights of the new Footprint data and tools

  • Last year, the United Nations’ persistent efforts to improve access to pertinent data resulted in shortening the delay in available data from three to two years. Not only did this change give researchers access to two years worth of data (2015, 2016) since last year’s edition, but this one-year gain in data availability delay brings the accurate assessment of countries’ Ecological Footprint and biocapacity that much closer to the current time, improving researchers’ ability to describe the recent reality and to assess current trends.
  • The 2019 edition of the National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts was produced, for the very first time, under the close observation of the team at York University’s Faculty of Environmental Studies (FES) who is part of the Ecological Footprint Initiative. Going forward, the Ecological Footprint Initiative team in Toronto will be entrusted with producing National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts data with the support of Global Footprint Network, in the context of the partnership created in 2018 by both organizations with a view to ensuring ever more robust and transparent data in the future.

“Our faculty and students continue to appreciate and use global data on the Ecological Footprint and biocapacity of countries. These remain the best metrics for calculating human demand on the environment. We look forward to continuing the important work of producing the National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts and leading a global research network committed to its application by policy-makers and the public.” —DR. ALICE J. HOVORKA, Dean & Professor of the Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University

Some country trends worth watching

All the results shown in this section reflect the perspective of a country’s consumption. This perspective tracks what is produced within the country plus the Footprint of trade (imports minus exports).

Venezuela

Venezuela’s total Ecological Footprint dropped 20 percent between 2014 and 2016, reflecting the dramatic deterioration of the country’s economy over the same period. The largest driver is the 50 percent decrease of the national cropland Footprint, due to a 58 percent collapse in Ecological Footprint of imports of agricultural products and a whopping 34 percent decline in local agricultural output. The carbon Footprint closely follows behind with a 12.8 percent decrease caused by the severe economic recession. Overall, the Ecological Footprint and GDP trends are closely aligned in this case. Rampant inflation began in 2015. By 2016, President Maduro declared economic emergency.

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom’s carbon Footprint dropped 11.7 percent between 2014 and 2016, driving the country’s total Ecological Footprint down 8.8 percent. The U.K.’s total carbon Footprint has decreased by 29 percent since its 2007 peak and by around 26 percent since 1990, faster than any other major high-income country. These trends continue into 2017, largely driven by a significant decline in coal use, according to Carbon Brief: “The most significant factors include a cleaner electricity mix based on gas and renewables instead of coal, as well as falling demand for energy across homes, businesses and industry.” Remarkably, the U.K. is one of 19 countries to have significantly lowered their fossil fuel emissions over the past decade without decreasing their GDP. The “decoupling” of GDP and Ecological Footprint is certainly a hot trend to watch for the in the years to come.

On a different note, lower crop yields in 2016 cause the cropland Footprint of the U.K. to decline by 13 percent. According to the U.K.’s farming statistics, wheat and barley yields dropped 12 percent and 11 percent respectively after a couple of years of peak performance but they remain in line with longer term averages. Meanwhile, blackgrass and other weeds, poor drainage and disease caused oilseed rape yields to drop 21 percent.

Europe

 

Many countries in Europe, including France and Germany, are showing a trend in decoupling of GDP and Ecological Footprint that echoes the trend in the U.K.. Europe’s carbon Footprint, which contributes to 60 percent of the region’s total Ecological Footprint, has decreased by 21 percent since 2007, including 3.7 percent between 2014 and 2016. This decline has been a major driver is drawing Europe’s Ecological Footprint down by 15 percent over the same period, lowering the ecological deficit by about 34 percent. Europe still uses 35 percent more goods and services from nature than its own natural ecosystems can renew.

Note that from 1991 on, the Europe region data set includes the breakaway countries from former Yugoslavia, the Baltic States, Belarus, Moldova, and Russia.

United States

 

The USA’s total Ecological Footprint has decreased over the past decade, largely driven by an 18 percent decrease in its carbon Footprint between 2005 and 2016. This is due to competition from natural gas and renewables, which have displaced coal-fired power as a cheaper option for electricity production. However, this trend was reversed in 2017 and 2018, according to more recent US data that the National Footprint Accounts will start taking into account in its next edition as 2017 U.N. data is made available. America’s carbon dioxide emissions rose by 3.4 percent in 2018, the biggest increase in eight years. Colder winters in the Northeast have spiked the use of oil and gas for heating. Hotter summers around the country have increased power usage for cooling, boosting emissions. Other factors include a boost in manufacturing and a relative expansion of the national economy, leading to higher emissions from factories, trucks and air travel. The U.S. has yet to find its path toward decoupling its carbon Footprint from economic growth.

Russia

 

The continuous 12 percent slide of Russia’s Ecological Footprint since 2011 has mainly been driven by the 18 percent decrease of its carbon Footprint. Rather than a “decoupling” phenomenon between GDP growth and lower carbon emissions, however, this decrease reflects the economic difficulties that Russia struggled with over that period. Factors include the continued downward momentum of oil prices since their 2012 peak, and the sanctions imposed by the United States, the 28-nation European Union, Norway, Canada, and Australia in retaliation for Russia’s interference in Ukraine. The weak ruble and changes in state support programs which make beef imports too expensive for most potential buyers in Russia, compounded in 2014 by Russia’s retaliatory ban on food products from those same countries, including meat, are reflected in the 38 percent drop of the grazing Footprint between 2012 and 2016.

Russia has also enjoyed a 51 percent growth of its total cropland biocapacity (+50 percent per person) since its momentous 2012 grain harvest failure due to the exceptional drought in its Eastern agricultural regions. While expanding farmland areas account for 3 percent of this increase (or 1.58 million global hectares), improved yields make up the rest. Since 2011, Russia has grown its total ecological reserve by 85 percent (86 percent per person) despite losing 1.6 percent of its forest biocapacity over the same period.

China

Unlike European countries, China’s total carbon Footprint soared in the post economic recession era. It increased by 39 percent from 2007 to 2014, reaching its peak in 2014. Since then, it has decreased by 2 percent thanks to a significantly reduced use of coal. From 2014 to 2016, expanded renewable and nuclear power generation was able to cover the slow growth in overall electricity consumption, according to Carbon Brief. This led to a slight decline in coal-fired power generation. However, 2017 and 2018 energy data point to a trend reversal. Electricity demand grew so fast in those two recent years – driven by growth in heavy manufacturing as well as contributions from household use and the service sector – that new low-carbon sources could not keep up. According to the Global Carbon Project, emissions grew by 2.3 percent from 2017 to 2018 due to more coal consumption for electricity production.

Since 2004, China, not unlike Russia, has grown its total cropland biocapacity by a whopping 19.3 percent (20 percent per person) – including 3.5 percent between 2014 and 2016 alone – increasing total biocapacity by 13 percent over the same period. Much of this upward trend is due to policies and government spending designed to improve agricultural sciences and practices in order to improve crop yield stability and performance, fending off the specter of feeding a large population from a relatively small area of available farmland. In addition, China has been expanding its total forested land by 32 percent since 1990.

Cuba

 

Cuba’s ecological deficit per person dropped 22.4 percent between 2010 and 2016, as its Ecological Footprint per person decreased by 10 percent and its biocapacity per person grew by 13 percent. The 23 percent decrease in the carbon Footprint per person is the main driver of the Ecological Footprint’s slide. Whether this trend continues hinges on the country’s commitment, in line with the Paris Climate Agreement, to generate 24 percent of its power from renewable sources by 2030. Cuba’s new Constitution, which was approved by referendum in February 2019, includes amendments directing Cuba to “promote the conservation of the environment and the fight against climate change, which threatens the survival of the human species.”

Between 2010 and 2016, Cuba increased its biocapacity per person by 13 percent (or 15 percent total) thanks to a 9 percent expansion of its total forested areas and a 28 percent boost of its total cropland biocapacity. The latter was made possible through agricultural transformation policies and programs designed, since 2007, to increase the country’s agricultural food self-sufficiency and biofuels capacity, reduce its dependence on imports, and possibly boost exports. However, the trend is expected to register a severe slow down, if not a halt, past 2016 due to extreme weather events, including Hurricane Irma in 2017, and the impact of the Venezuelan crisis on the Cuban economy.

7.29 地球超载日2019:不断提前的透支日

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美国加州奥克兰 2019年6月24日- 人类已在本年7月29日将今年预算的全球天然资源用尽。 基于全球生态足迹网络的估算统计, 在过去的20年, 地球生态资源超载日不断提前。(全球足迹网络 致力于推动 全球生态可持续性,并开创生态资源会计方法。这种生态资源会计法是把人类所有需求做总结算,主要包括下列项目:粮食,木材,纺织纤维,二氧化碳(碳)的回收,以及交通的需求。目前燃烧化石燃料(石油及煤等)所产生的碳占人类生态足迹的百分之六十。)

“生态资源超支日”  指人类对自然资源索取超过该整年地球生态系统所能再生还原的一天。 在1970 年代人 类首次将 “超支日”提前。  过去的二十年内, 人类造成超支日前移三个月。 今年的超支日是7月29日,这也是有史以来最早的。  7月29日代表人类目前对天然资源的抽取等于地球生态系统所能再生的1.75 倍。  换句话说就是我们使用了1.75 个地球。 我们之所以能如此超支是因我们逐渐挖空了地球的天然资源,如此更进一步危害地球未来的再生还原能力。

 

全球各地都有明显的生态资源超支征兆,包括森林破坏,土壤流失,生物多样性的衰减,以及大气中二氧化碳的堆积以及因其所引起的气候变化,导致严重的旱灾,水灾,野火,台风等。

马西斯•华可瑞格尔博士呼吁  “我们并不能常期拥用1.75个地球,我们只有一个地球,必须诚认人类生存面临重大危机”。   华博士是生态资源会计方法的发明人,也是全球生态足迹网络的创建人。 他进一步指出 “人类活动是不可避免地被地球生态资源所约束。 我们面临的难题是: 譲灾难来引导我们进入将来,还是我们有计划地迎接将来。 换句话说,我们的目标是居住在一个悲惨的地球,还是繁荣的地球。”

推后生态资源超支日与迈向  “一个繁荣地球的期望 “是相关而相容的。我们有能力停止此危险的趋势!如果我们每年把此超支日推后五天,人类将在2050年前达到 “一个繁 荣地球”  的目标。  在2019年超支日之前,全球生态足迹网络将强调目前改善措施的机会及预估其对超支日推后的效应。  例如以素食取代50%的肉类可把超支日推后十五天 (包括由于减少畜牧的甲烷排放所导致的十天。)  减少全球人类生态足迹的碳排放50% 便可把超支日推后93天。

目前已有超过八万人签署给美国及欧洲决策者的请愿书,要把生物资源的管理作为他们策略的中心,以此来推后超支日从7月29日到年底。

2019年推后生态资源超支日的工作项目包括:

  • 生态足迹计算器(www.Footprintcalculator.org)  也可用来计算个人使用者的生态足迹及超支日。现有法,德,西班牙及意大利文,并将在超支日前增加中文及葡萄牙文。目前已有一千五百万人使用该计算器。
  • 全球生态足迹网络及其伙伴将邀请公众共同探索 “推后超支日运动”以支持全球迈向“一个繁荣地球”的相关措施。这些步骤与下面五大项目相连:能源,粮食,都市,人口,及地球,包括下面行动的机会:引导群众参与对话,开办工作场所作业(例如减少食物浪费等),及请求政府认真而负责地管理天然资源。

更多信息:

www.overshootday.org/solutions:  探索有关项目 Https://www.overshootday.org/newsroom/infographics/:  相关可直接使用的图像 www.overshootday.org: 更多生态资源超支日数据

www.footprintcalculator.org: 个人生态足迹计算器

data.footprintnetwork.org: 所有国家公开的生态足迹及生物界总资源量资料

https://www.newsociety.com/Books/E/Ecological-Footprint: 有关生态足迹新书及摘要, 可供复印发表

社会新闻 “推后地球资源超支日“

全球生态足迹网络

全球生态足迹网络是一个国际组织致力于研究增强生态可持续性的测算,以帮助人类活在地球所能供应的界限内,以及对付气候变化。自2003年开始我们已与五十多国,三十个城市,及七十个全球伙伴合作,共同研究复杂的科学知识,从而做出有影响力的政策及经济投资开发决定。我们将同心协力创造繁荣的地球,让大家在地球界限内生活愉悦。www.footprintnetwork.org

联络

Kristine Jiao焦予薇 – (英文和中文) – 美国
+1 (510) 839-8879 x4 (PDT)
media@footprintnetwork.org

Laetitia Mailhes – (语和法语) – 法国
+1 (510) 839-8879 x308 (CET)
laetitia.mailhes@footprintnetwork.org

中国是否能实现生态文明转型?

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构建与自然和谐共处的经济发展模式是习近平主席关于国家向生态文明转型美好愿景的重要体现。

中国是否可以实现这样的文明?

为了寻求答案,我们与贵州省达成了合作关系。我们于7月6日在贵阳举办的“生态文明贵阳国际论坛2016年年会”中发布了合作的重要成果《贵州生态足迹报告:生态文明量化标准》。

毋庸置疑的是,中国正面临着极大的挑战:迅速增长的资源需求已经超过其可以提供的生态资源和服务;对石油燃料的严重依赖;人们对经济发展的期望,尤其是欠发展地区人民渴望脱离经济发展的困境。

贵州足迹报告受到瑞士政府的鼎力支持。作为中国独特拥有山地生态系统,丰富生物多样性和多民族群体的地区,贵州和瑞士却有着相似的地理环境。报告中分析对比了两个国家的情况。

接下来是我们关于贵州面临挑战的重要发现:

  • 贵州人均年收入为18700元(约2852美元),人均生态足迹为72gha与中国其他省区相比,贵州的人均收入排名倒数第五,人均生态足迹排名倒数第六。中国人均生态足迹为3.4gha而瑞士的为5.8gha。而报告的最终研究表明,贵州人均生态足迹已经达到1.98gha。
  • 在贵州,生态足迹的51%来自政府和民间对耐用资产的投资, 其余 49% 则来自于家庭日常消费, 包括食品, 住房, 交通, 商品和服务。在中国,47% 的足迹来自私人和政府投资,而53% 来自家庭消费。相反,在瑞士,29% 的足迹来自私人和政府投资,而71% 来自家庭消费。
  • 根据联合国的人类发展指数计算,测量人类幸福,贵州为62。低于0.7的高发展水平也低于中国平均值0.73。

我们与贵州合作的成果基于世界自然基金会中国(WWF China)与全球足迹网络合作的《中国生态足迹报告》。我们共同热切盼望中国更多省份加入我们。我们下一站将前往四川省。

全球足迹网络和中国科学院(IGSNRR)有着密切合作关系。中国专家学者已经在国际学科刊物上发表许多有关生态足迹的论文。全球足迹网络希望加速促成中国学术在生态足迹核算方面的领导地位。

更多信息请浏览www.zujiwangluo.org 或 www.chinafootprint.org。点击这里下载英文报告或者点击这里下载中文报告. 我们同时提供一份一页的简短概要,请点击这里.

做出改变:从北极到中国

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I had two passions as a kid: nature and technology. After starting as an electrical engineering and computer science undergraduate at University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), I realized my path lay elsewhere.

Long before I joined Global Footprint Network as Lead Researcher, my passion for nature led me to Alaska and Russia where, as a Ph.D. student at the University of Texas, I used cutting edge technologies to survey three dozen ecosystems to evaluate how global warming is changing landscapes in the Arctic.

Growing up in Orange County, California, it quickly became apparent to me that an emphasis on material wealth was keeping many of us disconnected from fundamental aspects of our life on Earth, starting with the natural ecosystems we depend on.

I ached to have a direct impact on those issues I had come to care deeply about, in no small part through living and working with the communities I encountered near the Arctic Circle and in the desert along the Mexican border. Following my doctorate and post-doc research, I joined Global Footprint Network.

I feel incredibly lucky and privileged to play a part in raising awareness about natural resource constraints in the public and among decision-makers. So much work has been done, yet there are still so many promising paths we can explore to make the Ecological Footprint increasingly relevant to communities around the world.

I am especially excited by the great opportunity that has been steadily growing in China. The concept of the Ecological Footprint resonates well with Chinese vision for creating a modern Ecological Civilization. Guizhou, a small, mountainous, biodiversity-rich province, where urban development, transportation and agriculture are challenging, is aiming to become an Eco-Civilization poster child with the help of the Swiss government.

We’re collaborating closely with the province’s Environmental Protection Department to help leaders along that path. Our next goal is to provide standards that all of China’s provinces can use and share in order to compare results.

You can support sustainability work in China and around the world by donating here. Your contribution could help Guizhou, China’s poorest province, set a precedent and show the rest of the world that it is possible to live well within the means of nature. Your support also could make a difference for impoverished communities everywhere who are beginning to envision their own sustainable future, with our help.

Thank you so much for your continued commitment to Global Footprint Network’s work around the world.