NO COUNTRY CURRENTLY MEETS ITS CITIZENS' BASIC NEEDS AT A GLOBALLY SUSTAINABLE LEVEL OF RESOURCE USE -A STUDY FOUND
The research is the first to quantify
the sustainability of national resource use associated with meeting basic human
needs for 151 countries.
Each country's resource use and
well-being achievements have been made available as a website built by the
academics involved in the study.
Lead author, Dr Daniel O'Neill, from
the Sustainability Research Institute at Leeds, said: "Almost everything
we do, from having dinner to surfing the Internet, uses resources in some way,
but the connections between resource use and human well-being are not always
visible to us.
"We examined international
relationships between the sustainability of resource use and the achievement of
social goals, and found that basic needs, such as nutrition, sanitation, and
the elimination of extreme poverty, could most likely be achieved in all
countries without exceeding global environmental limits.
"Unfortunately, the same is not
true for other social goals that go beyond basic subsistence such as secondary
education and high life satisfaction. Meeting these goals could require a level
of resource use that is two to six times the sustainable level."
Co-author, Dr Andrew Fanning, also
from the Sustainability Research Institute, said: "Our results suggest
that some of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, such as
combatting climate change and its impacts, could be undermined by the pursuit
of other goals, particularly those focused on growth or high levels of human
well-being."
This study builds on research by the
Stockholm Resilience Centre that identified nine environmental processes that
regulate the planet and proposed safe "planetary boundaries" for each
that -- if persistently exceeded -- could lead to catastrophic change. The
planetary boundaries include issues such as climate change, land-use change,
and freshwater use.
The researchers distributed seven
planetary boundaries among nations according to their share of global
population, and then compared these boundaries to national resource
consumption, after correcting for international trade.
At the same time, the study scored
countries on 11 social objectives established in previous research on what it
would mean for countries to develop in "safe and just" way. The
objectives included healthy life expectancy, access to energy, and democratic
quality among others.
The study benchmarked each country's
resource use against the planetary boundaries, and mapped these alongside the
social indicators. The mapping showed no country performed well on both the
planetary and social thresholds.
Co-author Dr William Lamb, from the
Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change (MCC), said:
"In general, the more social thresholds a country achieves, the more
planetary boundaries it exceeds, and vice versa.
"Although wealthy nations like
the US and UK satisfy the basic needs of their citizens, they do so at a level
of resource use that is far beyond what is globally sustainable. In contrast,
countries that are using resources at a sustainable level, such as Sri Lanka,
fail to meet the basic needs of their people."
Co-author Dr Julia Steinberger, from
the School of Earth and Environment at Leeds, said "Radical changes are
needed if all people are to live well within the limits of the planet. These
include moving beyond the pursuit of economic growth in wealthy nations,
shifting rapidly from fossil fuels to renewable energy, and significantly
reducing inequality.
"Our physical infrastructure and
the way we distribute resources are both part of what we call provisioning
systems. If all people are to lead a good life within the planet's limits then
these provisioning systems need to be fundamentally restructured to allow for
basic needs to be met at a much lower level of resource use."
Published in Nature Sustainability .
University of Leeds
Source : science daily
Source : science daily
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