The world is awash with literature describing the deepening self-inflicted crisis into which humanity is pitching. I am frequently asked how we can solve it, presuming we wish to do so. Here, briefly, are the ten most urgent solutions.
Author
Julian Cribb
is a science author with a focus on the human existential crisis:
food security, climate, extinction, planetary pollution, nukes,
resources, population.His books include Surviving the 21st Century, The Coming Famine, Food or War, Earth Detox, and Poisoned Planet. |
It is rapidly approaching the point where it can bring down civilization and, quite possibly, eliminate our species.
This is the greatest existential emergency of human history. In the coming decades it will determine whether we survive or fail.
The gravity of the coming together of the ten megarisks is not understood, either by governments in general, corporates or societies at large.
This general ignorance of the ten threats and their deeply interconnected nature is a major barrier to our solving any of them.
However, all of the ten threats are capable of being solved. Humans have the brains, organisational skills and technology to escape the trap we have dug for ourselves. But we lack the institutions, the understanding and the will to do so.
There are two underlying principles for human survival.
First, each of the ten megarisks must be solved in ways that make none of the other risks worse.[1]
Second, we cannot solve these risks one at a time, or according to some arbitrary priority, as they are all connected to one another and must therefore be solved together.
If human civilization, or even humans, are to survive, here are the ten most critical actions to be taken:
-
Outlaw all nuclear weapons, eliminate their stockpiles and safely recycle
their materials. There is no point in solving other risks if we destroy the
planet. (Nuclear war)
-
End all extraction and use of fossil fuels and their byproducts, including
pesticides, plastics and toxic petrochemicals by 2030. Replace with
renewable, natural-based substances. Reforest half the Earth’s land area.
(Climate change)
-
Convert the entire global economy to a circular model in which every
resource is recycled and re-used and nothing is lost, discarded or wasted.
(Resource scarcity)
- Develop a 3-pillar global food system consisting of:
- Regenerative agriculture which repairs its environment
- Urban food systems to recycle water and nutrients to feed megacities, and
-
Deep ocean aquaculture of aquatic plants, fish and marine animals using
recycled nutrients. (Food security)
-
Return half of the world’s current farmed and grazed lands to forest or
wilderness to end the 6th Extinction. Create a Stewards of the Earth program
to implement it. (Extinction)
-
Create a Right Not to Be Poisoned and a
Clean Up the Earth Alliance (see
Earth Detox), to eliminate all forms of toxic pollution in air, food, water and
consumer products. Introduce universal safety testing of all manufactured
chemicals.
-
Introduce a global plan to progressively and voluntarily reduce the
human population by 75 per cent by 2120. Ie Return it to where it was in the
mid-20th Century. Note: the world’s women are already doing this.
The issue is whether the fall happens voluntarily or involuntarily.[2]
-
Prevent future pandemics by ending environmental destruction (5), banning
dangerous scientific experiments, restricting global travel, creating global
early warning systems and reducing world population (7).
-
Reform the world economic system by (a) creating an
Earth Standard Currency, based on the planet’s natural assets for sustaining life and (b) creating
a global circular economy.
- Introduce global science-based awareness and education about the megarisks, their consequences and solutions to educate those of the human population willing to learn. (Delusion)
If humans were intelligent, then education and awareness would be sufficient to catalyse global, local and individual action everywhere to save ourselves from ourselves. Alas, the species collectively is not intelligent, though some individuals may be.
However, since a large part of humanity is either ignorant of, or opposed to, any action to save itself, or else finds it more profitable to ruin the Planet and the human future, then the most likely outcome of the present trajectory will be a large-scale collapse in civilization causing the deaths of a significant part of the human population – scientific estimates range from 50 to 90 per cent – mainly from famine, disease, mass refugeeism and (nuclear) war.
If that is not a sufficient wake-up call for everyone to act, then extinction is pretty much assured.
Optimistically, early action to end pandemics, climate change and food insecurity and restore the earth’s live support systems can generate the resolution and confidence for the other necessary solutions to be adopted collaboratively and universally.
However, this is not yet happening on a level large enough to make a difference. No government on Earth yet has a policy for human survival. Until they all do, our collective chances are grim.
[1] For example: you cannot solve food insecurity by burning more fossil fuels and making the climate worse for food production.
[2] The world’s women are already implementing a reduction in the birthrate. The issue whether the decline in population happens voluntarily or involuntarily.
Links
- (Surviving C21) Our Existential Crisis: What Is To Be Done?
- (AU Pearls and Irritations) A Choice Between National Happiness – And National Misery
- How The Climate Crisis Could Become A Food Crisis Overnight
- (AU) Our Survival As A Species Requires Urgent Action
- (AU) Seriously Ugly: Here’s How Australia Will Look If The World Heats By 3°C This Century
- Council for the Human Future
- Solving the mega-risks
- Why 2050 is too darned late…
- Food or War: is that the question?
- Diagnosing the American disease
- Is a Food Crisis the next big hit for humanity?
- Preparing for Catastrophic Risk
- The War on Global Carbon
- Time to speak the unspeakable
- The methane gun
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