FWIW, this view is normally referred to as [cornucopianism](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornucopian): this debate has been raging since at least the 1960s, and there are some interesting links from the Wikipedia page.
We know that infinite growth is not possible on a finite planet. I also don't think we will be doing asteroid mining etc. on any scale or timeframe relevant to the current climate crisis.
Therefore we know there is some limit - and we are just arguing about where that limit is.
The Global Footprint Network with their "Overshoot Day" believe we are already beyond that sustainable limit and, to be honest, with increasing populations that (quite rightly) demand Western living standards, I doubt we will ever be sustainable.
I'm not sure why infinite growth wouldn't be possible on a finite planet (even if we assume that "on a finite planet" is indeed a real constraint). Growth doesn't imply greater resource use.
Even if the economy were dominated by the creation and consumption of .mp3 files, an exponentially growing economy would eventually run out of server space and electricity on a finite planet.
Assuming we need nothing but space to exist in, the surface area of the earth is finite. Expand that by a few km up and down, and humans still have a finite amount of space to live within.
If we're allowed colonization of space, we can only travel at a finite speed. Humans can overtake a finite radius in a year, resulting in a cubic rate of growth in volume. Exponential growth is ultimately limited by the finite speed of light and dimensionality of our universe.
If you’re among those others, I’d be really interested to hear a critique of the article. It seemed pretty convincing to me, as well as constructive by suggesting that green investment is the right path forward
I'll give you one example which I find pretty convincing:
Take aviation. You can make aviation green by using hydrogen (on medium distances), batteries (on short distances) or efuels (everywhere, it's basically kerosene, but made with renewable electricity). Ok, great.
Now there's an EU research project that has run some numbers. Note that this project happened in collaboration with aviation companies, it's unlikely to paint a particularly pessimistic picture. Page 44 here:
https://www.cleansky.eu/sites/default/files/inline-files/202...
Their calculation is that you need between 21 and 32 Petawatthours per year to green aviation (depending on how optimistic you are about hydrogen-based aviation). That is around the same as the total amount of electricity the world uses today (all electricity, not just green electricity).
They assume a 4 percent growth rate for aviation, which is in line with what aviation organizations expect.
I have trouble imagining that this is realistic. Like: I'm pretty optimistic about renewable energy. But I just don't think it's very plausible to say: "We'll make all our electricity green, and then we'll add the same amount in green electricity just for aviation, and oh, we'll probably do the same for a bunch of other industry sectors that will need similar amounts" (there are studies with similar numbers e.g. for the chemical industry). Like I just don't think it's plausible to green all electricity and then grow the electricity sector by something like 500% in a short amount of time.
And when you come to the conclusion that this is not realistic you should start to wonder if you should really assume that aviation will just continue to grow and grow. (And the same is pretty much true for a lot of sectors where greening is not impossible, but challenging.)
>"Essentially, the idea that economic growth requires growth in resource use is false; rich countries have started to grow while using less and less of the planet’s most important resources."
Service economies rise off the backs of offshoring primary and secondary production to developing economies. None of that stuff exists without the underlying production, which absolutely depends on extraction of biosphere resources.
Good luck growing your university-educated, service economy cities without the raw material and fossil fuel abundance it currently relies on. Being increasing abstracted from your foundations may feel secure but you'll topple just the same when they give way, even thousands of floors above.
You could perhaps make an argument that more layers of leverage could be layered on top of existing levels of productive extraction, but when we're talking about a reduction (by choice or circumstance) in the underlying raw extractive activity, that's insufficient.
>"The kind of massive intention reordering of global production and consumption that degrowthers fantasize about is not just pragmatically impossible to implement, it’s the kind of thing that essentially everyone in the world except for a few very shouty people in Northern Europe and the occasional Twitter activist is going to reject."
Can't disagree with this. But the proposed alternative seems just as untenable:
>"Making a rapid transition to green, sustainable growth will require huge new investments"
Putting aside the energy density and portability issues, and the stuff about rare mineral extraction, base load etc etc etc... Perhaps if the current economic irrationality we've had hanging around since 2008 of an essentially unbounded slush fund of capital that somehow never significantly depreciates perpetuates forever onwards, this kind of thing could be pulled off. I'm unconvinced that we've entered some kind of calm water beyond our historical cycles of boom and bust, rather that we're in an extended period of irrationality yet to come down to earth. Still, nice to be hopeful. Just strikes me that both possible futures are equally unlikely, much as either one of them would be wonderful if they came to pass. Certainly better than the (IMO) more likely other way this all goes.
I agree, it's impossible to look at a country alone in a world economy.
Claiming that services like social media do not rely on higher consumption of raw materials is really far fetch. Good luck building growing a service like Facebook without:
- growing mobile phone market
- growing mobile network market
- growing internet access
- growing your servers behind it
- the energy consumption associated with it
It's quite easy to ignore facts when omitting that the majority of the supply chain and user base behind that is not located in the US.
I'm fairly confident that adding those numbers to those charts will give a different picture indeed
Fundamentally exponential growth is not sustainable in the long run.
But more importantly I see some reasonable degrowth arguments as advocating an end to consumerism. To no longer measure the wealth of a country by the extend of it's material consumption and financial transactions. We are optimizing the wrong thing. Imagine a world with a basic income, where someone who just likes to cut hair decides to cut hair for other people as long as they get to be creative while doing it. This would lower the GDP and nominally be degrowth, but not because the scope and range of possible human activities has decreased.
We have coupled status to consumption, money and being productive. I believe that this has become the overwhelming function of much economic activity. Otherwise it's not rationally understandable why people would opt to work 70 hours a week, barely know their kids, in order to make sure they can afford things they don't really need.
I don't really see the article(s) linked contradicting this line of thought in the degrowth community.
> Fundamentally exponential growth is not sustainable in the long run.
Growth doesn’t mean that we make materially more things, but that we make better things. Compared to a torch, a calculator, a phone, a GameBoy, etc… an iPhone requires far less raw materials.
This can be applied to any industry, so exponential growth is indeed possible.
We don’t need to work more or consume more things unless we either give up on innovation or if we think innovation is not possible because we have reached a knowledge boundary. The former would be a silly decision to make, the latter is an assumption that should be demonstrated.
Is this really true? All those objects are fairly low tech, between the lifetime of a torch or calculator which is way longer than the one of an iphone and the simpler production process behind it, I wouldn't be surprised that producing an iphone requires more materials, generates more defects for one working device and requires an way more complex supply chain.
I'm actually curious, which one DOES take more resources all up? And what do you count as a resource? ie. the bicycle would take far more coal and iron ore (neither of which the horse needs) but the horse would use up far more water and otherwise edible grains.
There's actually more to take into account to push the subject a lot. The human on a bicycle also needs food and water to move the bicycle. Which is the more efficient at converting those resources into movement and in which scenario ?
A horse also needs food and shelter and they poop. An early argument in favor of cars over horses were that cars didn’t leave fecal matter everywhere in cities.
well, have you considered how much material is used for producing that iPhone?
have you got an idea of how much water is used for that tshirt you probably wearing right now?
Lots of material would go into the production of all the tools it replaces. A programmable calculator, a mobile phone a GameBoy, a music player, my mother’s cook books, etc… combined will likely require more raw materials.
First, that might just mean that you live at a higher altitude than your father, but I guess you meant mass.
Then, it might just mean that your father's calculator use material of higher density.
More seriously. when building something, there's a lot more material than what comes in the final product:
- the scrap generated by the by the manufacturing process. The more elements, the more it's going to be.
- the number of defects, for every parts of the device (for some parts it will be extremely low, for some it would be quite higher, but there's always some). Granted, some defects can be re-purposed, but it's not always the case
- The raw materials to actually manufacture (like water)
- The average number of repairs required over a lifetime (replacing the screen on a iphone is quite frequent)
- The materials required to build the supply chain that can build such devices.
- The materials required to generate the energy required to build the factories.
And there's plenty of other things to take into account.
In the end it's not about the volume of raw material as such, that doesn't mean much as it is. It's for each material, to take into consideration if it's renewable, what's the impact of extracting it and many other questions.
I think it’s undeniable that iPhone uses less materials than all the objects it replaces combined, even if it consumes more materials and pollutes more than a 1970s programmable calculator (and I’m not too sure about that), it certainly requires less resources than a calculator plus a mobile phone plus a stereo plus blablabla
It's not undeniable at all, you made an assertion without any base.
This is far from being obvious, there's way too much things to take into consideration to be able to make such claim out of thin air.
Maybe, I have a degree in economics, but I’m a software developer and not an economist. I’d say that if innovations are built on top of other innovations and if we get occasional breakthroughs, the process may be approximated with an exponential. Otherwise, even logarithmic growth tends to infinity, not to de-growth.
Some (a lot?) of economic activity seems to be self-serving, not making our lives better (and sometimes making them worse). The lockdowns demonstrated that very well. For example: social media (doesn't add anything beneficial, makes us less social); 'influencers'; a good chunk of the hospitality industry; anything to do with crypto.
Very often, free alternatives / those not involving 3rd parties, simpler living, are better for us overall. But if more expensive options are available, we are pressured to take them so that we are not left behind / feel like we fit in / have a social life.
Also, at some point certain things are just 'good enough', and marginal improvements require a ton of effort but don't make life better. For example, mobile phones - an 8 year old phone would work just fine, if not for forced obsoletion. Yet tons of effort go into very marginal improvements, because if you don't do it, your competitors will.
> Also, at some point certain things are just 'good enough', and marginal improvements require a ton of effort but don't make life better. For example, mobile phones - an 8 year old phone would work just fine, if not for forced obsoletion. Yet tons of effort go into very marginal improvements, because if you don't do it, your competitors will.
If this were true, your innovating competitors will lose money. There’s a discussion to be had on bad innovations (such as almost everything related to the so-called “attention economy), but they are a drop in the ocean.
There are a lot of reasons to get the newest phone with the best features, and many of those reasons are not wholesome ones.
For example, my iPhone 6 is getting obsolete just because it would not get latest iOS updates. Many apps are no longer supporting the old OS version. Yet these apps are not video games requiring the latest hardware - they are simply glorified web pages. There is no objective reason for why the phone could not run them.
It is worse than useless. You do not need social media to call someone - on phone or on video, to send an email, organize an online game, chat on whatever messenger (Why do we need a new one every few months?) or even send a snail mail letter. Even an old-style message board is better for social interactions than social media.
If you think an iPhone requires less raw materials to make than a torch, please go ahead and hand-sculpt one from raw sand.
I think if you correctly account for all the materials required to support every last stage of process from dirt, ore and sand all the way to the finished iPhone, the result would be awe-inspiring and dismaying.
> If you think an iPhone requires less raw materials to make than a torch, please go ahead and hand-sculpt one from raw sand.
What a silly assertion. The mere fact you can't create something easily does not mean it does not necessitate less resources to build. The support system an supply chain is huge, but the resources it uses could be quite small if you divide by the number of units produced.
Even so, there are many tools that a smartphone replaces that would have needed in the past a full product just to do a single thing. It can replace a PC, a game console, a tv, a flashlight, a calculator, tons of books, measuring instruments, keys. Many many things that have now moved into one small device. Maybe the resources for a torch are not more than for a iPhone, but adding all the functions it fills, surely, it is more resource efficient than the past alternatives.
Your latter point is good. That kind of consolidation of purpose is really handy, indeed I think it's the future of resource management. We can work out how to efficiently use these things.
Former point? No. Do you have any idea how much energy it takes to smelt aluminum, or form a CPU-ready silicon wafer? Wood for torches grows out of the ground. You don't seem to have any idea of supply chain infrastructure, and it matters. There's a fairly close mapping between the amount of infrastructure involved, and the cost of the thing (Veblen goods aside). You can buy a flammable stick fairly cheaply, but buying a smartphone really does not wind up being the cost of the raw materials or even close… and this is because you're not looking at the infrastructure costs of producing the final result.
Sorry, you're way off base. Smart technological stuff is really cool in its own right, but it's mind-bogglingly wasteful by 'degrowth' standards.
Let's do the math. Embodied energy for aluminum is apparently at 211 GJ per tonne[1] whereas wood has a caloric value of 19.2 GJ/tonne dry matter [2], but let's say our wood has 50% moisture -> 9.6GJ/tonne => embodied energy at about 1/22 ratio
An iPhone 12 has 164 g, of which 24% is aluminum. [4] => ~39.36g of aluminum in one. Ergo, your, presumably wood torch, would have to weigh 865g in order to be able to have the same embodied energy as an iPhone.
Of course, this is highly simplified and silly and full of wonky napkin math, but at least I expect we're in the same order of magnitude range for the estimation.
Regardless, doing the math, it is lower than I expected. Also, the greatest issue I took with your claim that "If you think an iPhone requires less raw materials to make than a torch, please go ahead and hand-sculpt one from raw sand." -> that sentence makes no sense and fails to prove your point. Maybe the point is correct, but it is NOT proven in any way by that sentence. I don't even have a stance on the torch/iPhone comparison (although the effort I expended on the napkin math might show otherwise, that was just a fun little exercise for me)
And the wider point is that inovation might be better for the environment than lack of innovation. I am convinced that if we could move to a sustainable world if everything we bought would be higher quality and had more thought in it, abeit more expensive. The consolidation of purpose, as you nicely phrased it is one of the critical components that work for this "techstenance".
And the stronger point, related to the iPhone specifically is that
> Growth doesn’t mean that we make materially more things, but that we make better things. Compared to a torch, a calculator, a phone, a GameBoy, etc… an iPhone requires far less raw materials. This can be applied to any industry, so exponential growth is indeed possible.
In the debate, this is called decoupling, meaning the decoupling of rising material and/or energy consumption with economic growth.
The problem is that absolute decoupling couldn't been shown anywhere, when looking at actual empirical data. This is a pretty exhaustive summary of current research about this: https://eeb.org/library/decoupling-debunked/
you probably ignore the amount of raw materials needed to produce your iPhone (not what actually ends up in the product itself).
No, that's not an argument. The only argument is that you can keep growing by not selling anything material at all, like insurances, but with finite, actually soon degrowing population, how would you even think of doing it?
If you make better things, say a car that costs half of its predecessors then all else being equal you have halved your economic output. The reality is that we use that efficiency to buy more so the price stays the same but cars are twice as big and we buy many more of them.
Fundamentally there isn't any exponential growth and has never been any. And it would violate the laws of thermodynamics.
We have S curves. Lots of them. We're seeing the slowdown of the semiconductor industry S curve now. But we get new S curves in the beginning phases all the time. That's why we keep having so great growth.
But de-growth is just a weird concept. Why would we need it? What does it even mean? Would we burn all the books so we become ignorant about technology? I hope not!
World with basic income might create a class of people, who will demand to increase it (because why not, people who are not working and will be given some money for this will have a lot of time to organize themselves in some kind of strange union), if this group will be large enough it will soon find a political party that will absorb such group.
However to give away money, you need to get them from somewhere, basic income means that work will be taxed more heavily. At some point this will break economy and, in less optimistic scenario, lead to social unrest or takeover of the power by some ultra populist party - we have already seen in the history how helping the poor, discriminated "class" typically ends.
> Fundamentally exponential growth is not sustainable in the long run.
Besides being a fundamentally politically charged statement, I see no good argument on why not, so I'm sure you're ready to present some evidence behind that.
Where you're completely right is that fundamental exponential resource usage is not sustainable.
But in fact, OP makes a pretty convincing argument that resource usage is starting to decouple from GDP growth (in fact, exponentially so).
Adding the exponentially growing level of automation and still-dropping cost-effective renewables into the mix (as well as their synergetic effect on each other), it's a rationally following thought that energy will be almost-free in the near future.
With an exponential growth of external (solar) energy into the system, it's not far off to channel this energy into GDP to sustain the growth.
Just one example: Water problem. There's a drinking water shortage everywhere but if you look at the globe from orbit, you see the planet does not have a water shortage.
In fact, it's just an energy shortage of desalinating that water. Bring that almost-free water to the deserts around the equator and you're in fact creating resources.
I think the idea of degrowth is a fundamental error. It's only when the ecological finally gets economical when you convince the naysayers as well.
Then what do you do with the salt when you have exponentially desalinated amounts of water? Managing it is already a problem with our limited amounts of desalination.
Growth has consequences. People who optimize for economic gain are paid in part to conceal negative consequences to keep their short term gains from being inhibited.
If you can attain exponential growth without consequence, you’ve found a way to simply create matter or violate some law of physics, and honestly, that’s a bigger scientific achievement than economic.
It's not that there won't be consequences. I'm just firmly believing in a possibility of managing those and be better off afterwards. Supposing free energy and a common goal of not letting salinity increase, why not invest a bit more energy of extracting 100% of the water and just piling it up on a mountain? Salt is benign. We've pulled it from the ground below. We can put it back. Sea level's currently rising anyway, so we're synergetic.
We'll find a way if there is growth to sustaing it. On the contrary, degrowth will just lead to shrinkage and the zero-sum mindset behind will soon create fights for all the resources perceived as limited, distracting from the climate crisis. IMHO that's the only sure way to lose the fight against climate change.
Free energy isn’t a thing. There’s a cost to building it. Mining absolutely wrecks environments.
And just dumping billions of tons of salt on a mountainside is no different from what humanity has been doing for centuries now. Destroying an environment that currently has no economic benefits and leaving the next generation to deal with the disaster that it becomes. We’ve done it with deforestation, fossil fuels, excessive and mismanaged farming (see: dust bowl), growth hormones and excessive antibiotics in livestock, excessive ground water usage, excessive fertilizers and their runoff, etc. All those were great in small amounts, then people realized they could pretend there were no consequences to milk even more gains now. Now we have rising sea levels and countless other environmental problems, all because people previously avoided accepting consequences later on.
The universe is finite, it's very big but finite. All growth eventually hits limits. Exponential growth hits the limits in logarithmic time. The question is just whether this brings the time scale to time scales that humans can and should care about.
It's also a straw-man to imply that degrowth advocates want to eliminate all development. Nobody I know (but I am not that well read in the field, maybe it's just my pocket) is talking about stopping technological research, or science, or cultural growth. It's about the subset of human activities that are today labelled as economic.
Have you never done anything for anyone without being paid for it?
I believe the fundamental model of having money and passing it around, and thereby acknowledging that we do things for each other is absolutely fantastic. But the secondary effects absolutely swamp the primary purpose by now.
I can do things for other people, but I can also run ad campaigns, or engineer the culture in such a way that they will desire what I can produce. Desires are not a preexisting thing that a disinterested economic system is more and more efficiently satisfying. The desires are shaped by the wider social system of which the economic system and its intrinsic logic is a core part.
I don't understand why you think it implies trade shouldn't have happened. Do you assume that humans in the past were incapable of creating desires?
Either way, I more precisely should have said "fixed pre-existing thing". Obviously there are some needs and desires rooted in biology and probably, somewhere in the incomprehensible depth of time, these kick-started things. However, as fun as it is to speculate about pre-history, it's largely irrelevant to the conversation. There is no meaningfull way to understand why people pay many 1000$ for a pair of shoes without first establishing that humans build societies with a culture that is largely decoupled from biological imperatives.
As an aside: Humans seem to have a great need to pretend that their cultural constructs, whether gods or status symbols or desires or gender roles, are objective aspects of the universe. This does seem to be a very deep need... But the fact that this is a fallacy doesn't imply that there isn't also a rich tapestry of objective truths, and a subtle interaction between the two.
> There is no meaningfull way to understand why people pay many 1000$ for a pair of shoes without first establishing that humans build societies with a culture that is largely decoupled from biological imperatives.
Status seeking would likely be the biological imperative. Of course the specific desire is going to be culturally dependent.
> Do you assume that humans in the past were incapable of creating desires?
I assume that desires are not created but rather channelled or cultivated within their cultural context based on what's available. Sure, someone with a new product is going to use advertising to try and influence consumers to buy their product. But this assumes their product is something consumers would desire, or something that can be associated with something consumers desire, such as status or convenience.
So this last paragraph to me encapsulates the base fallacy that permeates our society when it comes to analyzing the economy. You exactly assume that there are fixed desires and needs and that this is merely "directed" or shifted around by culture. You think of it as a base real thing that advertisers try to influence, rather than something created from whole cloth.
This assumption does not stand up to scrutiny in my opinion. History shows otherwise.
People go to die in holy war to impress, or serve their country. This is not biologically sensible. And yet they did.
This is what I mean with decoupling. You can of course claim that this is just a strong version of status seeking being channelled, or you can invent another base desire that you think is biologically sensible and that the wish to die in war is just a cultivated version of. But your "base desires" don't have any explanatory value at that point. They don't survive Occam's Razor. They only serve to satisfy your psychological need that the things you care about are _real_.
desalinate exponentially more water every year and you'll run out of ocean on a surprisingly short time scale. Any exponential progression gets absurd on a surprisingly short time scale.
In actual fact, most markets and technology follow something more like and S-curve, with exponential growth in the first half and exponential decay in the second. We need a viable economic theory for the second half. "resource usage is starting to decouple from GDP growth" sounds like it's referring to being in the second half, without recognising the absurdity of pretending something is growing exponentially when it's value is still measured in terms of whatever is still rare.
> Imagine a world…where someone who just likes to cut hair decides to cut hair for other people as long as they get to be creative while doing it.
It sounds wonderful. Here’s the problem. Most people don’t want a creative hair cut. Most people want the same boring haircut everybody else has. And they need it now, not when you’re feeling “inspired” or “creative.”
A world where nobody is incentivized to provide value to others aside from “creative satisfaction,” is a world where nobody provides value to others.
Whether or not you agree with all the things people buy, the fact is, most people buy most things because they find them useful (the top GDP-contributing activities are rooted in things like food, water, housing, transportation, clothing, etc.)
Ending consumerism, means the end of people doing useful things for each other.
This includes all the peaceful global cooperation between countries that is a byproduct of a consumer driven global economy.
I don’t think changing the mindset of countries with nuclear weapons from optimistic growth to pessimistic scarcity is going to have the positive outcomes you think it will.
Unfortunately, when humans fight over scarce things, they tend to kill each other.
> Whether or not you agree with all the things people buy, the fact is, most people buy most things because they find them useful
This requires a loose definition of "useful" which includes status signalling, satisfying an impulse to buy things, and so on, to the point it's tautological; every action is useful. I would not attribute the bulk of consumer spending to an expectation of usefulness, otherwise. Among the useful things, people still spend extra to buy pleasure foods, pleasure clothes, pleasure housing, pleasure transportation.
> Ending consumerism, means the end of people doing useful things for each other.
I think if you look at how consumerism is defined, it's apparent we can have the exchange of goods and services without it. Economic systems can exist without consumerism, and existed before it.
Which societies are those? Feudal ones where the nobles are the only ones consuming and everyone else is subsisting? Or the ancient ones like Rome where there is a large amount of slave labor?
Or native american tribes, other pre-industrial subsistence economies. Slavery isn't at all required. A post-scarcity star trek kind of society wouldn't qualify as consumerist. A modern commune, whether you think it's a good idea or not, and whether you think they 'work' in practice or not, absolutely could exist without consumerism and without slavery. It's silly to think what we've got going is the only way to live. Even within our system, not everyone lives a consumerist lifestyle, some are ascetic.
Agreed. I think there are a lot of policy makers who have a LOT of trouble coping with the idea that humans aren't primarily rational actors contributing to a self-regulating market system in all things…
People seek consumption, money, and power. There's no real self-regulating mechanism for any of these things, as far as the drives of the humans that manifest those outcomes. We don't automatically have an 'enough' meter. As such, we don't manage ourselves well, and it falls to larger systems to identify these losses and mitigate them… which is always contentious.
I always feel these 'actually exponential growth is good' arguments end up resting on suspicious grounds. They fall into the category of moral arguments, where the moral is 'I should not have to examine or curtail my own whims'.
"The upshot is that at a 2.3% growth rate (conveniently chosen to represent a 10× increase every century), we would reach boiling temperature in about 400 years."
People are evolutionary agents. Cultures/states/corporations/memes are evolutionary agents. Evolutionary agents inherently compete. Competition drives both progress and inefficiency. The sort of society where someone "who just likes to cut hair decides to cut hair for other people", at useful frequencies, is sadly fundamentally impossible unless you lobotomize everyone and install a hegemonic overlord meme-complex.
There's a well-defined political argument called degrowth, which says that we need to stop economic growth in order to save the planet. There are some people who put forward this argument. Noah Smith is arguing against them. I think it would be hard to do this without giving them a collective name.
Well, you don’t have to. You can discuss the ideas and not the people.
The only purpose of labeling people based on a particular belief/position is to make it easier to attack with generalizations, and polarize the debate. Now you have to pick a side - are you a degrowther or not?
I am not sure that doing a find/replace of "degrowthers think" with "degrowth theory says" would really contribute make the debate less polarized. Maybe.
There are reasons to labeling people other than those you suggest. For example, maybe it simply was the first way to express his argument that came to mind. Or maybe, identifying a group of people who think X can be part of the debate. For example, suppose libertarians are all funded by billionaires. That might suggest a motivation for libertarian thought. You couldn't know this without identifying the people who are libertarians.
Lastly, it's often good that people have to "pick a side". Do you think we should aim to stop economic growth, or don't you? It's good that you should come to a clear position on this topic. Unclear positions might be nuanced, yes. But they might also be based on unclear thinking, or a desire to please everybody.
I know you’re right, but I often wonder what would initiate change.
Anecdotally, I quickly tire from reading or hearing arguments full of the polarization labels (liberal/conservative/neocon/neoliberal/etc). Wonder if I’m alone in this.
Yeah, those labels are beyond useless, and it's just a shortcut for a caricature of the opponent in the mind of whoever uses them. E.g. someone who is vaccine-hesistant might be lazily pigeon-holed as a dumb racist Trump supporter. People use "socialism" to think Sweden but the other side thinks China and Nazi since they know the "zi" stood for socialism and that means Bernie Sanders wants to gas his own folk.
You're correct; the debate is pretty arcane and the purpose of this particular post is mostly for Noah to lob bombs at other wonk bloggers he interacts with on Twitter frequently. This is a pathology of his writing on Substack, and actually of the entire Substack ecosystem more broadly. Most of the content produced in this ecosystem is basically "takes" on "stuff I heard online". See also Freddie de Boer and others. Extreme forest for trees problem. It's not just that it feels tribalistic and inaccessible to a lay audience, it's that it feels tribalistic and inaccessible to even a particularly educated and engaged audience who nevertheless don't spend all their time in this particular online bubble.
I say this acknowledging that the actual criticisms here are reasonable and I don't have any particular disdain for the post or the discussion, just that I am totally unsurprised that you picked up on it being oddly insular.
We’re not going to “degrowth.” Repeat that to yourself as a mantra until it sinks in. There’s billions of people out there whose standard of living is inadequate, and they’re going to try to keep on the development curve.
Okay, so what does climate response look like in that world? I suspect it looks like investing massive amounts of money in nuclear and carbon capture. Developed countries have spent trillions on COVID response to keep some 65+ people alive. That mk eh would have been far better spent on climate technology.
Yes, and what's more: We have still high population growth rates in many areas of the world. Take Sub-Saharan Africa for example. Even countries like Afghanistan, where the population grew from 20mn in 2000 to 40mn in 2020...
It's really really difficult to estimate the probability of something like that if it never happened before. Compare this to: in the next 200 years there will be a 9.0 earthquake in San Francisco with a probability of 99%. Or a pandemic...
We are going to 'degrowth' and those on the 'bottom' are going to suffer the most.
If not voluntary, then forced. The ecosystem that carries all the growth is rapidly falling apart (relatively, with speed measured in decennia, generations or centuries). We cannot stay on the exponential paths we've taken the last 250 years for another 250 years, that is impossible. Let alone for another 2500 years
This seems not to address the arguments made in the article - for example, that economic growth, beyond a certain point, is mostly about "doing more with less". Maybe those arguments are wrong, but they need responding to.
The article adresses all these points on a small timescale.
Just population growth alone, using the current curve (1.1%), will hit 118 billion people in 250 years and 5,812,724,005,588 billion (not a typo) people in 2500 years. Compounding exponential growth is quite literally unimanigable.
We cannot continue on current curves. No matter how efficient you make houses, produce iPads or food: exponential growth is unsustainable. Literally and figuratively.
That's not what the current curve actually looks like though. The rate of increase is declining every year. There are a number of developed economies that already have shrinking populations.
There are a couple of different population projections out there and, of course, predictions about the future are hard. But all of them show a population peak around 2100 of maybe 10-12 billion people.
It's hard to see why "economic growth involves doing more with less" would work on a small timescale but not a big one. Indeed the main point of the article is that if you wait long enough, this will kick in, but that in the short run we have a problem.
The same holds for population growth. As countries get richer the birth rate reduces. So there's very little chance that we'll stay on the current 1.1% curve, any more than we stayed on the analogous curve defined in 1950.
So one thing was addressed in the article that is a fundamental axiom of your argument, which is that historical curves are not laws of nature. You have no reason to believe that this is actually exponential growth into the future.
On a note addressing your population growth numbers, I just want to say that your numbers demonstrate that you are very unfamiliar with population growth dynamics and you should research the topic more. Those numbers are impossible and not going to happen (on earth) in any scenario whatsoever.
Developed economies are already not on an exponential path (as is made clear in the linked post if you would bother to read it). You are reasoning from a false premise.
how tiring to argue over this. "Degrowthing" is a means to an end. I don't think many people have a problem with "growth" itself just because they somehow religiously hate anything that growth. It's just that as is we are not exactly making things better and if we do more (without adjusting what we do) then that certainly can't suddenly be better for our planet. If we want to do less damage we have to reduce the damage that we are doing. Certainly selling increasing amounts of "stuff" is not making things better. I you can somehow make it so that any flavour of growth can be done while reducing the impact, great, go ahead.
In short: It's not that I hate cars, I like cars, I like driving. But in order to not break the world we live in we need to make fewer cars and drive them less. If you can suddenly make a car that does significantly less damage or negative damage then PLEASE make it, I will buy it. Growth Yay!
Buy a second hand car. The cost of making it has already been done. Even better a second hand hybrid or electric car. A new car no matter how it’s made will incur substantial material and energy usage.
While I agree on not triggering a new build, I still question it:
- When buying second-hand, I still use a share of the car lifespan, and it is this lifespan that makes the value of building it in the first place.
- I buy it from a person or a system (a leasing company in my last car's case) that periodically orders new cars, so I participate in making their business model possible by providing an output.
- Not everyone can live of second hand stuff: since I brought my previous car to its death (near 300.000km), another one has to be created somewhere to allow my next buy.
- Up to what mileage and years is it wise to extend the life of an old car when new ones burn less per km?
- I also calculated my share of atmospheric CO2 for the life of my previous car (6 liters gasoil per 100km over 250.000+ km), and it is a already a disaster for a single car...
That made me consider an electric car (new since they are still very rare second-hand) but only Tesla matches my needs and Tesla does not match my financial reach. Indeed the others are either hybrid-jokes (with 50km full-electric when you have the wind in the back) or city-only electric cars (poor recharge network and only 200km range).
My current idea is to reduce kms by adopting more teleworking (thanks Covid to push my employer to consider it) and waiting for a better offer for electric cars (even new).
Rebuilding a motor or transmission requires less energy and raw materials than making a new one. Replacing a motor or transmission with a new part requires less than making a new car.
But with economies of scale in manufacture, labor costs for repair, plus consumers' perceived need for new vehicles, results in cars being scrapped when they could otherwise be repaired.
> So the idea here is that we don’t need degrowth; instead, we can keep raising everyone’s standard of living without exhausting the planet’s resources.
Well, we haven't been able to pull that off. Quite the opposite.
Asia is a dumpster now, their rivers are black stinky waters, trash is everywhere, climate is changing at an alarming rate, we have lose 60% of all the insect species, oceans are emptying, full of micro-plastic and with great current disturbances, extreme weather events are occurring more and more and the amazon forest is getting eaten.
But sure, tell me how your magical theory matches practice in your dream like land.
The trick is just what you see in the article: focus on country-level data where direct consumption of certain resources are going down while GDP goes up, and claim without evidence that this is possible for all countries.
It reads like a religious sermon intended to ease the fragile consciences of a rapidly dwindling elite, jumping at shadows while they barricade themselves ever further into self-reinforcing fantasy. Complete and utter detachment from reality, complete with an imaginary foe in the form of "degrowthers," who supposedly exist and spend their days relentlessly banging at the gates of prosperity with intent to needlessly sack the city on the hill. Economics as a discipline has always been abused to justify the unjustifiable, but here it seems to be employed purely to defend the psychological safety of the most privileged, who cannot even bear to observe the destructive results of their lifestyles from a safe distance. The violence committed all around them, in their name, and the cries of anguish that result are easily brushed aside in service to maintaining the desperate illusion that cause and effect don't exist.
Degrowth is a tool - it is neither good or bad. To dismiss the entire concept as "Environmental nutters don't like SUVs and want to ban them!" just muddies an already turbid debate.
I think the CO2 graphs are trade-adjusted but those resource usage graphs come from USGS so I doubt it takes imports into account (especially given imports would include processed goods, manufactured parts etc. where estimating the resource use would be tricky)
It says trade adjusted, but this seems only to include the production.
"To calculate consumption-based emissions we need to track which goods are traded across the world, and whenever a good was imported we need to include all CO2 emissions that were emitted in the production of that good, and vice versa to subtract all CO2 emissions that were emitted in the production of goods that were exported."
What about shipping? And the production of the shipping vessels? Waste disposal?
I don't understand the argument, saying that US resource usage went down while China resource went up. Isn't this because the growth in the US is sustained by the production growth in China?
This doesn't prove that US economy grew while the global resources usage went down, just that the resource usage was moved offshore.
From TFA: " For example, China now produces more CO2 emissions than the U.S., the EU, and Japan combined... (And no, this is not because of outsourcing, as you can see by looking at the trade-adjusted emissions numbers.)" Link to: https://ourworldindata.org/consumption-based-co2
In particular, from that page, consumption-based CO2 emissions of the US have gone down since 2007.
How can they track the CO2 cost of an imported product? For example, I buy many products from Amazon.de, but almost all of them are produced in China. Do they account for transferring the CO2 emission from the original country? What about all that packaging and transportation?
Also, how do they know where all imported items come from? Many people buy from Alibaba or other Chinese websites which rarely declare the actual items inside delivered packages.
Perhaps read the orig research to find answers to these questions. My guess is that they measure this at aggregate level (using e.g. national statistics on imports versus home consumption in each product category). Indeed, that would make more sense than trying to track this at individual level.
Growth is an accounting technicality. We can re-define what growth means by introducing other metrics in the GDP, like population well being, and try as much as possible to de-couple it from energy consumption growth. I think energy is essential for good living but we can use it more efficiently and we can switch to cleaner sources.
Aligning production/consumption priorities with the need for human long-term survival? You are describing degrowth.
The article makes various strawen, starting with "the idea that economic growth requires growth in resource use" and "Degrowthers have no idea how to combine various resources"
That was one reason I was such a big fan of Andrew Yang - a minimum amount of consumption guaranteed for everyone, funded by increased costs of nonessential consumption, and redefinition of what makes a healthy economy so the resulting decline in net consumption doesn't ring any alarm bells. From an environmentalist standpoint it was an elegantly simple set of policies he proposed.
One quick points: 1.90$ is arbitrary as a mesure of absolute poverty. It is way too low. And actually, the best way of mesuring poverty is: %people sleeping without a shelter and %people having nutritional deficiency.
Having said that, i think some economist tried to do a correlation between adjusted dollar income to lifespan, and found that for each cent you make until you earn at least 5$ (adjusted) a day in industrialized/globalized countries, your lifespan at 5 is growing pretty fast. after this, the gains are minimal, so the actual limit on poverty should be 5$.
Excluding China, the %age of the world population under 5$ (adjusted) is diminishing since the 70s, as income from capital outperform income from labor faster than the marginal productivity increases (AKA: Piketty was wrong in his book Capital in the 20th century, capital did not take all productivity gains, it took more than that).
I do not have an opinion on degrowth, i hope it won't happen in my lifetime (because i'm an hypocrite, but at least i'm not hiding between either Singer/Gate optimism or other techno-optimism), i'm not actually convinced we will manage to avoid one, and i think a controlled one will be better than one that id forced upon us.
This at the end was a brilliant and very sharp comment:
"At its core, I feel like degrowth’s appeal comes from its implicit promise to recast genteel North European decline as some sort of grandiose world-saving moral quest. "
Europe's working age population is declining, and it will continue to do so for the foreseeable future unless old, retired Europeans undergo a major change in attitudes to immigration.
IIRC the decline is about 1.5% per year and it is forecast to increase considerably.
The same has been true of Japan for two decades,South Korea for one decade, and China's working age population peaked in 2015. China is running out of people in its rural areas that it can draw on for its factories.
The USA, Canada, and Australia are propped up by immigrants.
(Work, GDP, is done by working age people. This is not always obvious to economists.)
I'm not a degrowther (though I do think we should try to make our economy more symbiotic with nature where possible) but a couple of issues here stand out to me:
does his argument that Western countries' use of resource has started to inversely correlate with QoL improvement hold up in the face of those same countries outsourcing almost all manufacturing to other countries? It's all well and good that the US' use of metals is decreasing, but if that's just because China is using the raw materials and shipping the final products over then that's no better.
He also makes the argument that as non-industrialised countries begin to industrialise, they can just make use of non-material goods like we do. Is this not based on the assumption that other countries won't want similar standards of living to the US, ie car ownership, disposable and consumption goods, etc? We're talking about a multiplication of the production of goods.
From a systems standpoint, I think we need to be doing 2 things (for CO2 specifically, that's far from the only concern): reversing the increase of carbon in the carbon cycle (ie, reducing dependence on fossil fuels and sequestering carbon artificially if/where safe), and monitoring and increasing the bandwidth of the decarbonisation phase of the carbon cycle (soil, trees and the ocean playing the main role).
Yup, this is exactly the issue here. Lower CO2 emission, etc. is lower in developed countries because they have off-shored their production. Less developed country (like post-communistic Eastern and Central Europe countries) cannot do that, so they will the one who would pay for all climatism ideas. And those ideas looking good on paper are mostly dumb, as they don't really decrease CO2 emission, just move it elsewhere for those who are wealthy enough.
Looking and Carbon Tracker is pretty eye opening, if ones check how many coal based plants are planned in Asia. Funnily enough, Carbon Tracker estimates that 92% of those plants will be uneconomic, so, in theory China, India, Vietnam, Indonesia and Japan want to shoot their own foot for some crazy reason. My guess is that Carbon Tracker estimates are not that great...
Yep, accounting for carbon offshoring lowers the difference (US emissions gain 7% if you count consumption not just production, and China's lose 14%) but it still holds that China emits more per capita.
I'm not a degrowther either but reading their papers is quite interesting because from a first glance nobody will champion degrowth as a movement. Yet at the same time "growthers" are doomed to adopt the policy suggestions of "degrowthers". Why? Because all they did is imagine a sustainable future. Every time growth hits a sustainability cliff, politicians are forced to adopt one more degrowth policy.
Unless the Forced Green Growth is redistributive in nature the policy Noah is pining for will actually result in the exact same outcome for the poor as degrowth. This is obvious when you consider who owns Teslas cars or who has transformed their roofs to solar.
Degrowthers have a third argument that is a bit stronger than the two Noah debunks:
The charts showing that the US is consuming less resources as time goes on suggests the US is not growing. The financial shenanigans have decoupled the official statistics from reality.
There is a reason everyone is getting all stressed and politics are getting tenser - once growth stops, politics becomes about how to divide up a fixed pie.
There is also, and mainly, the "hedonic adjustment" that is made in computing GDP - the price of computing devices, for instance is arbitrarily increased to reflect their increased "power", and this is taken to mean that their value to consumers is increased by the same amount.
This year's phone is ten times as "powerful" as one from five years ago, therefore we multiply phone sales by ten.
The same reasoning applies with cars, ignoring the fact that it's now nearly impossible to buy a car without power windows, power steering, automatic transmission, anti-lock braking, etc.
I really enjoy reading this type of article because it automatically assumes that we are facing a choice of action. As if nature is going to just politely sit around and wait for us to discuss and plan optimised futures which are politically acceptable. Unfortunately, judging by the current massive ramp up in catastrophic climate impacts, this is unlikely to be an option. Instead it looks as though we'll be spending a considerable amount of time fire-fighting (pun intended) with increasingly desperate intensity until the whole stack of cards collapses on itself. Such a shame that we let things get to this state.
This is nothing new, its just being dressed up fresh and pushed by media. Where I live, the hole in the ozone layer and the imminent end of fossile energy sources was taught in school already 30 to 40 years ago. Everyone and their dog knew how bad we were and are treating the environment. Heck, it took two decades to force the leather-maker in our village to stop completely polluting our river. Everyone knew. But the industry was busy making money, and making the common people dependant on the shiny and new offerings of the consumerism culture. People stopped to do small-scale farming because it was much cheaper to go to the grocery-store and buy stuff.
And now that the industry, mostly managers, have made a shitload of money, the common man is supposed to fix it all up.
Sorry. I know why you think it is important. However, I am too old to believe this system can be fixed. We are doomed, and its about time we start to accept that. We've trained people to consume and be dependant on supply chains. We are not going to unlearn this as a society. A few will deprive themselves of things they could consume. But these people are not going to be significant. The rest is going to go on like they learnt in childhood.
> Where I live, the hole in the ozone layer and the imminent end of fossile energy sources was taught in school already 30 to 40 years ago.
> Sorry. I know why you think it is important. However, I am too old to believe this system can be fixed. We are doomed, and its about time we start to accept that.
Well, good news! We passed legislation to limit ozone-depleting chemicals, and now the ozone hole has stopped getting worse and is now healing:
So we are not doomed, and it's good to not accept that. We CAN make changes and fix things. And it doesn't require getting rid of refrigeration (or energy), it just requires different refrigerants (or sources of energy).
Climate change is not the hole in the ozone layer. That was a simple change. The legislation required did not severely impact our quality of life. We simply swapped one propellant for another.
Greenhouse gases are a product of our endeavour. Almost everything we do, unless it's "planting forests" has negative effect. Curbing that means consuming less, producing less. These are, by definition, going to dramatically affect quality of life.
Aside from the political and economic differences, the problems themselves are vastly different. Right now we're just starting to see climate change feedback loops kicking in. These are are catastrophically bad. While there is a near-zero % possibility that we will voluntarily reduce our annual co2 emissions (instead of merely slowing acceleration, or, as is the case most of the time, still actually increasing the rate year on year), feedback loops are out of our control.
Maybe we'll make changes to reduce our co2 emissions increases (unlikely). But I don't see how it's possible to actually stop emissions and begin taking greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere. Yet that's what we need to do .
It's simple: there's to much greenhouse gas in the atmosphere right now. We know this because there has been an increase in extreme weather, wildfires, melting of polar ice and killer heat waves. Ideally we should stop all emissions immediately and actually begin reversing what we've done. Yet day by day, year by year we are always adding more and taking about budgets, like the house is on fire and we taking about how much petrol we're "allowed to pour onto it".
It's not a matter of if but when we lose the polar ice, we lose reflectivity. Much worse, when the artic soil thaws it will release methane in quantities that will be (and I think the word has lost its impact these days)... Catastrophic. There's no putting that the genie back in the bottle.
Edit: While I am absolutely pessimistic, I don't think we should throw our arms up and say, "screw it I'm driving a hummer and flying helicopters every weekend". People don't respond well to depressing fact, they switch off because they feel powerless. It is easier to effect a change by more uplifting means. But we must still be honest about the scale of the problem. Personally, I find it difficult to see a comparison between the ozone layer and this without getting a bee in my bonnet
Your entire post takes for given that we have to use fossil fuels for our main energy source. This simply isn’t true.
Swap the energy source, and we’re (for the most part) fine. That’s 80% of climate change. The rest is agricultural emissions from livestock (and rice?) and agricultural land use plus a bit for cement (although fully cured cement, which takes decades, actually reabsorbs the CO2 the limestone itself emitted in the calcining process).
This narrative that climate change is just due to general human activity is entirely the narrative I’m seeking to attack. It’s false. It’s mainly (80%) the CO2 and methane emitted from fossil fuel usage. Switch to wind, solar, nuclear, hydro, geothermal, and you’ve basically solved the problem like we did with the ozone hole. The climate will start to heal. It really IS just a swap out like with the ozone hole. And we basically have the tech to do this. It just sometimes costs slightly more upfront. The industrialized countries can do this just fine, barely breaking a sweat. Switch the grid aggressively to solar and nuclear, require all new cars and trucks to be at least plug in hybrid and then pure electric. Switch iron reduction to hydrogen (already happening), heat pumps for heating, cement produced electrically, and we’re basically there (besides some mop up of agricultural and land use emissions from farming). We’re just not doing it. At least, not the speed we should.
We have to use fossil fuels while there are no alternatives online. Germany is shutting down nuclear plants and building coal power stations. Britain is increasing coal usage this year because Russian natural gas prices are going up.
Also, if "all we have to do is stop burning fossil fuels and farming cattle" then isn't that an admission that climate change is the result of human activity? If it wasn't, then why would we need to change our behaviour?
And if it were really as simple as you make it sound to just switch off fossil fuel and use renewables, then why hasn't it happened?
Right now, a report says that in this century we could be looking at global temperature increases of 5°C+ above pre-industrial levels at current trends. How long does it take to build a nuclear plant? 30 years? How many are being built right now? How many active nuclear plants are being decommissioned? When are we going to ban all fossil fuel cars? 2050? When are we going to curb the number of methane producing livestock?
Yeah, once those feedback loops kick in fully there is nothing whatsoever we can do even if we finally get off our asses and try. That's all I'm saying.
Spot on. Every time we hear that some environmental goal is "not possible" or "not financially viable" we have to keep in mind that the environment collapse will serve us the bill.
[Poor] people will die by the millions, again and again until we go extinct or go back to a sustainable lifestyle.
"degrowth’s appeal comes from its implicit promise to recast genteel North European decline as some sort of grandiose world-saving moral quest."
Aka: "I don't want to give up my SUV. Let the collapse happen."
The problem with his argument is not that the economy can't grow using less resources, that I agree with, it's that he equates a fixed supply of resources on the one side with a steady or falling (but non-zero) rate of consumption on the other side. However there are some resources that don't just replenish themselves and once they're gone, they're gone. So rate of consumption would have to trend to zero to be sustainable, not just stay flat.
Degrowth arguments is not lowering your consumption is enjoyable or popular; some might have written effusively about rediscovering vegan cuisine but I’d blame cookbooks usual enthusiasm for that one. Greta Thunberg was quite candid about how sailing the Atlantic was painful.
Degrowth argues that technological innovation won’t be enough to save biodiversity and decarbonise in time.
If you want to prove them wrong, don’t call them smelly hippies on a “grandiose world-saving moral quest”: that helps no one. Instead, invent electric cars, solar and wind energy, CO2 capture solutions, protein sources, etc. that are so cheap that you can replace alternatives. Whether those are ‘better’ can be subjective.
The article would be more convincing if it described the day in the life of someone with a middle-class Western lifestyle with no carbon footprint and not destroying wildlife habitats. By saying that current alternatives are not encouraging, he’s arguing for degrowth (or catastrophic environmental changes) not against.
I honestly don't know what this "de-growth" thing is about, it sounds suspiciously like a slur invented to label any sustainable economy advocate so they stop messing up industry with rules about how much energy or resources you can waste.
And the arguing isn't great either, when saying why their opponents arguments are wrong they demonstrate it partially by the following incredibly general statement:
> Past trends are no guarantee of future trends
and without any qualification why this would only apply to one sort of trend they assert their own trend as fact
> And the fact that rich countries have hit an inflection point where economic growth no longer depends on growing resource
Or in clearer words: "Your trend is false and will break tomorrow, but my trend is an eternal truth!". This sort of bluntly self serving argument does not fill me with confidence that there is much carefully crafter reasoning here.
> I honestly don't know what this "de-growth" thing is about, it sounds suspiciously like a slur invented to label any sustainable economy advocate so they stop messing up industry with rules about how much energy or resources you can waste.
I get this as an initial reaction but....why not just Google it before posting a lengthy comment based off of what it "sounds like"? As the sibling comments link shows, literally the first result for googling the term provides a long and detailed history of its proponents.
Abs the entire article is written from the perspective of someone concerned about sustainability (without thinking lower economic growth is a feasible path forward), which makes the assumption even more bizarre.
True and false. We should get rid of fake growth, which is consuming and producing useless stuff for the sake of preserving employment and increasing GDP. This fake growth is the result of inflationary monetary policies, which increase unnecessary spending and non-efficient investments.
In terms of a strategy game, inflationary economy shifts the balance from upgrading your units (more efficient) to just producing more with current units.
Sure, inflation is fake growth but the system needs endless growth so fake growth that employs people is better than real growth that abandons them on the streets.
This is a bit of a misleading title and article. The author claims to be against degrowth but then essentially makes arguments for it, with the caveat that we shouldn't reduce production, but only reduce consumption. That's despite the fact that degrowth is primarily about reducing resource use, not really about reducing other measures of productivity. Degrowth isn't about avoiding all work, reducing the production of solar panels, or stopping the building of passive housing, it's about cutting wasteful activity in favor of sustainable activity, much like the article advocates for. This requires significant central planning, which they both say is a non-starter and then advocate for in the form of forced green development. Ultimately, I don't see a big difference between their proposed way forward and that of the "degrowthers". It could even be regarded as a treatise on what degrowth could look like in practice.
Regardless of what mechanism we might invent for styling our growth oriented economy into a consumption reducing one, a big intervention is required, and we do need to intervene to avoid slamming (on ecological timescales) into malthusian limits in the ugliest way.
The author cherry picked US, where, BTW, a substantial chunk of GDP increase doesn't go to households, and therefore, to consumption, but into financial assets [1].
More serious analyses have shown that decoupling is as "magical thinking" as de-growth.[2]
I agree that degrowth is a hard pill to digest, and that converting our economy to greener alternatives may even fuel growth for some time, but I can't see how infinite growth should still be our goal, especially considering that human population will soon stabilise.
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 235 ms ] threadTherefore we know there is some limit - and we are just arguing about where that limit is.
The Global Footprint Network with their "Overshoot Day" believe we are already beyond that sustainable limit and, to be honest, with increasing populations that (quite rightly) demand Western living standards, I doubt we will ever be sustainable.
If we're allowed colonization of space, we can only travel at a finite speed. Humans can overtake a finite radius in a year, resulting in a cubic rate of growth in volume. Exponential growth is ultimately limited by the finite speed of light and dimensionality of our universe.
Take aviation. You can make aviation green by using hydrogen (on medium distances), batteries (on short distances) or efuels (everywhere, it's basically kerosene, but made with renewable electricity). Ok, great.
Now there's an EU research project that has run some numbers. Note that this project happened in collaboration with aviation companies, it's unlikely to paint a particularly pessimistic picture. Page 44 here: https://www.cleansky.eu/sites/default/files/inline-files/202...
Their calculation is that you need between 21 and 32 Petawatthours per year to green aviation (depending on how optimistic you are about hydrogen-based aviation). That is around the same as the total amount of electricity the world uses today (all electricity, not just green electricity).
They assume a 4 percent growth rate for aviation, which is in line with what aviation organizations expect.
I have trouble imagining that this is realistic. Like: I'm pretty optimistic about renewable energy. But I just don't think it's very plausible to say: "We'll make all our electricity green, and then we'll add the same amount in green electricity just for aviation, and oh, we'll probably do the same for a bunch of other industry sectors that will need similar amounts" (there are studies with similar numbers e.g. for the chemical industry). Like I just don't think it's plausible to green all electricity and then grow the electricity sector by something like 500% in a short amount of time.
And when you come to the conclusion that this is not realistic you should start to wonder if you should really assume that aviation will just continue to grow and grow. (And the same is pretty much true for a lot of sectors where greening is not impossible, but challenging.)
Service economies rise off the backs of offshoring primary and secondary production to developing economies. None of that stuff exists without the underlying production, which absolutely depends on extraction of biosphere resources.
Good luck growing your university-educated, service economy cities without the raw material and fossil fuel abundance it currently relies on. Being increasing abstracted from your foundations may feel secure but you'll topple just the same when they give way, even thousands of floors above.
You could perhaps make an argument that more layers of leverage could be layered on top of existing levels of productive extraction, but when we're talking about a reduction (by choice or circumstance) in the underlying raw extractive activity, that's insufficient.
>"The kind of massive intention reordering of global production and consumption that degrowthers fantasize about is not just pragmatically impossible to implement, it’s the kind of thing that essentially everyone in the world except for a few very shouty people in Northern Europe and the occasional Twitter activist is going to reject."
Can't disagree with this. But the proposed alternative seems just as untenable:
>"Making a rapid transition to green, sustainable growth will require huge new investments"
Putting aside the energy density and portability issues, and the stuff about rare mineral extraction, base load etc etc etc... Perhaps if the current economic irrationality we've had hanging around since 2008 of an essentially unbounded slush fund of capital that somehow never significantly depreciates perpetuates forever onwards, this kind of thing could be pulled off. I'm unconvinced that we've entered some kind of calm water beyond our historical cycles of boom and bust, rather that we're in an extended period of irrationality yet to come down to earth. Still, nice to be hopeful. Just strikes me that both possible futures are equally unlikely, much as either one of them would be wonderful if they came to pass. Certainly better than the (IMO) more likely other way this all goes.
Claiming that services like social media do not rely on higher consumption of raw materials is really far fetch. Good luck building growing a service like Facebook without: - growing mobile phone market - growing mobile network market - growing internet access - growing your servers behind it - the energy consumption associated with it
It's quite easy to ignore facts when omitting that the majority of the supply chain and user base behind that is not located in the US. I'm fairly confident that adding those numbers to those charts will give a different picture indeed
This is the relevant graph: https://www.nuestromundoendatos.org/exports/production-vs-co...
But more importantly I see some reasonable degrowth arguments as advocating an end to consumerism. To no longer measure the wealth of a country by the extend of it's material consumption and financial transactions. We are optimizing the wrong thing. Imagine a world with a basic income, where someone who just likes to cut hair decides to cut hair for other people as long as they get to be creative while doing it. This would lower the GDP and nominally be degrowth, but not because the scope and range of possible human activities has decreased.
We have coupled status to consumption, money and being productive. I believe that this has become the overwhelming function of much economic activity. Otherwise it's not rationally understandable why people would opt to work 70 hours a week, barely know their kids, in order to make sure they can afford things they don't really need.
I don't really see the article(s) linked contradicting this line of thought in the degrowth community.
Growth doesn’t mean that we make materially more things, but that we make better things. Compared to a torch, a calculator, a phone, a GameBoy, etc… an iPhone requires far less raw materials. This can be applied to any industry, so exponential growth is indeed possible.
We don’t need to work more or consume more things unless we either give up on innovation or if we think innovation is not possible because we have reached a knowledge boundary. The former would be a silly decision to make, the latter is an assumption that should be demonstrated.
Mass alone does not tell the whole story.
The horse does not need improved roads the way most bicycles do, and is more reliable off road than most mountain bikes.
Lots of food for thought here.
Then, it might just mean that your father's calculator use material of higher density.
More seriously. when building something, there's a lot more material than what comes in the final product: - the scrap generated by the by the manufacturing process. The more elements, the more it's going to be. - the number of defects, for every parts of the device (for some parts it will be extremely low, for some it would be quite higher, but there's always some). Granted, some defects can be re-purposed, but it's not always the case - The raw materials to actually manufacture (like water) - The average number of repairs required over a lifetime (replacing the screen on a iphone is quite frequent) - The materials required to build the supply chain that can build such devices. - The materials required to generate the energy required to build the factories.
And there's plenty of other things to take into account. In the end it's not about the volume of raw material as such, that doesn't mean much as it is. It's for each material, to take into consideration if it's renewable, what's the impact of extracting it and many other questions.
Such growth is anything but exponential. In fact, it's logarithmic.
It really doesn’t matter if whatever is created is better or just more of the same.
New things will require more things.
I highly recommend reading Rich Gold’s excellent book The Plenitude:
https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/plenitude
Very often, free alternatives / those not involving 3rd parties, simpler living, are better for us overall. But if more expensive options are available, we are pressured to take them so that we are not left behind / feel like we fit in / have a social life.
Also, at some point certain things are just 'good enough', and marginal improvements require a ton of effort but don't make life better. For example, mobile phones - an 8 year old phone would work just fine, if not for forced obsoletion. Yet tons of effort go into very marginal improvements, because if you don't do it, your competitors will.
If this were true, your innovating competitors will lose money. There’s a discussion to be had on bad innovations (such as almost everything related to the so-called “attention economy), but they are a drop in the ocean.
For example, my iPhone 6 is getting obsolete just because it would not get latest iOS updates. Many apps are no longer supporting the old OS version. Yet these apps are not video games requiring the latest hardware - they are simply glorified web pages. There is no objective reason for why the phone could not run them.
People in a lot of places literally couldn't socialise physically for much of the last 18 months, surely social media must have helped?
Like one can argue that it's a cure worse than the diseases, but it's difficult to say that it's entirely useless.
I think if you correctly account for all the materials required to support every last stage of process from dirt, ore and sand all the way to the finished iPhone, the result would be awe-inspiring and dismaying.
What a silly assertion. The mere fact you can't create something easily does not mean it does not necessitate less resources to build. The support system an supply chain is huge, but the resources it uses could be quite small if you divide by the number of units produced.
Even so, there are many tools that a smartphone replaces that would have needed in the past a full product just to do a single thing. It can replace a PC, a game console, a tv, a flashlight, a calculator, tons of books, measuring instruments, keys. Many many things that have now moved into one small device. Maybe the resources for a torch are not more than for a iPhone, but adding all the functions it fills, surely, it is more resource efficient than the past alternatives.
Former point? No. Do you have any idea how much energy it takes to smelt aluminum, or form a CPU-ready silicon wafer? Wood for torches grows out of the ground. You don't seem to have any idea of supply chain infrastructure, and it matters. There's a fairly close mapping between the amount of infrastructure involved, and the cost of the thing (Veblen goods aside). You can buy a flammable stick fairly cheaply, but buying a smartphone really does not wind up being the cost of the raw materials or even close… and this is because you're not looking at the infrastructure costs of producing the final result.
Sorry, you're way off base. Smart technological stuff is really cool in its own right, but it's mind-bogglingly wasteful by 'degrowth' standards.
How many torches do you have to burn, to repeatedly melt, refine, cast, machine etc. just the aluminum alone from your aluminum-cased device?
An iPhone 12 has 164 g, of which 24% is aluminum. [4] => ~39.36g of aluminum in one. Ergo, your, presumably wood torch, would have to weigh 865g in order to be able to have the same embodied energy as an iPhone.
Of course, this is highly simplified and silly and full of wonky napkin math, but at least I expect we're in the same order of magnitude range for the estimation.
Regardless, doing the math, it is lower than I expected. Also, the greatest issue I took with your claim that "If you think an iPhone requires less raw materials to make than a torch, please go ahead and hand-sculpt one from raw sand." -> that sentence makes no sense and fails to prove your point. Maybe the point is correct, but it is NOT proven in any way by that sentence. I don't even have a stance on the torch/iPhone comparison (although the effort I expended on the napkin math might show otherwise, that was just a fun little exercise for me)
And the wider point is that inovation might be better for the environment than lack of innovation. I am convinced that if we could move to a sustainable world if everything we bought would be higher quality and had more thought in it, abeit more expensive. The consolidation of purpose, as you nicely phrased it is one of the critical components that work for this "techstenance".
And the stronger point, related to the iPhone specifically is that
[1] https://theconversation.com/the-trouble-with-aluminium-7245
[2] http://www.woodenergy.ie/frequentlyaskedquestions/
[3] https://www.gsmarena.com/apple_iphone_12-10509.php
[4] https://www.businessinsider.com/how-much-metal-in-an-iphone-...
In the debate, this is called decoupling, meaning the decoupling of rising material and/or energy consumption with economic growth.
The problem is that absolute decoupling couldn't been shown anywhere, when looking at actual empirical data. This is a pretty exhaustive summary of current research about this: https://eeb.org/library/decoupling-debunked/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox
We have S curves. Lots of them. We're seeing the slowdown of the semiconductor industry S curve now. But we get new S curves in the beginning phases all the time. That's why we keep having so great growth.
But de-growth is just a weird concept. Why would we need it? What does it even mean? Would we burn all the books so we become ignorant about technology? I hope not!
However to give away money, you need to get them from somewhere, basic income means that work will be taxed more heavily. At some point this will break economy and, in less optimistic scenario, lead to social unrest or takeover of the power by some ultra populist party - we have already seen in the history how helping the poor, discriminated "class" typically ends.
Besides being a fundamentally politically charged statement, I see no good argument on why not, so I'm sure you're ready to present some evidence behind that.
Where you're completely right is that fundamental exponential resource usage is not sustainable.
But in fact, OP makes a pretty convincing argument that resource usage is starting to decouple from GDP growth (in fact, exponentially so).
Adding the exponentially growing level of automation and still-dropping cost-effective renewables into the mix (as well as their synergetic effect on each other), it's a rationally following thought that energy will be almost-free in the near future.
With an exponential growth of external (solar) energy into the system, it's not far off to channel this energy into GDP to sustain the growth.
Just one example: Water problem. There's a drinking water shortage everywhere but if you look at the globe from orbit, you see the planet does not have a water shortage.
In fact, it's just an energy shortage of desalinating that water. Bring that almost-free water to the deserts around the equator and you're in fact creating resources.
I think the idea of degrowth is a fundamental error. It's only when the ecological finally gets economical when you convince the naysayers as well.
Growth has consequences. People who optimize for economic gain are paid in part to conceal negative consequences to keep their short term gains from being inhibited.
If you can attain exponential growth without consequence, you’ve found a way to simply create matter or violate some law of physics, and honestly, that’s a bigger scientific achievement than economic.
We'll find a way if there is growth to sustaing it. On the contrary, degrowth will just lead to shrinkage and the zero-sum mindset behind will soon create fights for all the resources perceived as limited, distracting from the climate crisis. IMHO that's the only sure way to lose the fight against climate change.
And just dumping billions of tons of salt on a mountainside is no different from what humanity has been doing for centuries now. Destroying an environment that currently has no economic benefits and leaving the next generation to deal with the disaster that it becomes. We’ve done it with deforestation, fossil fuels, excessive and mismanaged farming (see: dust bowl), growth hormones and excessive antibiotics in livestock, excessive ground water usage, excessive fertilizers and their runoff, etc. All those were great in small amounts, then people realized they could pretend there were no consequences to milk even more gains now. Now we have rising sea levels and countless other environmental problems, all because people previously avoided accepting consequences later on.
It's also a straw-man to imply that degrowth advocates want to eliminate all development. Nobody I know (but I am not that well read in the field, maybe it's just my pocket) is talking about stopping technological research, or science, or cultural growth. It's about the subset of human activities that are today labelled as economic.
I believe the fundamental model of having money and passing it around, and thereby acknowledging that we do things for each other is absolutely fantastic. But the secondary effects absolutely swamp the primary purpose by now.
I can do things for other people, but I can also run ad campaigns, or engineer the culture in such a way that they will desire what I can produce. Desires are not a preexisting thing that a disinterested economic system is more and more efficiently satisfying. The desires are shaped by the wider social system of which the economic system and its intrinsic logic is a core part.
Either way, I more precisely should have said "fixed pre-existing thing". Obviously there are some needs and desires rooted in biology and probably, somewhere in the incomprehensible depth of time, these kick-started things. However, as fun as it is to speculate about pre-history, it's largely irrelevant to the conversation. There is no meaningfull way to understand why people pay many 1000$ for a pair of shoes without first establishing that humans build societies with a culture that is largely decoupled from biological imperatives.
As an aside: Humans seem to have a great need to pretend that their cultural constructs, whether gods or status symbols or desires or gender roles, are objective aspects of the universe. This does seem to be a very deep need... But the fact that this is a fallacy doesn't imply that there isn't also a rich tapestry of objective truths, and a subtle interaction between the two.
Status seeking would likely be the biological imperative. Of course the specific desire is going to be culturally dependent.
> Do you assume that humans in the past were incapable of creating desires?
I assume that desires are not created but rather channelled or cultivated within their cultural context based on what's available. Sure, someone with a new product is going to use advertising to try and influence consumers to buy their product. But this assumes their product is something consumers would desire, or something that can be associated with something consumers desire, such as status or convenience.
This assumption does not stand up to scrutiny in my opinion. History shows otherwise.
People go to die in holy war to impress, or serve their country. This is not biologically sensible. And yet they did.
This is what I mean with decoupling. You can of course claim that this is just a strong version of status seeking being channelled, or you can invent another base desire that you think is biologically sensible and that the wish to die in war is just a cultivated version of. But your "base desires" don't have any explanatory value at that point. They don't survive Occam's Razor. They only serve to satisfy your psychological need that the things you care about are _real_.
In actual fact, most markets and technology follow something more like and S-curve, with exponential growth in the first half and exponential decay in the second. We need a viable economic theory for the second half. "resource usage is starting to decouple from GDP growth" sounds like it's referring to being in the second half, without recognising the absurdity of pretending something is growing exponentially when it's value is still measured in terms of whatever is still rare.
It sounds wonderful. Here’s the problem. Most people don’t want a creative hair cut. Most people want the same boring haircut everybody else has. And they need it now, not when you’re feeling “inspired” or “creative.”
A world where nobody is incentivized to provide value to others aside from “creative satisfaction,” is a world where nobody provides value to others.
Whether or not you agree with all the things people buy, the fact is, most people buy most things because they find them useful (the top GDP-contributing activities are rooted in things like food, water, housing, transportation, clothing, etc.)
Ending consumerism, means the end of people doing useful things for each other.
This includes all the peaceful global cooperation between countries that is a byproduct of a consumer driven global economy.
I don’t think changing the mindset of countries with nuclear weapons from optimistic growth to pessimistic scarcity is going to have the positive outcomes you think it will.
Unfortunately, when humans fight over scarce things, they tend to kill each other.
This requires a loose definition of "useful" which includes status signalling, satisfying an impulse to buy things, and so on, to the point it's tautological; every action is useful. I would not attribute the bulk of consumer spending to an expectation of usefulness, otherwise. Among the useful things, people still spend extra to buy pleasure foods, pleasure clothes, pleasure housing, pleasure transportation.
> Ending consumerism, means the end of people doing useful things for each other.
I think if you look at how consumerism is defined, it's apparent we can have the exchange of goods and services without it. Economic systems can exist without consumerism, and existed before it.
People seek consumption, money, and power. There's no real self-regulating mechanism for any of these things, as far as the drives of the humans that manifest those outcomes. We don't automatically have an 'enough' meter. As such, we don't manage ourselves well, and it falls to larger systems to identify these losses and mitigate them… which is always contentious.
I always feel these 'actually exponential growth is good' arguments end up resting on suspicious grounds. They fall into the category of moral arguments, where the moral is 'I should not have to examine or curtail my own whims'.
"The upshot is that at a 2.3% growth rate (conveniently chosen to represent a 10× increase every century), we would reach boiling temperature in about 400 years."
It is possible to have sensible debate without immediately putting people into the blue or red team. We can do better than this.
The only purpose of labeling people based on a particular belief/position is to make it easier to attack with generalizations, and polarize the debate. Now you have to pick a side - are you a degrowther or not?
There are reasons to labeling people other than those you suggest. For example, maybe it simply was the first way to express his argument that came to mind. Or maybe, identifying a group of people who think X can be part of the debate. For example, suppose libertarians are all funded by billionaires. That might suggest a motivation for libertarian thought. You couldn't know this without identifying the people who are libertarians.
Lastly, it's often good that people have to "pick a side". Do you think we should aim to stop economic growth, or don't you? It's good that you should come to a clear position on this topic. Unclear positions might be nuanced, yes. But they might also be based on unclear thinking, or a desire to please everybody.
Anecdotally, I quickly tire from reading or hearing arguments full of the polarization labels (liberal/conservative/neocon/neoliberal/etc). Wonder if I’m alone in this.
That’s such an anti-teamer thing to say.
I say this acknowledging that the actual criticisms here are reasonable and I don't have any particular disdain for the post or the discussion, just that I am totally unsurprised that you picked up on it being oddly insular.
Okay, so what does climate response look like in that world? I suspect it looks like investing massive amounts of money in nuclear and carbon capture. Developed countries have spent trillions on COVID response to keep some 65+ people alive. That mk eh would have been far better spent on climate technology.
If not voluntary, then forced. The ecosystem that carries all the growth is rapidly falling apart (relatively, with speed measured in decennia, generations or centuries). We cannot stay on the exponential paths we've taken the last 250 years for another 250 years, that is impossible. Let alone for another 2500 years
Just population growth alone, using the current curve (1.1%), will hit 118 billion people in 250 years and 5,812,724,005,588 billion (not a typo) people in 2500 years. Compounding exponential growth is quite literally unimanigable.
We cannot continue on current curves. No matter how efficient you make houses, produce iPads or food: exponential growth is unsustainable. Literally and figuratively.
There are a couple of different population projections out there and, of course, predictions about the future are hard. But all of them show a population peak around 2100 of maybe 10-12 billion people.
The same holds for population growth. As countries get richer the birth rate reduces. So there's very little chance that we'll stay on the current 1.1% curve, any more than we stayed on the analogous curve defined in 1950.
I would guess that the marginal value of cleverness or technology decreases over time
On a note addressing your population growth numbers, I just want to say that your numbers demonstrate that you are very unfamiliar with population growth dynamics and you should research the topic more. Those numbers are impossible and not going to happen (on earth) in any scenario whatsoever.
Agreed. Collapse or increasing eco-terrorism is my guess.
In short: It's not that I hate cars, I like cars, I like driving. But in order to not break the world we live in we need to make fewer cars and drive them less. If you can suddenly make a car that does significantly less damage or negative damage then PLEASE make it, I will buy it. Growth Yay!
- When buying second-hand, I still use a share of the car lifespan, and it is this lifespan that makes the value of building it in the first place.
- I buy it from a person or a system (a leasing company in my last car's case) that periodically orders new cars, so I participate in making their business model possible by providing an output.
- Not everyone can live of second hand stuff: since I brought my previous car to its death (near 300.000km), another one has to be created somewhere to allow my next buy.
- Up to what mileage and years is it wise to extend the life of an old car when new ones burn less per km?
- I also calculated my share of atmospheric CO2 for the life of my previous car (6 liters gasoil per 100km over 250.000+ km), and it is a already a disaster for a single car...
That made me consider an electric car (new since they are still very rare second-hand) but only Tesla matches my needs and Tesla does not match my financial reach. Indeed the others are either hybrid-jokes (with 50km full-electric when you have the wind in the back) or city-only electric cars (poor recharge network and only 200km range).
My current idea is to reduce kms by adopting more teleworking (thanks Covid to push my employer to consider it) and waiting for a better offer for electric cars (even new).
Rebuilding a motor or transmission requires less energy and raw materials than making a new one. Replacing a motor or transmission with a new part requires less than making a new car.
But with economies of scale in manufacture, labor costs for repair, plus consumers' perceived need for new vehicles, results in cars being scrapped when they could otherwise be repaired.
My nearly 300.000 km vehicle costed thousands per year in maintenance, and a moderate crash sealed its "death".
Obviously a car in the same condition in a poor country could be fixed by a low-wage worker with used parts for another 100.000 km.
Well, we haven't been able to pull that off. Quite the opposite.
Asia is a dumpster now, their rivers are black stinky waters, trash is everywhere, climate is changing at an alarming rate, we have lose 60% of all the insect species, oceans are emptying, full of micro-plastic and with great current disturbances, extreme weather events are occurring more and more and the amazon forest is getting eaten.
But sure, tell me how your magical theory matches practice in your dream like land.
Does this include the outsourcing of production to countries in asia?
What about shipping? And the production of the shipping vessels? Waste disposal?
This doesn't prove that US economy grew while the global resources usage went down, just that the resource usage was moved offshore.
In particular, from that page, consumption-based CO2 emissions of the US have gone down since 2007.
Also, how do they know where all imported items come from? Many people buy from Alibaba or other Chinese websites which rarely declare the actual items inside delivered packages.
The article makes various strawen, starting with "the idea that economic growth requires growth in resource use" and "Degrowthers have no idea how to combine various resources"
Dunno how you should measure wealth/growth/etc.
If we all plan on getting wealthy via moving money between accounts, buy low/sell high, and surveillance advertising, the sky's the limit.
Having said that, i think some economist tried to do a correlation between adjusted dollar income to lifespan, and found that for each cent you make until you earn at least 5$ (adjusted) a day in industrialized/globalized countries, your lifespan at 5 is growing pretty fast. after this, the gains are minimal, so the actual limit on poverty should be 5$.
Excluding China, the %age of the world population under 5$ (adjusted) is diminishing since the 70s, as income from capital outperform income from labor faster than the marginal productivity increases (AKA: Piketty was wrong in his book Capital in the 20th century, capital did not take all productivity gains, it took more than that).
I do not have an opinion on degrowth, i hope it won't happen in my lifetime (because i'm an hypocrite, but at least i'm not hiding between either Singer/Gate optimism or other techno-optimism), i'm not actually convinced we will manage to avoid one, and i think a controlled one will be better than one that id forced upon us.
Not only it's arbitrary, but it's not updated on yearly basis, even if the cost of life increases by 20% every year.
"At its core, I feel like degrowth’s appeal comes from its implicit promise to recast genteel North European decline as some sort of grandiose world-saving moral quest. "
IIRC the decline is about 1.5% per year and it is forecast to increase considerably.
The same has been true of Japan for two decades,South Korea for one decade, and China's working age population peaked in 2015. China is running out of people in its rural areas that it can draw on for its factories.
The USA, Canada, and Australia are propped up by immigrants.
(Work, GDP, is done by working age people. This is not always obvious to economists.)
does his argument that Western countries' use of resource has started to inversely correlate with QoL improvement hold up in the face of those same countries outsourcing almost all manufacturing to other countries? It's all well and good that the US' use of metals is decreasing, but if that's just because China is using the raw materials and shipping the final products over then that's no better.
He also makes the argument that as non-industrialised countries begin to industrialise, they can just make use of non-material goods like we do. Is this not based on the assumption that other countries won't want similar standards of living to the US, ie car ownership, disposable and consumption goods, etc? We're talking about a multiplication of the production of goods.
From a systems standpoint, I think we need to be doing 2 things (for CO2 specifically, that's far from the only concern): reversing the increase of carbon in the carbon cycle (ie, reducing dependence on fossil fuels and sequestering carbon artificially if/where safe), and monitoring and increasing the bandwidth of the decarbonisation phase of the carbon cycle (soil, trees and the ocean playing the main role).
Looking and Carbon Tracker is pretty eye opening, if ones check how many coal based plants are planned in Asia. Funnily enough, Carbon Tracker estimates that 92% of those plants will be uneconomic, so, in theory China, India, Vietnam, Indonesia and Japan want to shoot their own foot for some crazy reason. My guess is that Carbon Tracker estimates are not that great...
https://ourworldindata.org/consumption-based-co2
https://degrowth.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Kallis_2012_...
The charts showing that the US is consuming less resources as time goes on suggests the US is not growing. The financial shenanigans have decoupled the official statistics from reality.
There is a reason everyone is getting all stressed and politics are getting tenser - once growth stops, politics becomes about how to divide up a fixed pie.
This year's phone is ten times as "powerful" as one from five years ago, therefore we multiply phone sales by ten.
The same reasoning applies with cars, ignoring the fact that it's now nearly impossible to buy a car without power windows, power steering, automatic transmission, anti-lock braking, etc.
And now that the industry, mostly managers, have made a shitload of money, the common man is supposed to fix it all up.
Sorry. I know why you think it is important. However, I am too old to believe this system can be fixed. We are doomed, and its about time we start to accept that. We've trained people to consume and be dependant on supply chains. We are not going to unlearn this as a society. A few will deprive themselves of things they could consume. But these people are not going to be significant. The rest is going to go on like they learnt in childhood.
> Sorry. I know why you think it is important. However, I am too old to believe this system can be fixed. We are doomed, and its about time we start to accept that.
Well, good news! We passed legislation to limit ozone-depleting chemicals, and now the ozone hole has stopped getting worse and is now healing:
https://news.un.org/en/story/2019/09/1046452
So we are not doomed, and it's good to not accept that. We CAN make changes and fix things. And it doesn't require getting rid of refrigeration (or energy), it just requires different refrigerants (or sources of energy).
Greenhouse gases are a product of our endeavour. Almost everything we do, unless it's "planting forests" has negative effect. Curbing that means consuming less, producing less. These are, by definition, going to dramatically affect quality of life.
Aside from the political and economic differences, the problems themselves are vastly different. Right now we're just starting to see climate change feedback loops kicking in. These are are catastrophically bad. While there is a near-zero % possibility that we will voluntarily reduce our annual co2 emissions (instead of merely slowing acceleration, or, as is the case most of the time, still actually increasing the rate year on year), feedback loops are out of our control.
Maybe we'll make changes to reduce our co2 emissions increases (unlikely). But I don't see how it's possible to actually stop emissions and begin taking greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere. Yet that's what we need to do .
It's simple: there's to much greenhouse gas in the atmosphere right now. We know this because there has been an increase in extreme weather, wildfires, melting of polar ice and killer heat waves. Ideally we should stop all emissions immediately and actually begin reversing what we've done. Yet day by day, year by year we are always adding more and taking about budgets, like the house is on fire and we taking about how much petrol we're "allowed to pour onto it". It's not a matter of if but when we lose the polar ice, we lose reflectivity. Much worse, when the artic soil thaws it will release methane in quantities that will be (and I think the word has lost its impact these days)... Catastrophic. There's no putting that the genie back in the bottle.
Edit: While I am absolutely pessimistic, I don't think we should throw our arms up and say, "screw it I'm driving a hummer and flying helicopters every weekend". People don't respond well to depressing fact, they switch off because they feel powerless. It is easier to effect a change by more uplifting means. But we must still be honest about the scale of the problem. Personally, I find it difficult to see a comparison between the ozone layer and this without getting a bee in my bonnet
Swap the energy source, and we’re (for the most part) fine. That’s 80% of climate change. The rest is agricultural emissions from livestock (and rice?) and agricultural land use plus a bit for cement (although fully cured cement, which takes decades, actually reabsorbs the CO2 the limestone itself emitted in the calcining process).
This narrative that climate change is just due to general human activity is entirely the narrative I’m seeking to attack. It’s false. It’s mainly (80%) the CO2 and methane emitted from fossil fuel usage. Switch to wind, solar, nuclear, hydro, geothermal, and you’ve basically solved the problem like we did with the ozone hole. The climate will start to heal. It really IS just a swap out like with the ozone hole. And we basically have the tech to do this. It just sometimes costs slightly more upfront. The industrialized countries can do this just fine, barely breaking a sweat. Switch the grid aggressively to solar and nuclear, require all new cars and trucks to be at least plug in hybrid and then pure electric. Switch iron reduction to hydrogen (already happening), heat pumps for heating, cement produced electrically, and we’re basically there (besides some mop up of agricultural and land use emissions from farming). We’re just not doing it. At least, not the speed we should.
Also, if "all we have to do is stop burning fossil fuels and farming cattle" then isn't that an admission that climate change is the result of human activity? If it wasn't, then why would we need to change our behaviour?
And if it were really as simple as you make it sound to just switch off fossil fuel and use renewables, then why hasn't it happened?
Right now, a report says that in this century we could be looking at global temperature increases of 5°C+ above pre-industrial levels at current trends. How long does it take to build a nuclear plant? 30 years? How many are being built right now? How many active nuclear plants are being decommissioned? When are we going to ban all fossil fuel cars? 2050? When are we going to curb the number of methane producing livestock?
Yeah, once those feedback loops kick in fully there is nothing whatsoever we can do even if we finally get off our asses and try. That's all I'm saying.
[Poor] people will die by the millions, again and again until we go extinct or go back to a sustainable lifestyle.
"degrowth’s appeal comes from its implicit promise to recast genteel North European decline as some sort of grandiose world-saving moral quest."
Aka: "I don't want to give up my SUV. Let the collapse happen."
― Ayn Rand
How much of that has been achieved by manufacturing everything in China?
Degrowth argues that technological innovation won’t be enough to save biodiversity and decarbonise in time.
If you want to prove them wrong, don’t call them smelly hippies on a “grandiose world-saving moral quest”: that helps no one. Instead, invent electric cars, solar and wind energy, CO2 capture solutions, protein sources, etc. that are so cheap that you can replace alternatives. Whether those are ‘better’ can be subjective.
The article would be more convincing if it described the day in the life of someone with a middle-class Western lifestyle with no carbon footprint and not destroying wildlife habitats. By saying that current alternatives are not encouraging, he’s arguing for degrowth (or catastrophic environmental changes) not against.
And the arguing isn't great either, when saying why their opponents arguments are wrong they demonstrate it partially by the following incredibly general statement:
> Past trends are no guarantee of future trends
and without any qualification why this would only apply to one sort of trend they assert their own trend as fact
> And the fact that rich countries have hit an inflection point where economic growth no longer depends on growing resource
Or in clearer words: "Your trend is false and will break tomorrow, but my trend is an eternal truth!". This sort of bluntly self serving argument does not fill me with confidence that there is much carefully crafter reasoning here.
I get this as an initial reaction but....why not just Google it before posting a lengthy comment based off of what it "sounds like"? As the sibling comments link shows, literally the first result for googling the term provides a long and detailed history of its proponents.
Abs the entire article is written from the perspective of someone concerned about sustainability (without thinking lower economic growth is a feasible path forward), which makes the assumption even more bizarre.
In terms of a strategy game, inflationary economy shifts the balance from upgrading your units (more efficient) to just producing more with current units.
k% annual economic growth when energy intensity and material intensity decrease k% per unit of GDP can go forever.
Regardless of what mechanism we might invent for styling our growth oriented economy into a consumption reducing one, a big intervention is required, and we do need to intervene to avoid slamming (on ecological timescales) into malthusian limits in the ugliest way.
More serious analyses have shown that decoupling is as "magical thinking" as de-growth.[2]
I agree that degrowth is a hard pill to digest, and that converting our economy to greener alternatives may even fuel growth for some time, but I can't see how infinite growth should still be our goal, especially considering that human population will soon stabilise.
[1] https://russroberts.medium.com/do-the-rich-capture-all-the-g...
[2] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S14629...