[Mb-civic] Unsustainable Growth

ean at sbcglobal.net ean at sbcglobal.net
Mon Mar 6 21:42:28 PST 2006


12 February 2006

Unsustainable Growth

By Gwynne Dyer
http://www.noabc.com/default~area~docread~docid~343.htm

It’s exactly the sort of document that an American think-tank would have produced in 
the year 1900, if they had had think-tanks in 1900. This time it’s the Chinese 
Academy of Sciences, the leading research institute in the world’s most populous 
country, and the document is called China Modernisation Report 2006.

That imaginary American think-tank of a century ago would certainly have predicted 
massive urbanisation and far higher incomes in the United States by 1950, because 
those trends were already well established at the time. It might not have forecast that 
half the American population would own automobiles by 1950, let alone that tens of 
millions of Americans could afford to travel abroad by then, but a bold forecaster 
might have been done so. And when it all came true, nothing terrible happened as a 
result.

This time the predictions won’t come true, because terrible things will start to happen 
long before 2050. This is deeply unfair, because all China wants for its citizens is the 
same lifestyle that most Western countries had achieved by 1950. But they got away 
with it because they were the first countries to industrialise, and China won’t because 
it is so big and because it has come so late to the game.

The report, published on 9 February, glows with enthusiasm for the predicted rise in 
Chinese incomes (tenfold by 2050, to $1300 a month), for the 500 million peasants 
who will move to the cities, for the 600 million city-dwellers who will move out into hi-
tech suburban homes. Half China’s people will own their own cars and be able to 
afford overseas travel, the report predicts. But I don’t think so.

The Chinese people deserve prosperity, and they have waited too long for it, but they 
cannot have it in the classic Western style. Take the cars alone. Within a decade, 
China will be the second-largest automobile manufacturer on the planet – but for half 
the Chinese population to own cars, the world’s total stock of motor vehicles must 
almost double. For half of Indians and Brazilians and Russians also to own cars (and 
all these countries have similar expectations), the car population of the planet must 
triple.

It doesn’t work at the local level (nine of the world’s ten most polluted cities are 
already in China), and it doesn’t work at the global level. It is taboo to say so outside 
of scientific and environmental circles, because the rapid growth of the Chinese and 
Indian economies is now the main motor driving world economic growth, but it 
cannot go on like this.

At the beginning of the Second World War the world had two billion people, of whom 
about one-quarter lived in industrialised countries– but few of them owned cars, or 
ran air-conditioners, or travelled abroad. Forty years later there were four billion 
people. Those who lived in fully industrialised societies now consumed far more 
energy and produced far more waste, as a “modern” lifestyle now included cars, 
meat in most meals, electrical appliances galore and, for many people, foreign travel, 
but they were still only a quarter of the population. Total human pressure on the 
environment? Up fivefold or sixfold in forty years.

Now we have six and a half billion people, and we are still running at a quarter of the 
human race living in developed countries, so the pressure on the environment is 
around ten times what it was in 1940. But the predicted development of China by 
2050 (and the comparable growth of India, Brazil and Russia) will raise the share of 
the human race living in high-consumption industrial economies to over half of the 
global population – which will exceed eight billion by that time. Total human pressure 
on the environment: perhaps twenty-five times higher in a single century.

It’s China’s turn, and it’s monstrously unfair that it cannot just follow the same 
development path that Britain first carved in the late 1800s, and all the rest of the 
West followed in the1900s. But it can’t. You cannot get away with that style of 
development any more when the world is already as damaged as it is now.

The most frightening map I have ever seen is one published in James Lovelock’s 
new book, Revenge of Gaia, that shows what proportion of the Earth’s surface would 
remain suitable for agriculture if the average global temperature went up by 5 
degrees C (9 degrees F). None of China is habitable (above desert population 
densities) except Manchuria. None of India makes it either, except the foothills of the 
Himalayas, and none of the United States except the Pacific Northwest.

That is a completely unacceptable outcome of headlong “modernisation” in the old 
style, so the China Modernisation Report 2006 is just a fantasy. Somewhere between 
now and the future it envisages for 2050, the negative consequences of continuing 
down the present path will become so large and undeniable that the current pattern 
of development will be abandoned. It may not be abandoned soon enough to avoid 
terrible consequences for China and the world, but the day will never arrive when half 
of China’s population owns cars.

On the other hand, the day MUST arrive when China’s people (and India’s and 
Brazil’s nd Indonesia’s) live as well as Americans, or else there will be hell to pay. So 
the day may well arrive when more than half of all Americans don’t own cars either. 
The future, as usual, is not going to be like the present.



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"A war of aggression is the supreme international crime." -- Robert Jackson,
 former U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice and Nuremberg prosecutor

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