I stumbled across this article a couple of weeks ago, and
just had to share it. It's incredibly well researched,
thought-provoking article that I wish everybody on the planet could
read and have a good think about. Please take the time to
read it, and feel free to add some comments with your thoughts
after. If you prefer to download a PDF version to print and
read on the bus/train/plane/etc, I've attached it after the
article.
Thanks a ton to Jon for writing and sharing this excellent
article.. hoping to see more from you soon...
Defending the
Wild
Jon Sumby
Hobart, 2008
For the past several billion years evolution on Earth has been
driven by small-scale incremental forces, such as sexual selection,
punctuated by cosmic-scale disruptions - plate tectonics, planetary
geochemistry, global climate shifts, and even extraterrestrial
asteroids. Sometime in the last century that changed. Today the
guiding hand of natural selection is unmistakably human, with
potentially Earth-shaking consequences.
The fossil record and contemporary field studies suggest that
the average rate of extinction over the past hundred million years
has hovered at several species per year. Today the extinction rate
surpasses 3,000 species per year and is accelerating rapidly. In
contrast, new species are appearing at a rate of less than one per
year.
Over the next 100 years or so as many as half of the Earth's
species, representing a quarter of the planet's genetic stock, will
functionally, if not completely disappear. The land and oceans will
continue to teem with life, but it will be a peculiarly homogenized
assemblage of organisms unnaturally selected for their
compatibility with one fundamental force: Us. Nothing - not
national or international laws, global bioreserves, local
sustainability schemes, or even 'wildlands' fantasies - can change
the current course. The broad path for biological evolution is now
set for the next several million years. And in this sense the
extinction crisis - the race to save the composition, structure,
and organisation of biodiversity as it exists today - is over, and
we have lost.'
These are the opening paragraphs of The End of the Wild by
Stephen M. Meyer. It is a clear, harsh, and compelling story. His
argument raises fundamental questions, both about how we must
behave toward the Earth that gives us life, and how we must act to
protect and preserve the Earth.
Meyer is right, we have lost. The Earth we think we have is
ending. The next few decades will see global and regional
ecosystems, the varied richness of wild nature, swept away by a
tidal wave of environmental change that we cannot stop or avert.
The world of our children will be poorer, less diverse and full of
weedy, invasive, species that thrive amongst the degradation we
cause. There will be feral cats but there will be no Tasmanian
devils.
But this is not news. In 1997, the journal Science devoted an
issue to what they called 'human-dominated ecosystems'. There is
nowhere on Earth that we have not degraded, be it by pollution, the
chainsaw, or fishing net. The most recent satellite imagery reveals
that more than a third of the Earth's surface has been converted to
animal pasture or cropland. The oceans are being depleted and
degraded at an ever faster rate with current research indicating a
global fisheries collapse within the next forty years. On top of
that the amount of carbon dioxide in the air right now means that
the oceans will acidify for the next few centuries, greatly
changing the entire ocean environment. The Great Barrier Reef will
disappear and this cannot be stopped because the carbon is in the
air now. You will watch it on your lounge room TV.
From all points of the globe, research is coming back that
paints the same picture and it is a grim one. The Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment, which collated and synthesised much of this
research, is as important a document as the global warming reports
issued by the IPCC. Yet it remains largely ignored. This is simply
because it documents and discusses the damage we are doing to the
environment that sustains us, the environment that we profit from,
while the IPCC reports document changes that threaten us and our
consumer lifestyle. One discusses the damage we do, which our
culture largely ignores in the rush for profit and lifestyle, and
says we must stop. This plea is carried on by a very few who are
generally mocked and reviled as 'greenies' because they are crying
out 'Stop the destruction!'. The other is paid far more attention
because it threatens our profit and lifestyle, even when the only
way to minimise that threat is to make significant changes to that
lifestyle - something we are not willing to do, if it were even
possible.
The US has defunded carbon capture research. The EU has admitted
that it will not reach its minor carbon reduction targets. Canada
has reneged on its own targets, opening up that countries vast tar
sand deposits to extract oil to feed the US. The Australian energy
industry predicts that Australian electricity consumption will rise
by more than 150% over the next two decades. The international
shipping industry expects to double the number of large ships by
2017, allowing the globalised trade economy to grow unimpeded.
Aircraft manufacturers are on a boom, with Boeing expecting $50
billion in orders over the next decade. Short haul flights, which
are the most polluting, are now the most common form of passenger
air travel. The targets agreed at the Bali climate talkfest are
aspirational, lower than required and set comfortably in the future
when they need to happen in the next decade, according to the
IPCC.
The alternative, 'biofuels', which promise to let us happily
continue driving our cars as if nothing has changed, have been
shown to be worse than oil in terms of carbon emissions and they
consume agricultural land that we need for food, land that we take
from the wild. Food prices are already rising as corn and other
crops sell to the higher bidder: Biofuel. In Indonesia, special
teams of workers are systematically eradicating orangutans, killing
them, because they are endangered and if they are found in a forest
it can't be clearfelled for conversion into the palm oil
plantations that are the increasing international source of
biofuel. Australia has just built a major refinery to process
Indonesian palm oil. 'Sustainable' transport initiatives in Europe
rely on biofuels sourced from countries like Indonesia and Brazil,
which itself has recently recorded a significant rise in the
clearfelling of the Amazon as the biofuel gold rush accelerates. In
India, a 'car for the masses' is in production, hoping to sell to
500 million people; a prospect that the lead researcher for the
Indian IPCC section says has given him nightmares.
The catch-cry is 'Earth hour' and 'sustainability', wherein we
can live like we do now, a lifestyle that has no impact; one that
is 'zero' or at least 'low emission'. Sustainability is a myth. A
comfortable story we tell ourselves. One that says we can live in
our McMansions, eat our McDonalds, watch nature documentaries on
our home theatres, chat on FaceBook, and fly away on holiday paying
a token extra for fake 'offsets' so we are 'sustainable'.
The predicate of 'sustainable' is 'lifestyle' which, living in
the developed world, we see as what we enjoy now. Valentine's Day
is a day for lovers. In Africa, Kenya's second largest export
industry is cut flowers. Kenya supplies one quarter of Europe's
flowers, every one of which is quickly airfreighted to the shops,
so a Parisian man can buy a rose to give to the girl he admires. A
rose that will wilt and be thrown out in but a few days. This is
our carbon consumer lifestyle. A Kenyan rose in Paris, courtesy of
global warming.
China is building two new coal-fired power stations every week.
They have said they will not stop until the Chinese people have
reached the lifestyle that the West enjoys. Eighty per cent of
global carbon emissions come from twenty per cent of the world's
population: Us - The US, the EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand,
Japan.
If the one billion population of China achieves the lifestyle of
the US, carbon emissions will rise by more than 300%. Does the
world have the resources to do that? Furthermore, it comes back to
us because the Chinese economic boom is driven by the production of
cheap goods, like sunglasses, toys, plasma televisions and
bicycles, that are made to satisfy the consumer demand from
countries like the US and Australia. India, with it's hundreds of
millions, wants to follow the path of China. Yet all the research
says we have to reduce global carbon emissions by 80% within the
next forty years.
Another critical consideration is that projections of human
population growth indicate that the global population will rise by
50% in the next forty years. In the same time fisheries are
expected to collapse, fresh water become scarcer, agricultural
production decline, drought and storm increase, oil resources
dwindle, and global warming to really bite. Where is a
'sustainable' lifestyle for nine billion people? Is it
solar-powered broadband, backyard chickens, and a bicycle made in
China? Where does this 'sustainable' lifestyle, which looks just
like the life we have now, leave the wild Earth?
I say 'wild Earth' because 'wilderness' is a comfortable
anthropocentric (human-centred) word. It is a word we use when we
go hiking to somewhere that has no houses. It does not describe the
environment we are in. We have a habit of killing predators that we
think are a threat. Eagles, wolves, snakes, sharks, dingoes. Or any
animal or plant that threatens our profit; possums, badgers, seals
that 'steal our fish'. The wilderness we gaze upon is not wild.
Furthermore, it has been even more changed by the subtle
chemical poisons we have released into the air and water, the
invasive species that we have introduced. The first which causes
genetic damage affecting the next generations, the second which
crowds out and overpowers indigenous life; like the canetoad in
Northern Australia which is sweeping through and decimating that
ecosystem. The world is now a myriad of animals and plants that we
have driven to the edge of extinction, existing as endangered
remnant populations, or falling into extinction vortexes as 'ghost
species'. Even where we cannot, or rarely, see this is happening.
For more than the last decade frogs have been disappearing from the
depths of even the remotest regions, from the cloud forests of
South America to Cape York in Australia, over 200 species that we
know about so far in just a few areas. The wild is dying.
'Wild' is the term preferred by ecologists. It describes the
full richness of a functioning ecosystem; one where the range of
interactions includes the top predators and where biodiversity
grows and exists untrammelled by human presence. There are very,
very few areas where this is the case. The oceans are possibly the
last parts of the Earth where the wild can be found. Even there, we
reign supreme. The latest research indicates that there are no
parts of the ocean untouched by human presence. Tuna are a top
predator, an essential part of the deep ocean ecosystem but they
are a prime food fish and they are becoming endangered. We kill
more than 100 million sharks every year, mainly for sharkfin soup
with the rest of the body being discarded overboard; an extra 50
million are thrown back into the ocean, dead, as unwanted bycatch.
Sharks are now becoming endangered around the world. In South
Africa a vicious system of nets are set permanently in the ocean
specifically to kill sharks. If a shark escapes the nets and kills
someone, it is seen as a 'rogue' and hunted down to teach other
sharks 'a lesson'. We do not tolerate the wild, we prefer
wilderness.
On a personal level, we can still enter the wild and be part of
the world, instead of apart from it as we live in the bubble of our
consumer culture. Floating in the ocean and watching a large bull
shark swim towards you with its back arched is to be in the wild;
where you are not the centre of the world but just one
not-so-important occupant, a morsel for the richness of Gaia. On a
cultural level, an industrial level, we are dominant. No animal,
plant, or ecosystem challenges us. We convert, consume, use,
pollute and destroy as we wish. Nothing, even ourselves, is safe
from us. As Pogo said, 'We have met the enemy and he is us'.
This is the challenge. On a global scale the wild is vanishing,
being replaced by a comfortable wilderness where the only challenge
is the terrain and the weather. Even these wilderness areas, where
some semblance of untouched biodiversity remains, are under threat
from expanding commercial use and human colonisation. How do these
areas remain protected from us to carry on as wild, the core of
life on Earth?
Around the world, compared to the general population, there are
a vanishingly small number of people working to keep the wild
alive. Simply because it is there and it deserves to be. Many of
the techniques are carefully considered and incorporated in
treaties and policy. Reserves, heritage areas, marine protected
areas. Many involve scientific expertise and theory. But as Meyer
so lucidly points out, they are failing.
From the pressure of chemicals and invasive species. From
commercial interests and population. From the fact that these
'protected' areas are small and isolated from each other. From the
fact that these 'protected' areas are human constructs with
artificial boundaries laid over the wild. From global warming which
will force the forests to walk, until they run into our fences and
die.
There are choices to be made in the immediate future. To keep
the wild our consumer society must be kept out, but this flies in
the face of human domination. To defend the wild is to be condemned
by most. When the decision to use armed guards to protect the
critically endangered black rhino was made it was supported. Yet
apparently when the first poacher was shot, the guard who killed
him faced calls to be charged with murder. In his defence he
reportedly said, 'If a man tries to rob a bank in downtown Harare
and the guard shoots him, he is hailed as a hero, because he has
protected money, an important thing. Here I am, I am protecting an
important thing, the living jewel of our nation, and I am being
called a murderer?'
To defend the wild is no small thing, because it is the Earth
that is being defended. The Earth is wild and that is more
important than we are. When groups like Sea Shepherd or EarthFirst!
defend the wild, they are condemned as 'violent' and 'extreme', but
they are working to continue the wild, the life that exists
independently of us. The wild Earth that does not need us, does not
know us, but is threatened by us. The wild Earth needs no defence
but it needs more defenders.
Notes and further information
-'biofuels', … have been shown to be worse than
oil…
'Converting rainforests, peatlands, savannas, or grasslands to
produce food-based biofuels in Brazil, Southeast Asia, and the
United States creates a 'biofuel carbon debt' by releasing 17 to
420 times more CO2 than the annual greenhouse gas (GHG) reductions
these biofuels provide by displacing fossil fuels.' 'Land Clearing
and the Biofuel Carbon Debt.' Joseph Fargione, et al. (2008).
Science.
Published online, February 7th, 2008 at:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1152747v1
'…we found that corn-based ethanol, instead of
producing a 20% savings, nearly doubles greenhouse emissions over
30 years and increases greenhouse gases for 167 years.' 'Use
of U.S. Croplands for Biofuels Increases Greenhouse Gases Through
Emissions from Land Use Change.' Timothy Searchinger, et al.
(2008). Science.
Published online, February 7th, 2008 at:
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1151861v1
The UK Government has announced a review of the practicality and
use of biofuels.
See the Guardian Online, February 2008, at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/feb/21/biofuels.transport/
- Brazil, which itself has recently recorded a significant
rise in the clearfelling of the Amazon
'Deforestation of the Amazon has accelerated, in recent months and
is likely to increase this year for the first time in four years,
says a senior Brazilian government scientist. The rise raises
questions over Brazil's assertion that its environmental policies
are effectively protecting the world's biggest rain forest, the
destruction of which is a major source of carbon emissions that
cause global warming. "I think the last four months is a big
concern for the government and now they are sending people to do
more law enforcement," Carlos Nobre, a scientist with Brazil's
National Institute for Space Research, told a seminar in
Washington. "But I can tell you that it [deforestation] is going to
be much higher than 2007." Nobre, whose government agency monitors
the Amazon, said that 6000sq km [km!] of forest had been lost in
the past four months.'
- From: The New Zealand Herald, January 2008, at:
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10487854
- special teams of workers are systematically eradicating
orangutans, killing them,
'In February 2007, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
called the situation a state of emergency in a new report, Last
Stand of the Orangutan. According to the UN, "The natural forests
of Sumatra and Borneo are being cleared so fast, up to 98 per cent
may be destroyed by 2022."' At least 50 orangutan are dying for
palm oil plantations every week. With the loss of their forests,
and the killing, orangutans will become extinct in the wild within
the next twenty years.
See the Palm Oil Action Group: www.palmoilaction.org.au
- The Earth we think we have is ending.
'… the Coorong, a 110-kilometre long coastal system at the
mouth of the Murray made legendary 30 years ago by the pelican
movie Storm Boy… The beloved pelicans disappeared from the
southern lagoon three years ago, and are failing to breed on the
northern area… The fairy terns that relied on the Coorong as
a prime breeding ground no longer nest there and, as The Sunday Age
has reported, are almost certain to face regional extinction.
… It can no longer support the 50 species of birds that once
lived there. Also gone are the fish, worms and plant life they fed
upon… [As] Professor David Paton, an ecology specialist from
the University of Adelaide… has been [saying] in newspaper
articles and public lectures, the Coorong of old is dead.'
- From: The Sunday Age, February 2008, at:
http://www.theage.com.au/news/environment/aflutter-with-life-yet-the-coorong-is-dying/2008/02/23/1203467459956.htm
- The latest research indicates that there are no parts of
the ocean untouched by human presence.
At least 80% of the ocean is commercially fished and 41% is
considered heavily affected by human activity. Only 3.7% of the
ocean is considered relatively pristine and this is found in polar
waters, which are becoming available for industrial use as the
world warms. A co-author of this recent assessment, Dr Mark
Spalding, commented, 'What is surprising is the truly global spread
of human impact. The map provides a challenge for us to start to
think seriously about conservation.' 'A Global Map of Human Impact
on Marine Ecosystems.' Benjamin Halpern, et al. (2008). Science.
Vol. 319, page 948.
- The oceans are being depleted and degraded at an ever
faster rate
'The loss of deep-sea species poses a severe threat to the future
of the oceans, suggests a new report publishing early online on
December 27th and in the January 8th issue of Current Biology, a
publication of Cell Press. In a global-scale study, the researchers
found some of the first evidence that the health of the deep sea,
as measured by the rate of critical ecosystem processes, increases
exponentially with the diversity of species living there. "For the
first time, we have demonstrated that deep-sea ecosystem
functioning is closely dependent upon the number of species
inhabiting the ocean floor," said Roberto Danovaro of the
Polytechnic University of Marche, in Italy. "This shows that we
need to preserve biodiversity, and especially deep-sea
biodiversity, because otherwise the negative consequences could be
unprecedented. We must care about species that are far from us and
[essentially] invisible."'
- From: ScienceDaily, December 2007, at:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/12/071227184100.htm
- current research indicating a global fisheries collapse
within the next forty years.
'There will be virtually nothing left to fish from the seas by the
middle of the century if current trends continue, according to a
major scientific study. Stocks have collapsed in nearly one-third
of sea fisheries, and the rate of decline is accelerating. Writing
in the journal Science, the international team of researchers says
fishery decline is closely tied to a broader loss of marine
biodiversity. But a greater use of protected areas could safeguard
existing stocks. "The way we use the oceans is that we hope and
assume there will always be another species to exploit after we've
completely gone through the last one," said research leader Boris
Worm, from Dalhousie University in Canada. "What we're highlighting
is there is a finite number of stocks; we have gone through
one-third, and we are going to get through the rest," he told the
BBC News website.'
- From: BBC News, November 2006, at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6108414.stm
- sharks … are now becoming endangered around the
world.
There are presently 233 shark species listed as threatened or
endangered in the international Red Book of endangered species
maintained by the inter-governmental organisation, the IUCN. Nine
more are to be added in 2008. The scalloped hammerhead will be
globally listed as endangered. The shortfin mako shark, the bigeye
thresher, and the common thresher will be listed as vulnerable. The
silky shark will be listed as near threatened; while the tiger
shark, the bull shark and the dusky sharks will be included as
either endangered or threatened. The scalloped hammerhead made the
Red Book because the population has collapsed by 98% in the last
thirty years.
See the Guardian Online, February 2008, at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/feb/18/conservation.aaas
- the oceans will acidify for the next few centuries,
greatly changing the entire ocean environment.
'The Royal Society report makes it clear that ocean acidification
is irreversible within our lifetimes, and that it will take tens of
thousands of years to recover.' - Simon Wright and Andrew Davidson
(from the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Co-operative Research
Centre and the Australian Antarctic Division), writing in the
Australian Antarctic Magazine, Issue 10, Autumn 2006.
Available at:
http://www.aad.gov.au/MediaLibrary/asset/MediaItems/ml_388954837037037_17%
2020Ocean%20acidification.pdf
- Australia has just built a major refinery to process
Indonesian palm oil.
This refinery is in the Northern Territory and will produce
122,500 tonnes of biodiesel annually while profiting from the
deaths of over 2500 members of the orangutan people every
year.
See the ABC News Online at:
http://www.abc.net.au/rural/content/2006/s1800099.htm
- the global population will rise by 50% in the next forty
years.
ThThe current UN projection for human population growth is from
6.4 billion in 2006 to more than nine billion by 2050.
- China is building two new coal-fired power stations every
week.
See the BBC News, June 2007, at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/6769743.stm
The original short essay that forms the basis of The End of
the Wild is here:
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?ItemID=7620
The MIT Press review of The End of the Wild is here:
http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=10941
Information about Stephen M. Meyer is here:
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V126/N64/64meyerobit.html
A Bill of Rights for Future Generations
We, the people of the future, like the twenty thousand
generations who came before us, have the right to breathe air that
smells sweet, to drink water that runs pure and free, to swim in
waters that teem with life, and to grow our food in rich, living
earth.
We have the right to inherit a world unsullied by toxic
chemicals, nuclear waste, or genetic pollution. We have the right
to walk in untamed nature and to feel the awe that comes when we
suddenly lock eyes with a wild animal.
We beseech you, the people of today: Do not leave your dirty
messes for us to clean up; do not take technological risks, however
small, that may backfire catastrophically in times to come. Just as
we respectfully ask that you not burden us with your deferred debts
and depleted pension plans, we also claim our right to a share of
the planet's ecological wealth. Please don't use it all up.
We,We, in turn, promise to do the same. We grant these same
rights and privileges to the generations who will live after us; we
do so in the sacred hope that the human spirit will live
forever.
A curse on any generation who ignores this plea.
Jon
Download a
PDF version of 'Defending the Wild' by Jon Sumby
here...