Sustainability

Is sustainability unsustainable?

April 29, 2015

Global

April 29, 2015

Global
Timothy Nixon

Managing editor, Sustainability

Tim Nixon is a founder and the managing editor of the sustainability site at Thomson Reuters. He is also Director of Sustainability at Thomson Reuters, and has ongoing engagement with thought leaders across a wide spectrum of NGO and private-sector partners. He has spoken at global policy-making events, including for example the World Bank Land & Poverty Conference, UN PRI Annual Meeting and the first global meeting of UNEA (United Nations Environment Assembly). He is also the author of numerous blogs on Thomson Reuters Knowledge Effect and a report on the Global 500 greenhouse gas emission trends.

Tim is a lawyer by training and has spent most of his career working with diverse collaborators to build change-leading initiatives.

We are increasingly surrounded by claims of "sustainability", from academics and regulators to investors and data providers. But what if our current ideas of what is "sustainable" actually are not? Global economic activity is already breaching four of nine critical planetary boundaries.

"Where today’s mainstream economic debates are usually couched in liberal versus conservative ideology, we felt a much deeper inquiry was required, one that examined the unquestioned assumptions of both the left and the right."

John Fullerton, Managing Director, JP Morgan (1982 -2001), currently founder and president of Capital Institute, a US-based think tank

 

We are increasingly surrounded by claims of "sustainability". Investors claim to have found a more "sustainable" strategy which accounts for environmental, social or governance (ESG) risk. Regulators in places like the EU or South Africa have moved to require companies to disclose their performance related to non-financial, ESG factors. Data providers like Thomson Reuters, Bloomberg and others provide spreadsheets which allow for ranking corporate and government actors using different "sustainability" metrics, like CO2 emissions, or water-use per dollar of revenue earned.

These data-sets, white papers, rankings and even global policy pronouncements (e.g., UN summits) are important steps forward in terms of our ability to develop a common language for non-financial risk which is so clearly material to many aspects of our lives.

One critical question I’m hearing asked more often now though is whether we are even asking the right questions. We understand the "best" environmental performers in an economic sector as the most "sustainable". But what if our planet, as a whole, across social and environmental systems, is not actually being managed sustainably even with the best performance in our current paradigms?

What if our current ideas of what is "sustainable" actually are not?

This is where a thought leader like John Fullerton can help with defining this possibility. Mr Fullerton was previously the managing director of JPMorgan where he managed multiple capital markets and derivatives businesses around the globe. He understands global finance and therefore one of the most important variables in the sustainability question.

On April 21st, 2015, the Capital Institute and Yale’s Centre for Business and the Environment launched a sweeping new report called "Regenerative Capitalism, How Universal Principles And Patterns Will Shape Our New Economy". In it, Mr Fullerton explains how when viewed holistically, we are creating broad systemic risk in our planetary systems:

"Global economic activity is already breaching four of nine critical 'planetary boundaries'– atmospheric carbon, nitrogen and phosphorous flows from agriculture dumped into our river systems, land use changes, and the rate of biodiversity loss. Fresh water stress in specific locations is on the rise. In the process, we are compromising the Earth’s interconnected life support systems."

Source: Rockstrom, Johan et al, "Planetary Boundaries, A Safe Operating Space for Humanity", updated 2015. Stockholm Resilience Centre.

Mr Fullerton continues, "These boundaries are depicted individually in the graphic above, but it is important to realise that since everything is connected to everything else, any one breach of a critical scientific boundary is enough to shift the entire system into destabilising collapse. In short, we are playing with fire."

Mr Fullerton argues that sustainability, in a systemic sense, hinges on the adoption of eight core principles which together describe how our systems of individual and collective existence depend on each other.

It’s a story which, in a way, steps back from our planet and says, okay, we are going to have to learn how to get along now that we are bumping into our own physical and existential limits. To not do so creates ever-increasing risk that we will break the life-giving systems on which we depend.

Described economically as a function of energy inputs and increasing/decreasing levels of sustainability, the picture looks like this, with our status-quo somewhere in the "conventional" and "green" range:

Mr Fullerton is not suggesting that we embark on some utopian journey which discards our current systems and their benefits. What he is saying though is that we are in a period of great change, and that empirical, systemic thinking in the "regenerative" capitalist way is an important way to navigate risk which we can glimpse only in part, and which is rooted in an economic system which puts us in a losing game of reaction to accelerating crisis du jour.

In order to illustrate these empirical, universal principles at work in our economic context, Capital Institute provides a "Field Guide to Investing in a Regenerative Economy" with 25 stories of the regenerative economy taking place in the real world, even if still largely at small scale.

Even if you profoundly disagree with some or all of this thinking, it is at least worth considering that there is systemic risk baked into our current economic system where the planet is viewed as a resource which serves the unwavering, undifferentiated goal of economic growth, rather than economic growth serving goals which will allow current and subsequent generations to live meaningful and healthy lives.

 

A version of this blog post first appeared on the Thomson Reuters blog.

 

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

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