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Items tagged with: degrowth
"Der Kopf ist rund, damit die Gedanken die Richtung ändern können."
Sehr schöner Artikel um den gedanklichen Blinker zu setzen um anzufangen umzudenken.
https://steadyhq.com/de/treibhauspost/posts/4226cdc1-f78b-4526-8854-33b7f45f3a60
#Wirtschaft #Ökonomie #bip
#degrowth #postwachstum #Klima #klimaprüfung
Eine Wette, die niemand gewinnen kann
Kann die Wirtschaft weiter wachsen und gleichzeitig schnell genug CO₂-neutral werden? Zahlreiche Studien bezweifeln das. Wir müssten die Spielregeln grundlegend ändern.Steady
August 1st is #EarthOvershootDay - the date when demand on our planet’s resources surpasses its capacity to regenerate them.
Earth Overshoot Day is getting earlier and earlier in the year. mostly due to our wasteful lifestyles.
If everyone lived like the USA or Australia, we need 5 Earths for sustainability.
If the world lived like Japan, China or most European nations, we need 3 Earths.
We have only 1 Earth
#Degrowth
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Why do we call developed countries „developed“?
If they still need to grow indefinitely, why are they „developed“?
Shouldn’t we call them „insatiable“ countries instead?
#growth #degrowth #postgrowth #overshoot #Development #sustainability #infinity
'Planned degrowth or deaccumulation and a shift to sustainable human development is now unavoidable in the wealthiest countries, whose per capita ecological footprints are non-sustainable on a planetary basis, if organized civilization is to survive.'
John Bellamy Foster - who has previously been a vociferous critic of #degrowth, while advocating for the very similar logic of deaccumulation, seems to have subtly shifted his position
https://monthlyreview.org/2023/07/01/planned-degrowth/
Planned Degrowth: Ecosocialism and Sustainable Human Development
In the introduction to this summer's special issue on "Planned Degrowth," John Bellamy Foster outlines the major themes of degrowth thought, including…John Bellamy Foster (Monthly Review)
From an ecologist’s perspective, degrowth is inevitable. Many species #overshoot their environment’s carrying capacity if they have temporary access to an unusually high level of resources. Returning to more stable levels often involves large-scale starvation and die-offs as populations adjust.
Access to fossil fuels has allowed us to temporarily overshoot biophysical limits. This lifted our demands on the biosphere past the level it can safely absorb. Barring a planned reduction of those biosphere demands, we will experience the same “adjustments” as other species."
https://theconversation.com/critics-of-degrowth-economics-say-its-unworkable-but-from-an-ecologists-perspective-its-inevitable-211496
Critics of ‘degrowth’ economics say it’s unworkable – but from an ecologist's perspective, it’s inevitable
Access to fossil fuels allowed humanity to overshoot Earth’s biophysical limits. The crises we now face are all symptoms of this overshoot, and the only fix is to cut our demands on the biosphere.The Conversation
#capitalocene #climateEmengency #degrowth
https://monthlyreview.org/2023/07/01/on-technology-and-degrowth/
Comment: think "war-time economy" for what real emergency economies are like.
On Technology and Degrowth
There is a common misconception among critics that degrowth proponents do not engage with the question of technology, instead leaving the implementation of…Jason Hickel (Monthly Review)
In pictures: South America's 'lithium fields' reveal the dark side of our electric future
Demand for lithium-ion batteries is unprecedented - but is mining the chemical harmful to the environment?Maeve Campbell (Euronews.com)
Why only Degrowth Will Save The World - The New Climate. - Medium
Scientists reckon that the earth can handle a total material footprint of around 50 billion tonnes per year, and today we have exceeded this twice over. At a 1-degree rise in global temperatures, we…Notes from the Understory (The New Climate.)
Moving beyond growth is not only desirable — it is essential
VIEW | The pursuit of growth at all costs has created a global economic system that is fragile and vulnerable to shocks, and this needs to change, a group of European Parliament Members (MEPs) write.Euronews (Euronews.com)