Why degrowth is the only responsible way forward

The latest IPCC report to limit global warming to 1.5° presents four scenarios. Three of them strongly depend on negative emission technologies, which are highly controversial as they have not been proven to work at the required scale and represent an “unjust and high-stakes gamble”. The IPCC also provides a fourth scenario that does not rely on negative emissions, but which notably requires that “global material production and consumption declines significantly”.

gaianicity's avatarCounty Sustainability Group

A reduction of economic activity is necessary and just – and can lead to human flourishing.

Moss Graffiti Image: Kulturlabor Trial&Error, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

To sustain the natural basis of our life, we must slow down. We have to reduce the amount of extraction, pollution, and waste throughout our economy. This implies less production, less consumption, and probably also less work.

The responsibility to do so must lie mainly on the rich, who currently enjoy a disproportionate share of our resources. But we should also do things differently, as much of today’s economic activity is of little benefit to human wellbeing. Imagine what could be if we organized democratically to produce what we actually need, distributed those resources fairly, and shared them in common. This, in a nutshell, is the vision of degrowth: a good life for all within planetary boundaries. And while this might seem utopian…

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6 thoughts on “Why degrowth is the only responsible way forward

  1. Anyone who visits a grocery store or any shopping center can see that overproduction, as we have now, has led to glutted markets of cheap plastic junk, frivolous trinkets, degraded, processed food, and a steady increase of packaging to product ratios. De-growth is already happening, because people are maxed out on credit and taxes and mis-allocation of resources.

    Consumerist propaganda from advertising and the media glosses over the fact that production has vastly outstripped sales for most things. New cars are rusting at the docks. In port cities like Savannah, storage facilities are packed and new ones being built to store all the imports that no one can sell.

    People don’t have homes to store their stuff, and many older people already have all the appliances and furniture they need, and for some, more than they need, of clothes, shoes, tools, and cars. These are the people who are just looking to get rid of stuff, not buy more.

    And I completely agree with nomad, above, that we should start with the Pentagon.

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