Sustainability in the here and now
๐ Itโs 50 years since the concept took root. What now?
๐ข For more comment + Q&As, check out the WorldWise View archive ๐
VIEW
Analysis and global perspectives in health, development, planet.
Sustainability took root in a time of turmoil.ย
Itโs pretty amazing to think that notions of what โdevelopmentโ means were reshaped in the public sphere over a few short months in the early 1970s.ย
In March 1972, a team of economists and scientistsโknown as the Club of Romeโpublished The Limits to Growth, one of the first reports to forecast catastrophic consequences if humans kept on exploiting the Earthโs limited supply of natural resources.
โItโs one of those ideas that change how you see the world, and I still remember how it felt to first read about it some two decades later, sat at a long table in the wood-panelled Geography department of my alma materโ
Then in early June of that same year, the United Nations held the first global conference on the environment in Stockholm, known since then as the Stockholm Conference. It was the first high-profile forum to platform โsustainable developmentโ, and to link environmental protection and living conditions. โโ
It became a pivotal moment, laying the foundations for environmental institutions that we now take for granted.
A Nature editorial published this week has more on the legacy over the ensuing yearsโand on missteps along the way.ย
Thereโs little doubt the event was a breakthrough that propelled regulation and policy instruments which continue to support global environment and development agendas to this day. In addition to the series of follow-on actions signposted in the editorial, itโs worth noting that the Stockholm Conference paved the way for the Brundtland Report that in the mid-1980s coined the classic definition of โsustainable developmentโ:
โmeeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needsโ
But, as we all know, this goal remains elusive.
On that note: Nature also calls out this weekโs Stockholm+50 international meetingโdesigned as โboth commemoration and call to actionโโas a missed opportunity for the present-day sustainability agenda to gain political traction.
Hereโs the thing. Back in the early seventies, part of the reason โthe time was ripe for an environmental agenda to enter the world stageโ was a nascent unease over the limits and costs of economic growth. This unease would only grow after the Stockholm Conference, with the 1973 oil crisis and the worldwide recession of the mid-1970s.ย
Such moments of entropyโor uncertainty, or unpredictabilityโare opportunities for change.ย And now, we have our own moment to seize.
Fifty years ago, that change was about environmental awareness. Whatโs todayโs version?
Iโve explored this question by talking to a few experts in the field recently. My take-away is this: that the key is to reformulate the sustainability argument in a way that casts the environmental agenda as no different from the economic and prosperity agendaโand persuades politicians to move in the right direction.
When Limits to Growth began to ask questions over the link between natural resources and economic activity, the idea was new and controversial. Itโs now understood that environmental issues have consequences for economies, societies and governance. But the dominant model of economic growth and development still excludes evidence on the impact of relying on ecosystems.
The divide between systems that govern nature and human prosperity is artificial, but itโs persistent.
In the here and now, the real opportunity for meaningful change lies in integrating sustainability into the tough economic choices that countries face today. Food, energy, living standards, povertyโthese crises are preoccupying politicians the world over. Itโs the moment to marshal focused evidence that shows how policies guided by sustainability can chart a way out.
The UN gives the right message with its Stockholm+50 concept note. But this thinking needs to go beyond concept notes.
That would be leadership equal to that which set off a momentous shift in how we think about development half a century ago.ย
Briefing Highlights
TREND TO WATCHย
Monkeypox infections are now starting to crop up across the Global South. Within Africa, where the disease is endemic, Nigeria has faced an unusual outbreak of monkeypox since 2017. But requests for help to understand the reasons didnโt get much of a response, according to Chikwe Ihekweazu, former director general of Nigeriaโs CDC, who has said incidents of infection only got attention when they were exported out of Africa. Meanwhile, the Democratic Republic of Congo is battling the worldโs largest outbreak. Itโs still not clear why the virus has started to show an unusual pattern of spread outside the African continent. But we may now actually have a chance of finding out.
UNDER THE RADAR
Across the world, refugees and migrants continue to perish while seeking safe haven from violence and disaster. And for the first time ever, the number of forcibly displaced people has breached the 100 million mark. The rise is driven by conflict, such as the invasion of Ukraine and conflict in Afghanistan and parts of Africaโbut acute natural disasters such as floods, droughts and cyclones, are still the main reason people flee their homes.
Based on Briefings publishedย May 31 + May 24.
COVID-19 PANDEMIC
Vaccines bring optimism as COVID cases soar in South America - WaPo
Africa finally has enough COVID shots. Is it too little, too late? - Politico + Reuters
The pandemicโs true health cost: how much of our lives has COVID stolen? - Nature
DEVELOPMENT & RIGHTS
Mauritius protests: "When people feel lost, they resort to revolt" - African Arguments
Egyptโs bread crisis awakens old fears of political unrest - WSJ
The Xinjiang Police Files: Faces from Chinaโs Uyghur detention camps - BBC + Sensemaker
HUMANITARIAN
Dozens dead, millions stranded as floods ravage Bangladesh and India - Guardian
Four million people hit by floods in Bangladesh: UN - France24
ENVIRONMENT & CLIMATE
Climate change is harming a vital tool to combat it: forests - Axios
Debt suffocates African nationsโ ability to respond to climate change - FT
Climate change ravages Iraq as palm trees make way for desert - Al Jazeera
Climate change boosted odds of record heat in Pakistan and India -WaPo
HEALTH
Global pollution kills 9 million people a year - AP
Mozambique records first wild polio case for three decades - Telegraph
From the weekโs global soundtrack ๐
โ๏ธย Independent and reader-funded
๐ค Liked thisย WorldWiseย email?
Tap the heart button. Forward to a friend. Comment or reply.ย Follow on Twitter.
๐ฉย Help keep WorldWiseย going
If you support global journalism, please consider a subscription orย one-time donation.