Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
People have this idea that sailing is cheap, because of the low fuel costs. But blue-water sailors have a saying that goes like this:
The wind is free … but everything else costs money.
Reading the various pronouncements from the partygoers at the Durban climate-related Conference of Parties, I was struck by the many uses of the words “sustainable development” and “sustainability”. It’s pretty confusing. Apparently, paying high long-term subsidies for uneconomic energy sources is sustainable … who knew?
Anyways, I got to thinking about how I’ve never been sure what “sustainable development” means, and of how much it reminds me of the sailors saying. One of the first uses of the term was in the UN’s 1987 Brundtland Report, which said:
“Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”
I never understood that definition. How could I use a shovel to turn over the earth for my garden, for example? Every kilo of iron ore that is mined to make my shovel is a kilo of iron ore that is forever unavailable to “future generations to meet their own needs”. It’s unavoidable. Which means that we will run out of iron, and thus any use of iron is ultimately unsustainable. My shovel use is depriving my great-grandchildren of shovels.
Oh, sure, I can recycle my shovel. But some of the metal will inevitably be lost in the process. All that does is make the inevitable iron-death move further away in time … but recycling doesn’t magically make iron extraction sustainable.
Figure 1. Example of unsustainable development.
And if me using a steel shovel to dig in my own garden is not sustainable … then what is sustainable? I mean, where are the “peak iron” zealots when we need them?
So other than sunlight, wind, and rainbows … just what is sustainable development supposed to be built of? Cell phones are one of the most revolutionary tools of development … but we are depriving future generations of nickel and cadmium in doing so. That’s not sustainable.
Here’s the ugly truth. It’s simple, blunt, and bitter. Nothing is sustainable. Oh, like the sailors say, the wind is free. As is the sunshine. But everything else we mine or extract to make everything from shovels to cell phones will run out. The only question is, will it run out sooner, or later? Because nothing is sustainable. “Sustainable Development” is just an airy-fairy moonbeam fantasy, a New Age oxymoron. In the real world, it can’t happen. I find the term “sustainable development” useful for one thing only.
When people use it, I know they have not thought too hard about the issues.
Finally, there is an underlying arrogance about the concept that I find disturbing. Forty percent of the world’s people live on less than $2 per day. In China it’s sixty percent. In India, three-quarters of the population lives on under $2 per day.
Denying those men, women, and especially children the ability to improve their lives based on some professed concern about unborn generations doesn’t sit well with me at all. The obvious response from their side is “Easy for you to say, you made it already.” Which is true. The West got wealthy by means which “sustainable development” wants to deny to the world’s poor.
Look, there could be a climate catastrophe in fifty years. And we could hit some sustainability wall in fifty years.
But when a woman’s kids are hungry, she won’t see the logic of not feeding them to avoid “compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”. She won’t understand that logic at all.
And neither do I. Certainly, I think we should live as lightly as possible on this marvelous planet. And yes, use rates and R/P ratios are an issue. But nothing is sustainable. So let’s set the phrase “sustainable development” on the shelf of meaningless curiosities, go back to concentrating on feeding the children we already have on this Earth, and leave the great-grandchildren to fend for themselves. Everyone says they’ll live to be a thousand and be a lot richer than I am and have computers that can write poetry, so I’m sure they’ll figure it out.
w.
PS—Theorists say that it’s not enough that development be sustainable in terms of the environment. They also demand sustainability in three other arenas: social, economic, and cultural sustainability.
Socially sustainable? Culturally sustainable? We don’t even know if what we currently do is culturally or socially sustainable. How can we guess if some development is culturally sustainable?
I swear, sometimes I think people have totally lost the plot. This is mental onanism of the highest order, to sit around and debate if something is “culturally sustainable”. Like I said … let’s get back to feeding the kids. Once that’s done, we can debate if the way we fed them is culturally sustainable.
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JPeden,
Imagine my performance in this blog is a dogmatic pro CO2 person.
It is unusual to keep my nose just behind one’s car exhaust.
About 31 years ago I started my Caprice Classic engine at my parking. It was winter. My 5 years old son was waiting for me in the car. I was talking to my neighbor for some times. I called my son if he is ready to go, no reply, “CO” made him sick, there was a clinic nearby, they saved his life with pure oxygen. Irregularities in engines, fuel, traffic,…. Do we want grey air? Should we say Cancer is because of CO2 or other factors?
When a huge number of humans are under RISK, should be inject CO2 in undergrounds? Somebody said CO and CO2 no smell …. Then what is that smell for?
I think; CO2 okay/nokay/whatever, keep it away from us take it to where its ppm is safe (allowable).
Allowable is not better than safe, it means we should have it, and no way out. In greater cities everything is above max allowable. It doesn’t mean CO2 is bad. Water is good, but our body can never bear the pressure of it in deep levels.
Threadjack in progress.
Back on topic, Aynsley Kellow’s linked article, above, contains the following: “We must reject nature as providing norms which guide how we must live and accept instead that we are part of a living, changing system; we can chose to accept, use, or control elements to make for a habitable existence, both singly and individually. ”
All such “natural norms” are projections, justifications, or rationalizations of what we want to do anyway.
It should be noted that just as Ehrlich felt cheap abundant energy would be a machine gun in the hands of an idiot child, the sustainabilists consider that the attainment of modern technological and industrial living standards by the Undeveloped South would doom the world.
Both are damnfools.
As the development of an indefinitely sustainable low-cost energy resource is key to the sustainability of our current lifestyle, here is a video presentation by Bill Gates introducing TerraPower, his new nuclear startup. He introduces a new concept, the Traveling Wave Breeder Reactor, which appears to be a novel method of running the same nuclear breeding cycle that President Nixon was pushing when his administration thought the doomed Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor was the sure path to a prolific nuclear future. In this talk, Gates seems to be emphasizing the assumed emergency requirement to reduce anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions to zero by 2050, perhaps to overcome those objections that sunk the government funded LMFBR project after well over five billion dollars had been spent.
Bill Gates on energy: Innovating to zero!
Uploaded by TEDtalksDirector on Feb 20, 2010
1,608 likes, 321 dislikes; 283,355 Views; 29:33 min
”At TED2010, Bill Gates unveils his vision for the world’s energy future, describing the need for “miracles” to avoid planetary catastrophe and explaining why he’s backing a dramatically different type of nuclear reactor. The necessary goal? Zero carbon emissions globally by 2050.”
A recent report announces a development in cooperation with China.
Bill Gates and China Developing Nuclear Reactor
Uploaded by crwenewswire on Dec 7, 2011
0 likes, 0 dislikes; 161 Views; 1:09 min
”Welcome to CRWE Newswire News Update, I’m Christina Collins
“— Bill Gates, Microsoft Corp. co-founder says he is in discussions with China to jointly develop a new kind of nuclear reactor — Wednesday . . .”
Nothing is Sustainable
Willis, I respectfully disagree, unless you add a qualifier thusly: “Nothing man does is sustainable”.
The sustainability question was answered long ago by God, who was quoted by Moses, who was quoted by Jesus Christ as recorded in Matthew 4:4: blah blah …
[Snipped heaps of religious rambling. You’ve been warned about preaching and praying and hanging your religious views out on the blogs. Oh, not by this site, but by the man himself, who said “And when thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are: for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and in the corners of the web, that they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.”
So … please take your religion someplace private. This is not the place for it.
Thanks,
w.]
[Snipped heaps of …
I take it you work or have worked for the United Nations, then? You advocate their taking the place of that which God has reserved to himself, taking care of and “sustaining” people?
If the fairy tale of CAGW and the tenants of the UN are not about religion, what is they about?
Sorry, I don’t have snip rights. I meant to say:
If the fairy tale of CAGW and the tenants of the UN are not about religion, what are they about?
squareheaded says:
December 31, 2011 at 9:56 pm
As I mentioned above, your intrusion of God into a scientific discussion is unwarranted and unwanted. Whether or not God exists is immaterial to scientific questions. Again, I invite you to stop your pushiness and keep your !@ur momisugly#$%^ God to yourself. If you want to discuss science, I’m up for it. For religious issues, you’ll have to apply elsewhere.
w.
squareheaded says:
December 31, 2011 at 9:58 pm
How would I know? Ask them, not me. I’m neither a believer in the fairy tale, nor a supporter of many parts of the UN.
Thanks,
w.
[snip – policy, this comment will incite a flame war – Anthony]
Forget about future generations, what about other forms of life right now? They are using the sun and wind. Every bit of sun and wind energy that humans use is taking it from the animals and plants that need it.
Obviously, a solar panel on a roof (which already represents the “taking” of space by the building) isn’t adding to the problem. But a field effectively paved over with acres of solar panels and miles upon miles of giant wind turbines are clearly a problem.
In a way, sustainable is both impossible and infinitely possible. Look at false teeth (it just popped into my head as an example–don’t ask!). It seems dentures were originally cobbled together from animal teeth and ivory. There’s a limit to materials supply and the results were sometimes not so good. Modern dentures are made from acrylic, fiberglass, metal, or a combination of these. The dentures themselves, as a product, are sustainable. The materials change, the product remains. In the future, dentistry may improve to the point where dentures are not needed. Most things in life are like that. If materials run out or if a better material comes along, we modify the product to match what is available or works better. Materials themselves may not be infinitely sustainable (though I think it would take a long time to run out of iron, etc.) but the products continue using different materials. Thus, both sustainable and not sustainable.
@ur momisugly Alice
…you have just described free market capitalism beautifully.
“(it just popped into my head as an example–don’t ask!)”…ok I won’t. But if stuff like that…just pops into your head…that’s pretty cool! Unless you just popped in your dentures…’cause if that’s why then I am laughing!