Scientists – we're on second notice: another 'warning to humanity' – popular science edition

From the UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY and the “Tweets are now citations” department comes this inane press release which seems more interested in promoting the “people are looking at it” meme than what’s in it.


Scientists’ warning to humanity ‘most talked about paper’

No. 6 top paper ever published since global Altmetric records began, first of similar age

Twenty-five years after the first ‘scientists’ warning to humanity’, a new report is continuing to gain momentum and is already the one of the most talked about papers globally since Altmetric records began.

The paper, World scientists’ warning to humanity: A second notice, has prompted speeches about the research in Israel’s Knesset and Canada’s BC Legislature, with signatories increasing with the specially formed Alliance of World Scientists.

This is the image being used to promote the World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice and the same authors’ response letter. CREDIT Oliver Day, Oregon State University

The latest translation includes Polish, with universities set to discuss the recommendations later this month and a push by the University of Silesia for city-wide implementation.

Co-author at the University of Sydney Dr Thomas Newsome has helped the report go viral, which has prompted almost 9,000 Tweets. The paper is inspiring responses such as the publication of a friendly satirical high-profile “final warning”.

The paper’s cumulative score is currently in sixth place out of more than 9 million publications, since Altmetric started tracking attention to research more than six years ago.

Three letters in comment, as well as a response companion piece by the Warning authors publishes today in the peer-reviewed journal BioScience.

The response piece, “Role of Scientists’ Warning in shifting policy from growth to conservation economy”, highlights two key areas for action in policy and science:

1. Nobel Prize in Economics incorporating the limits of the biosphere – The Economic Sciences Prize Committee should give greater weight to externalised environmental limits.

2. Carbon pricing globally – already implemented or planned by some 42 countries and 25 states, provinces and cities but there is an urgent need for higher carbon prices.

“There are critical environmental limits to resource-dependent economic growth,” the authors state.

Lead author of the warning letter and new response paper, ecology Professor William Ripple at Oregon State University said: “Our scientists’ warning to humanity has clearly struck a chord with both the global scientific community and the public.”

The “second notice” warning paper has received an additional 4,500+ endorsements by scientists since it published in November 2017.

There are now approximately 20,000 expert endorsements and/or co-signatories to the paper online; signatures and donations are encouraged at scientistswarning.forestry.oregonstate.edu/. Updates continue from co-author @NewsomeTM on Twitter.

The paper’s Altmetric of about 7100 is gaining ground on the top paper for 2016, former United States President Barack Obama’s review of the healthcare system, which accumulated a score of 8063 in four months; most of the top 100 of all time have an Altmetric below 6000.

###


The paper: The Role of Scientists’ Warning in Shifting Policy from Growth to Conservation Economy

We are pleased to see the three follow-up letters concerning our “World Scientists’ Warning to Humanity: A Second Notice” (Ripple et al. 2017). Each letter expresses a thoughtful, heartfelt response to our paper. We agree in how they describe the need to get more scientists into policymaking positions (Dror), to create a new global environmental ethic (Skubała), and to recognize economic growth as a major driver of environmental impacts (Pacheco et al.). The letters raise questions about how science interacts with society and how evidence-based reasoning can play an important role in creating a healthy relationship between humans and the biosphere.

We concur with Dror that getting scientists more politically active is important. This trend may have already started, with actions ranging from global marches for science to scientists’ running for and holding political office (Fairley 2017). One potential result of a new environmental ethic, as is suggested by Skubała, would be to recognize and accept that there are critical environmental limits to resource-dependent economic growth. In our article, we emphasize the need to “reassess the role of an economy rooted in growth” and urge revising our economy to “reduce wealth inequality” and “take into account the real costs which consumption patterns impose on the environment.” Our article also underscores the importance of stabilizing and gradually reducing the global population, which itself would be a significant contributor to ending economic growth (Victor 2010).

We agree with Pachecho and colleagues that transformative change is essential, whereby humanity abandons the pursuit of economic growth as the overarching guide to public policy. We need a new development paradigm to ensure that economies deliver well-being while respecting both social and planetary boundaries (Raworth 2017). Most helpful for this paradigm shift, both symbolically and pragmatically, would be for the scientist members of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to insist that its Economic Sciences Prize Committee give greater weight to awarding prizes for economic theory that accounts for environment–economy interlinkages and feedback loops. If Nobel memorial prizes in economics were given to those drawing attention to economic drivers of environmental degradation and the well-being implications of degraded ecosystems, it would draw attention to problems with mainstream economic theory as well as encourage other economists and natural scientists to collaborate and to do more work in this area.

Another way to promote a global shift toward a conservation economy is, for example, to implement carbon pricing to mitigate climate change. Putting a price on carbon pollution has been shown to be a successful method of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and driving investment into clean-energy technologies (World Bank et al. 2017). As an emerging global trend, some 42 countries and 25 states, provinces, and cities have implemented or scheduled to implement carbon-pricing mechanisms, with more jurisdictions considering implementing them in the future (http://carbonpricingdashboard.worldbank.org/). Despite this progress, accelerating the pace of action and significantly increasing the price on carbon soon will be necessary for carbon pricing to make a significant contribution to curbing climate change (World Bank et al. 2017).

Our world scientists’ warning article was signed by 15,364 scientists from 184 countries (http://scientists.forestry.oregonstate.edu). The original article has been translated into 17 different languages: Spanish, Portuguese, French, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Dutch, German, Telugu, Hindi, Swedish, Serbian, Italian, Hebrew, Turkish, Japanese, Catalan, and Korean versions of our original scientists’ warning article can be found in the supplemental material for this article. We wanted our paper to ignite a global conversation followed by action, and it has been successful in reaching many millions of people through these language translations, mass media, and social media (https://oxfordjournals.altmetric.com/details/28854048). For example, on Twitter alone, there have been more than 8000 tweets reaching up to 14,000,000 people. Content from the paper has also been read aloud on the floor of one of Canada’s provincial legislatures (https://youtu.be/URi0WU7-Ey0). Although Dror notes that social, economic, and political change may not necessarily follow, the media discussions highlight the need to put human behavior at the center of a new environmental ethic. We are smart enough to solve these problems, as Skubała notes, but if humanity does not forcefully pursue the behavioral changes and policies we urge in our warning, the human and nonhuman suffering we warn about may multiply. An alliance among scientists, policymakers and influencers, faith/spiritual leaders, and the public will hopefully allow us to make the needed transformations. Already, we have seen examples of great conservation success when we work together to overcome environmental challenges (Sodhi et al. 2011). These conservation wins generate encouraging messages of optimism, helping garner much-needed public support to protect the Earth’s biosphere and create an environmentally sustainable future.


https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/advance-article/doi/10.1093/biosci/biy007/4913795

World Scientists’ Second Warning to Humanity: The Time for Change Is Now

Twenty-five years have passed, and humanity has received the second “Warning.” William Ripple, his co-authors, and more than 15 thousand scientists are concerned about the condition of our planet and that “humanity is not taking the urgent steps.” The real message from the warning is simple and dramatic: Soon it will be too late for us. It’s high time to wake up and start working. We are experiencing the sixth extinction event, and despite the great efforts of many scientists and educators, this critical message has not yet reached a significant part of society. It is a great shame that scientists are forced to write the warning a second time and that the environmental situation is becoming worse and worse. The scientific evidence that we have crossed boundaries is numerous and obvious. The problem is that many people do not believe scientists. Soon, we will see what humans will do with this most important message.

We are far from sustainability, and the situation is not much better than 25 years ago, when the first “Warning” was published. The Sustainable Society Index (SSI) integrates three components. In 2016, human well-being had the highest score (6.4) of the three well-being dimensions (environmental well-being and economic well-being amounted to 4.8 and 4.6, respectively). The total SSI has the value of 5.2, which means that the world is about halfway to full sustainability. The prospect of creating a sustainable society is still very distant, but we know what we need to do to achieve that goal. In the warning, we can find 13 wise, effective, and sometimes very courageous tips (e.g., promoting plant-based foods, counting hidden environmental costs, and increasing outdoor nature education) on what we must do to achieve sustainability.

I perceive the warning also as a call for a new global ethic. This was clearly highlighted in 1992 and is present in the current warning. The authors stress that it is high time to change our individual behaviors. It will be revealed whether we are truly moral beings. Many scientists are convinced that our human morality was inherited from our ancestors. Now, we will find out what we might do with this gift from the great apes.

Why didn’t the first warning reach humans? I am not sure whether the second warning will be accepted. Jane Poynter, a Biosphere 2 crewmember, emphasized that for the first time, she felt an integral component of the biosphere while taking part in the project. All or most of us do not literally feel we are part of the biosphere. As long as nature is seen outside us, separate from us, we will not be ready to accept the warning. How will the new world be if again humanity puts aside the second warning? My hope is that perhaps we are slow but we’re not stupid and that finally we will start treating Earth as our only home.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
135 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
MarkW
March 7, 2018 10:09 am

“We concur with Dror that getting scientists more politically active is important.”
Didn’t we have a couple of trolls yesterday who were whining about us skeptics trying to politicize science?

March 7, 2018 10:23 am

I first misread this as “Scientists warming to humanity..” and thought we were making progress.

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Shelly
March 7, 2018 10:30 am

No such luck. There is no carbon tax money in that.

March 7, 2018 10:34 am

When will we begin to see some “evidence-based reasoning” in the Climate Change world?

ResourceGuy
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
March 7, 2018 10:41 am

It’s not going to happen because the evidence is moving farther away and the super El Nino was only a short respite.

Bruce Cobb
March 7, 2018 10:41 am

Uh-oh, it’s our “2nd notice”. There is no “3rd notice”. We get kicked off the planet. And it goes on our permanent record.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
March 7, 2018 12:42 pm

Until we get the actual “Eviction Notice”, who cares what they say.

RicDre
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
March 7, 2018 4:19 pm

I don’t think they would evict us, just make us drink hemlock then bury us in their garden as that would be a much more “Organic” solution to the problem of “Climate Deniers” and the hemlock might be optional.

March 7, 2018 10:48 am

humanity abandons the pursuit of economic growth as the overarching guide to public policy.

Humanity has already lived for many millennia in a world without economic growth. If we ever return to that situation we are not going to like it.

Peta of Newark
March 7, 2018 10:53 am

Singalong with Peta..
Predicting is easy with eyes closed
Misunderstanding all you see.
It’s getting hard to be concerned
But it all works out.
It doesn’t matter much to me.
Let me take you down
Coz I’m going to…..
Cherrypick Fields, nothing is real
Nothing to get hung about
Cherrypick Fields forever
No one I think is in my tree
The temperature must be high or low
That is you can’t, you know, measure it
But it’s all right
That is, I think, it’s really bad

RicDre
Reply to  Peta of Newark
March 7, 2018 11:04 am

+100

Sara
Reply to  Peta of Newark
March 7, 2018 1:24 pm

Long ago, in them there Olden Days, there was a radio station DJ in Chicago who would play Strawberry Fields then another song then back to SF, then another song, ad nauseum.
You picked the best possible analogy for the current dimwittedness. Now I wonder what the “science guys” are smoking.
Isn’t one definition of insanity doing something over and over and still getting the same things wrong? Creating and following that neural pathway repeatedly until the rut is worn so deep they can’t get out of it is only going to result in repeated failures.
I’m waiting for a news story about some kid walking home from school instead of waiting for the bus because the teacher keeps telling the class that the world is going to end tomorrow or very soon, and they all need to be ready. This is if it hasn’t already happened. Haven’t seen it around here just yet.

RicDre
Reply to  Sara
March 7, 2018 4:23 pm

” Creating and following that neural pathway repeatedly until the rut is worn so deep they can’t get out of it is only going to result in repeated failures. ”
Could this problem be caused by an insufficient number of alternate neural pathways?

John harmsworth
March 7, 2018 10:54 am

These idiots keep drawing their line in the sand somewhere out past Jupiter. There are probably some reasonable things that could be done to make the world a better place ( land farming fish?), but they just have to go for broke every time with ridiculous warnings in a n effort to destroy Capitalism.
They are a joke! Not a funny one. They hurt the stated cause of conservation by twisting it to undermine human achievement through industry.

David Chappell
March 7, 2018 10:55 am

“…donations are encouraged…”
’nuff said.

tom0mason
March 7, 2018 11:08 am

Our second written warning? By some academic know nothing academics, spouting rubbish like —
“1. Nobel Prize in Economics incorporating the limits of the biosphere – The Economic Sciences Prize Committee should give greater weight to externalised environmental limits.”
Nobel Prize? — Worthless, man-made plastic badge of stupidity. “Economic Sciences” is naught but unreal nonsense encrypted with highfalutin jargon. If the work worthy then no mention of any prizes are required as it will stand on it’s merit.
2. Carbon pricing globally – already implemented or planned by some 42 countries and 25 states, provinces and cities but there is an urgent need for higher carbon prices.”
BS! Carbon taxation (for CO2 emissions) is NOT required, elevated CO2 levels in the atmosphere is good for life on the planet. CO2 does not govern the climate!
These people act as if they know everything nature can do, and that are in charge of it. Utter hubris on a massive scale. Whoever funds these people stop it NOW! They’re dangerously mad!

ResourceGuy
March 7, 2018 11:09 am

We don’t have a doomsday clock but we have warnings, tweets, and our own cookoos.

ResourceGuy
March 7, 2018 11:24 am

I think Australia would be “happier” and safer under President Xi.

Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  ResourceGuy
March 7, 2018 9:17 pm

I think I’m now in a position to say “I for one would welcome our new Lizard Overlords”.

March 7, 2018 11:35 am

Second Notice?
I think the only proper response is:
“The check is in the mail.”
With all of the sincerity that phrase usually entails.

March 7, 2018 11:48 am

Time to get a dissenting letter out there with 10 times as many scientists indicating the damage that will be caused by these ‘well-meaning ‘ zealots. Let’s have some papers about the harm this ideology has already caused to the poor and elderly and the opportunity cost to well-being of the trillions taken out of economic development. How have we allowed this plague to develop and prosper?

Bruce Cobb
March 7, 2018 11:50 am

I think they must mean that we are skating on thin ice, or maybe that the die is cast, there’s no Planet B, the canaries in the coal mine are all tweeting angrily, and if we’re not careful our climate will be pushing up daisies.

knr
March 7, 2018 12:11 pm

almost 9,000 Tweets. really you can easily add a zero to that for a singer sharking their rear end , a cat in a hat or some guy shoving a pepper up his nose .

Bruce of Newcastle
March 7, 2018 12:17 pm

I am a scientist of good standing with a chemistry PhD from the University of Sydney.
I’m embarrassed that such crud should be emitted by my old uni.
My examination of climate data over the last decade strongly suggests to me that most warming last century was natural, and that ECS is below 1 C/doubling. Therefore CO2 is harmless. Simple arithmetic can tell anyone that there is not enough extractable fossil fuel on the planet to raise the global temperature another 2 C.
The harm caused to poor people and the environment by these stupid climate policies is the real crime against humanity.

Moderately Cross of East Anglia
Reply to  Bruce of Newcastle
March 7, 2018 2:19 pm

Bruce – Fred Hoyle told people exactly that in the 1970s when people were suggesting ways to halt the onset of the expected new ice age but our poorly informed eco-loons never do their homework. He specifically mentioned that if you set fire to all the coal and oil it still wouldn’t work.
And I totally agree that what is going on is a crime against humanity.

March 7, 2018 12:32 pm

After nearly 5 months, the credibility of this collection of endorsers is zero. “Aaskan Yushal Raseev, Activist
Committee for Global Economic Equality, Maldives” and “Zulu, Dawn, Teacher, Centre for Indigenous Peoples’ Struggle, South Africa” are still listed as endorsers. Anyone can sign (themselves or others), there is no checking. This needs to be exposed for the joke it is.

Doug MacKenzie
March 7, 2018 12:33 pm

The truth is that it has taken hundreds of scientists and statisticians 30 years to prove to themselves that “global warming” is a real phenomenon, is at about 1 degree C, and somewhere around 50% caused by human CO2 emissions according to the IPCC, And the scientist’s computer models using the best theories available show about twice the warming compared to what is actually measured. It’s very difficult to tell a couple of billion people that they have to remain living in poverty in order to save the world from a “maybe” apocalypse.

John Smith
March 7, 2018 12:40 pm

The whiff of sulfur and communism…

George McFly......I'm your density
March 7, 2018 12:49 pm

Wow, recognition at last for the Global Community of Bed Wetters

March 7, 2018 12:49 pm

At first I thought this must have been posted by mistake, as it is not yet April Fools day. Nope, this actually was an attempt to be serious. Warmunist lunacy reaches a new peak.

Dave Fair
March 7, 2018 12:54 pm

Who decides how many children one gets to have? What one buys? Big Brother?

Wharfplank
March 7, 2018 1:20 pm

Is this the “change” I keep hearing about?

jmichna
March 7, 2018 1:44 pm

“We concur with Dror that getting scientists more politically active is important.”
Advocacy replaces science when this happens. Science should follow where evidence, theory, experimentation and results lead, not to some preconceived “position.” Political advocacy is the death knell for any real science… at least any “science” that can be trusted.

March 7, 2018 2:10 pm

For the Left there is Doom everywhere.
And the Left continues to eat its own in its on-going politically correct rampage.

Arizona State University professor Lawrence Krauss, internationally known as an outspoken atheist and for his work on the symbolic “Doomsday Clock,” has been put on paid leave by university officials after allegations of sexual misconduct were published in a recent BuzzFeed article.
http://www.khou.com/article/news/nation-now/doomsday-clock-professor-put-on-leave-amid-allegations-of-sexual-misconduct/

“This year’s Clock deliberations felt more urgent than usual…as trusted sources of information came under attack, fake news was on the rise, and words were used by a President-elect of the United States in cavalier and often reckless ways to address the twin threats of nuclear weapons and climate change,” Rachel Bronson, the executive director and publisher of Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, said in a statement.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/01/26/doomsday-clock-end-world-nuclear-weapons-climate-change-donald-trump/97077736/
Delicious;y sweet schadenfreude:

John Harmsworth
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
March 7, 2018 3:05 pm

“For the Leftther/e is doom everywhere”1
I think they create doom everywhere they go!