by Matt Ridley
Let nobody tell you that the second decade of the 21st century has been a bad time. We are living through the greatest improvement in human living standards in history. Extreme poverty has fallen below 10 per cent of the world’s population for the first time. It was 60 per cent when I was born. Global inequality has been plunging as Africa and Asia experience faster economic growth than Europe and North America; child mortality has fallen to record low levels; famine virtually went extinct; malaria, polio and heart disease are all in decline.

Little of this made the news, because good news is no news. But I’ve been watching it all closely. Ever since I wrote The Rational Optimist in 2010, I’ve been faced with ‘what about…’ questions: what about the great recession, the euro crisis, Syria, Ukraine, Donald Trump? How can I possibly say that things are getting better, given all that? The answer is: because bad things happen while the world still gets better. Yet get better it does, and it has done so over the course of this decade at a rate that has astonished even starry-eyed me.
Perhaps one of the least fashionable predictions I made nine years ago was that ‘the ecological footprint of human activity is probably shrinking’ and ‘we are getting more sustainable, not less, in the way we use the planet’. That is to say: our population and economy would grow, but we’d learn how to reduce what we take from the planet. And so it has proved. An MIT scientist, Andrew McAfee, recently documented this in a book called More from Less, showing how some nations are beginning to use less stuff: less metal, less water, less land. Not just in proportion to productivity: less stuff overall.
This does not quite fit with what the Extinction Rebellion lot are telling us. But the next time you hear Sir David Attenborough say: ‘Anyone who thinks that you can have infinite growth on a planet with finite resources is either a madman or an economist’, ask him this: ‘But what if economic growth means using less stuff, not more?’ For example, a normal drink can today contains 13 grams of aluminium, much of it recycled. In 1959, it contained 85 grams. Substituting the former for the latter is a contribution to economic growth, but it reduces the resources consumed per drink.
As for Britain, our consumption of ‘stuff’ probably peaked around the turn of the century — an achievement that has gone almost entirely unnoticed. But the evidence is there. In 2011 Chris Goodall, an investor in electric vehicles, published research showing that the UK was now using not just relatively less ‘stuff’ every year, but absolutely less. Events have since vindicated his thesis. The quantity of all resources consumed per person in Britain (domestic extraction of biomass, metals, minerals and fossil fuels, plus imports minus exports) fell by a third between 2000 and 2017, from 12.5 tonnes to 8.5 tonnes. That’s a faster decline than the increase in the number of people, so it means fewer resources consumed overall.
If this doesn’t seem to make sense, then think about your own home. Mobile phones have the computing power of room-sized computers of the 1970s. I use mine instead of a camera, radio, torch, compass, map, calendar, watch, CD player, newspaper and pack of cards. LED light bulbs consume about a quarter as much electricity as incandescent bulbs for the same light. Modern buildings generally contain less steel and more of it is recycled. Offices are not yet paperless, but they use much less paper.
Even in cases when the use of stuff is not falling, it is rising more slowly than expected. For instance, experts in the 1970s forecast how much water the world would consume in the year 2000. In fact, the total usage that year was half as much as predicted. Not because there were fewer humans, but because human inventiveness allowed more efficient irrigation for agriculture, the biggest user of water.
Until recently, most economists assumed that these improvements were almost always in vain, because of rebound effects: if you cut the cost of something, people would just use more of it. Make lights less energy-hungry and people leave them on for longer. This is known as the Jevons paradox, after the 19th-century economist William Stanley Jevons, who first described it. But Andrew McAfee argues that the Jevons paradox doesn’t hold up. Suppose you switch from incandescent to LED bulbs in your house and save about three-quarters of your electricity bill for lighting. You might leave more lights on for longer, but surely not four times as long.
Efficiencies in agriculture mean the world is now approaching ‘peak farmland’ — despite the growing number of people and their demand for more and better food, the productivity of agriculture is rising so fast that human needs can be supplied by a shrinking amount of land. In 2012, Jesse Ausubel of Rockefeller University and his colleagues argued that, thanks to modern technology, we use 65 per cent less land to produce a given quantity of food compared with 50 years ago. By 2050, it’s estimated that an area the size of India will have been released from the plough and the cow.
Land-sparing is the reason that forests are expanding, especially in rich countries. In 2006 Ausubel worked out that no reasonably wealthy country had a falling stock of forest, in terms of both tree density and acreage. Large animals are returning in abundance in rich countries; populations of wolves, deer, beavers, lynx, seals, sea eagles and bald eagles are all increasing; and now even tiger numbers are slowly climbing.
Perhaps the most surprising statistic is that Britain is using steadily less energy. John Constable of the Global Warming Policy Forum points out that although the UK’s economy has almost trebled in size since 1970, and our population is up by 20 per cent, total primary inland energy consumption has actually fallen by almost 10 per cent. Much of that decline has happened in recent years. This is not necessarily good news, Constable argues: although the improving energy efficiency of light bulbs, aeroplanes and cars is part of the story, it also means we are importing more embedded energy in products, having driven much of our steel, aluminium and chemical industries abroad with some of the highest energy prices for industry in the world.
In fact, all this energy-saving might cause problems. Innovation requires experiments (most of which fail). Experiments require energy. So cheap energy is crucial — as shown by the industrial revolution. Thus, energy may be the one resource that a prospering population should be using more of. Fortunately, it is now possible that nuclear fusion will one day deliver energy in minimalist form, using very little fuel and land.
Since its inception, the environmental movement has been obsessed by finite resources. The two books that kicked off the green industry in the early 1970s, The Limits to Growth in America and Blueprint for Survival in Britain, both lamented the imminent exhaustion of metals, minerals and fuels. The Limits to Growth predicted that if growth continued, the world would run out of gold, mercury, silver, tin, zinc, copper and lead well before 2000. School textbooks soon echoed these claims.
This caused the economist Julian Simon to challenge the ecologist Paul Ehrlich to a bet that a basket of five metals (chosen by Ehrlich) would cost less in 1990 than in 1980. The Stone Age did not end for lack of stone, Simon said, arguing that we would find substitutes if metals grew scarce. Simon won the bet easily, although Ehrlich wrote the cheque with reluctance, sniping that ‘the one thing we’ll never run out of is imbeciles’. To this day none of those metals has significantly risen in price or fallen in volume of reserves, let alone run out. (One of my treasured possessions is the Julian Simon award I won in 2012, made from the five metals.)
A modern irony is that many green policies advocated now would actually reverse the trend towards using less stuff.
Originally published 12/19/19 by Matt Ridley, in The Spectator
Here is a great 4 minute visualization of world progress made since the industrial revolution: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbkSRLYSojo
Here is the pessimistic/socialist/communist response video response to the above.
I notice he has comments disabled on YT so no one can criticize his approach.
Is the rational optimist right to be so optimistic? He states it is ironic that policies advocated by groups like XR will result in more consumption and more land use. It would not be merely ironic but tragic. If governments of the West meet these targets even half way, it would lead to an environmental catastrophe of the highest order.
The whole trend of reversing land use and material consumed would be thrown into reverse. The vast carpets of wind farms would ensure that high flying migratory birds would disappear from the skies. Forests would recede as more and more countries resort to cannibalising the only “renewable” fuel available to meet their emission targets.
And nor would this madness be stopped even when the damage became apparent to the dimmest politicians, for once set into motion, these laws develop an entire industry devoted to their continuing.
3. Planned parenthood (e.g. selective-child or wicked solution, clinical cannibalism)?
5. Trans/homosexual, yes, is politically congruent (“=”), but why stop there?
6. Protecting women, men, children, and babies, too, throughout our evolution, right?
10. “Free” is measured on a relative scale.
The Twilight faith or conflation of logical domains. The science of plausible. Inference (i.e. created knowledge) in lieu of the scientific method. Empathetic appeals. Deference to mortal gods.
The Pro-Choice, selective, opportunistic quasi-religion (“ethics”) is a progressive condition. One step forward, two steps backward.
But, but, but Trump is a bad orange man.
Wonderfully positive Christmas greeting! Thank you. Would I be wrong to add Polar Bears to the list of large animals on the increase?
Mario
Hi there across the Atlantic
Has Potus annonced any economic measures in his Xmas address, since the $US lost 2 cents (1.11 to 1.13) to EU’s Euro?
Merry Xmas to all
link GMT (UK time)
panic over, looks like computers glitch
Merry Christmas to All, Peace on Earth, and Joy to the World!
Great essay, Mr. Ridley, but you missed a big blessing. According to Dr. Spencer at UAH the global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly has risen 0.6° C since 2009 (running centered 13-month average).
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2019/12/05/uah-global-temperature-update-for-november-2019-0-55-deg-c/
That’s 1.08°F for you old-schoolers. The troposphere is an entire degree warmer!
While you may not have noticed it where you live, the planet is marginally warmer. That means growing seasons are just a tiny bit longer, with just a fraction more rain, and agricultural productivity has increased ever so slightly.
Plants and animals are gaining net biomass. Threatened species are a little less threatened. No years in the last decade lacked summer. Continental ice sheets did not initiate. Warmth spread and cold retreated, just a little bit.
Those are Good Tidings. Thank the Lord and praise Him on this wonderful day.
I think it would be great to live in some of those countries where Freedom of the Press is increasing; child poverty is falling; poverty in general is falling; prison populations are falling; homelessness is falling; income disparity is falling; the health of the population is getting better; educational standards are rising; housing stock is increasing; bombs are not blowing up your wedding celebrations; your country hasn’t (yet) been bombed into the stone-age; a country that doesn’t base it’s energy policies on, of all things, windmills; a country whose wealth doesn’t disappear into Panamanian bank accounts.
Perhaps I could live in a country whose technological advances in electronics are not based on child exploitation in the Congo or low paid workers in China. Or one who doesn’t sell weapons of mass destruction to be used on Yemeni children.
Sadly, I live in the UK. A country whose next monarch was best friends with Jimmy Savile.
Ask any scientist 50 years ago what the ideal temperature of the planet might be and 97% would have said warmer.
Then climate science was hijacked to use to impose global socialism by making up a climate crisis to target the life blood of the economies of developed/rich countries……..cheap, reliable, robust and abundant fossil fuels.
The beneficial gas, CO2 was redefined as carbon pollution and warmer became a bad thing for humans, even as the rest of life on earth has been telling humans “thanks for rescuing us from near CO2 starvation”.
The current climate optimum can continue with benefits outweighing negatives until we are at least 2 degrees C warmer.
Climate science and scientists had it right 50 years ago……….but this field has been corrupted by political agenda and gone backwards with regards to applying our understanding of how this current climate optima is affecting life on this greening planet.
Best weather and climate in the last 1,000 years……when it was this warm during the Medieval Warm Period. Add in the wonderful increase in CO2 and its the best for life since humans have walked this greening planet.
This is the mentality of meth addicts who think their high is going to last forever.
Our economy will not exist without the stable base that is provided by a diverse and robust biosphere of which we are just a tiny part. All the evidence indicates that biosphere is in rapid decline and will not provide a stable base for anything much longer. Let alone a way of life by billions of humans that uses up natural resources as if there were no negative impacts.
Those negative impacts are incredible already, research shows that we’ve killed half the life on Earth already and what is left is in rapid decline.
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/oct-19-2019-understanding-the-anthropocene-extinction-regenerating-cartilage-and-more-1.5324707/understanding-extinction-humanity-has-destroyed-half-the-life-on-earth-1.5324721
Almost a half of insect species are threatened with extinction, the global biomass of insects is decreasing at a horrific 2.5% a year. A decade now 25% of what is left will be gone and at current rates by 2100 there will be almost no insects left. That is the base of many ecosystems. Avian species are under similar threats and mammals not much better.
The oceans are heating up so fast that much of the life currently there now won’t be much longer when you add in industrial level fishing and pollution on a massive scale.
Things are only rosy here on Earth if you only think of your next high from your money addiction which is what this piece and this entire site is devoted to. And like addicts you panic at the mere thought of losing your drug of choice. Even if it kills us all in what is in relative terms a blink of an eye.
Life has been on earth for almost 4 billion years, but at the rate we are killing it off, much of it from fossil fuels forced climate change, most will be gone in decades at this rate. Something you seem oblivious to in your drug fueled delusions.
In immediate terms, tell the people being killed by massive wildfires in places like California or Australia how much better their lives are. Or those who in the thousands are now losing their homes and way of life from the extreme consequences of climate change already.
Can you really pretend that massive and frequent hurricane and cyclonic disasters aren’t real like Rush Limbaugh attempted before fleeing from one in his private jet. Or the massive wildfires that are now common globally or all the other weather “extremes” that are in fact the new catastrophic norm.
In even limited economic terms climate change is already a disaster with billions of dollars externalized by the fossil fuels sector that could reach tens of trillions in loses by mid century according to the banks, not activists. That’s something that all of the rest of us are being forced to pay to sustain an unsustainable energy model.
https://hbr.org/2016/04/the-data-says-climate-change-could-cost-investors-trillions
Go ahead and print this or not, it probably won’t make difference to people who even after all this time are still denying a reality that is has become so obvious to most of us.
Australian Wildfires – not unprecedented – nothing to do with “Climate Change” – 103 arsonists and firebugs arrested in 2 months in QLD, 74 in NSW – directly linked to the reduction in fuel load management in recent decades.
“those who in the thousands are now losing their homes and way of life from the extreme consequences of climate change already.” – are you for real? Evidence please.
“massive and frequent hurricane and cyclonic disasters” – have been steadily declining over recent decades.
“climate change is already a disaster with billions of dollars externalized by the fossil fuels sector” – the “Climate Change” industry is diverting billions and seeks to divert trillions which could otherwise be spent on ecodiversity, habitat preservation and rehabilitation, anti-pollution measures, dister prevention, disease and malnutrition prevention and treatment etc, etc.
In fact: https://principia-scientific.org/climate-related-deaths-down-by-98-9-last-year-all-time-low/
I have been unhappy when cold, and I have been unhappy when warm. Given the choice I will take unhappy but warm every time.
It’s an odd thing in life that happiness appears to be inversely proportional to prosperity.
“Extreme poverty has fallen to 10%” What about run-of-the-mill, ubiquitous, mundane poverty. Regarding life expectancy … why has it fallen in the United States? Yes, there is the opioid epidemic, but what is its cause? Granted, great strides have taken place in medicine and in other fields, and there are emerging economies in what was once termed the “Third world”. But, at the risk of posing as a “Cassandra” to your “Pollyanna”, you are painting to rosy a picture.
Most run of the mill poverty is self-inflicted.
Beyond that, the poverty level in the US is defined as a certain fraction of the median income. So no matter how wealthy the country, poverty will always be with us.
Sounds like to me you haven’t experienced “poverty”.
The headline misses the entire point of Christmas.
Sad.
“For example, a normal drink can today contains 13 grams of aluminium, much of it recycled. In 1959, it contained 85 grams. Substituting the former for the latter is a contribution to economic growth, but it reduces the resources consumed per drink” :
“tin can”, “drink can” sheets don’t mandatory include aluminium:
https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-huawei&sxsrf=ACYBGNRCJFTGluLd5pW1t6RI_4k5hI_4mw%3A1578332475796&ei=O3ETXu2XMOPLrgTJqLmADw&q=what+metal+are+tin+cans+made+from&oq=tin+cans+are+made+&gs_l=mobile-gws-wiz-serp.
“The Stone Age did not end for lack of stone,
Simon said, arguing that we would find substitutes if metals grew scarce.” Simon said.
Wait a minute; the battle isn’t yet won:
https://www.google.com/search?client=ms-android-huawei&sxsrf=ACYBGNRlwbDG0j7XZwpQbd8aEp6M1cZZYQ%3A1578387333099&ei=hUcUXrfUBYSsrgTVmLaIDQ&q=building+sand+price+statistics&oq=building+sand+price+statistics&gs_l=mobile-gws-wiz-serp.
https://youtu.be/k0qs19-WI7U
rah
All of progressivism and collectivism is based on a foundation of belief that all wealth and resources are zero sum.
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I tend to agree with you, rah.
– Wealthy people can buy und collect any / everything, e.g. https://www.google.com/search?q=hummel+figuren&tbm=isch&client=ms-android-huawei&hl=de&ved=2ahUKEwilh9jKnPHmAhXB04UKHfTzCW4QrNwCegQIARA4&biw=360&bih=518
– Wealthy people can buy people, staff, even companies.
OTOH
– unsophisticated investors – everyday people, collectors, can buy stuff too – in their limits.
+ everyday people can make friends, meet comrades, watching TV the never ending world of sports…
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What’s happening meantime – wealth, currency, money, financial properties no more show real, undistorted relations to “the world outside”.
A risky, giddy path of inch-by-inch tapping. Ahead.
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