Earth’s life support systems have been so damaged that
the planet is “well outside the safe operating space for humanity,” scientists
have warned.
Their assessment found that six out of nine “planetary boundaries”
had been broken because of human-caused pollution and destruction of the
natural world. The planetary boundaries are the limits of key global systems –
such as climate, water, and wildlife diversity – beyond which their ability to
maintain a healthy planet is in danger of failing.
The broken boundaries mean the systems have been driven far from
the safe and stable state that existed from the end of the last ice age, about
10,000 years ago, to the start of the industrial revolution. The whole of
modern civilization arose in this time period, called the Holocene.
The assessment was the first nine planetary boundaries and
represented the “first scientific health check for the entire planet,” the
researchers said. Six boundaries have been passed and two are judged to be
close to being broken: air pollution and ocean acidification. The one boundary
that is not threatened is atmospheric ozone, after action to phase out
destructive chemicals in recent decades led to the ozone hole shrinking.
The scientists said the “most worrying” finding was that all four
of the biological boundaries, which cover the living world, were at, or close
to, the highest risk level. The living world is particularly vital to the Earth
as it provides resilience by compensating for some physical changes, for
example, trees absorbing carbon dioxide pollution.
The planetary boundaries are not irreversible tipping points
beyond which sudden and serious deterioration occurs, the scientists said.
Instead, they are points after which the risks of fundamental changes in the
Earth’s physical, biological, and chemical life support systems rise
significantly. The planetary boundaries were first devised in 2009 and updated
in 2015, when only seven could be assessed.
Prof Johan Rockström, the then director of the Stockholm
Resilience Centre who led the team that developed the boundaries framework,
said: “Science and the world at large are really concerned over all the extreme
climate events hitting societies across the planet. But what worries us, even
more, is the rising signs of dwindling planetary resilience.”
Rockström, who is now joint director of Potsdam Institute for
Climate Impact Research in Germany, said this failing resilience could make
restricting global heating to the 1.5C climate goal impossible and could bring
the world closer to real tipping points. Scientists said in September that the
world was on the brink of multiple disastrous tipping points.
Prof Katherine Richardson, from the University of Copenhagen who
led the analysis, said: “We know for certain that humanity can thrive under the
conditions that have been here for 10,000 years – we don’t know that we can
thrive under major, dramatic alterations [and] humans impact on the Earth
system as a whole are increasing as we speak.”
She said the Earth could be thought of as a patient with very high
blood pressure: “That does not indicate a certain heart attack, but it does
greatly raise the risk.”
The assessment, which was published in the journal Science Advances and
was based on 2,000 studies, indicated that several planetary boundaries were
passed long ago. The boundary for biosphere integrity, which includes the
healthy functioning of ecosystems, was broken in the late 19th century, the
researchers said, as destruction of the natural world decimated wildlife. The
same destruction, particularly the razing of forests, means the boundary for
land use was broken last century.
Climate models have suggested the safe boundary for climate change
was surpassed in the late 1980s. For freshwater, a new metric involving both
water in lakes and rivers and in soil, showed this boundary was crossed in the
early 20th century.
Another boundary is the flow of nitrogen and phosphorus in the
environment. These are vital for life but excessive use of fertilizers mean
many waters are heavily polluted by these nutrients, which can lead to algal
blooms and ocean dead zones. According to the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization data, three times the safe level of nitrogen is added
to fields every year.
The boundary for synthetic pollution, such as pesticides, plastics
and nuclear waste, was shown to have been passed by a 2022 study. The Richardson-led
analysis assessed air pollution for the first time, which affects plant growth
and monsoon rains. It found air pollution has passed the planetary boundary in
some regions such as south Asia and China, but not yet globally. Ocean acidification
is also assessed as getting worse and being close to exceeding the safe
boundary.
The scientists said: “This update finds that six of the nine
boundaries are transgressed, suggesting that Earth is now well outside of the
safe operating space for humanity.”
Rockstrom said: “If you want to have security, prosperity and
equity for humanity on Earth, you have to come back into the safe space and
we’re not seeing that progress currently in the world.”
Phasing out fossil fuel burning and ending destructive farming are
the key actions required.
The planetary boundaries are set using specific metrics, such as
the level of CO2 in the atmosphere for climate change. The
Earth’s systems are resilient to some level of change, so most of the
boundaries have been set at a level higher than that which persisted over the
last 10,000 years. For example, CO2 was at 280 parts per
million until the industrial revolution but the planetary boundary is set at
350ppm.
Prof Simon Lewis, at University College London and not part of the
study team, said: “This is a strikingly gloomy update on an already alarming
picture. The planet is entering a new and much less stable state – it could not
be a more stark warning of the need for deep structural changes to how we treat
the environment.”
“The planetary boundaries concept is a heroic attempt to simplify
the world, but it is probably too simplified to be of use in practically
managing Earth,” he continued. “For example, the damage and suffering from
limiting global heating to 1.6C using pro-development policies and major
investments in adapting to climate change would be vastly less than the damage
and suffering from limiting warming to 1.5C but doing this using policies that
help the wealthy and disregard the poor. But the concept does work as a
science-led parable of our times.”
A related assessment published in May examined planetary boundaries combined with social justice issues and
found that six of these eight “Earth system boundaries” had been passed.
The researchers said more data was needed to deepen the
understanding of the current situation, as well as more research on how the
passing of planetary boundaries interact with each other. They said the Earth’s
systems had been pushed into disequilibrium and, as a result, “ultimate global
environmental conditions” remained uncertain.
A separate initiative to define the end of the Holocene and the
start of a new age dominated by human activities moved forward in July, when
scientists chose a Canadian lake as the site to represent the beginning of the Anthropocene.
This group settled on a date of 1950, significantly later than the dates
indicated by most of the planetary boundaries.
Damian Carrington is an environment editor
at the Guardian. @dpcarrington
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