Forget
Peak Oil, We're At Peak Everything
The
idea that we're running out of oil may have faded slightly from the
list of concerns, but that's just one of any number of precious
natural resources we're using up far too quickly.
By
Terry Tamminen
8
March, 2013
The
idea that we're running out of oil may have faded slightly from the
list of concerns, but that's just one of any number of precious
natural resources we're using up far too quickly.
Peak
oil is the concept that new discoveries of commercially exploitable
oil resources do not keep pace with growing demand. By extrapolating
the data, you can estimate when we will run out of it for all
practical purposes. There are a lot of disagreements about whether we
have reached peak oil or when the downhill slope will hit a point
that brings a significant percentage of our vehicles to a grinding
halt, but the concept has made scientists and policy makers ask the
question: What other critical resources may be peaking?
Asia
Pulp & Paper Company, one of the world's largest, announced last
month that it will no longer use wood from natural forests for any of
its $4 billion per year worth of products. Why? Because APP's
customers realized we are running out of natural forests from which
to harvest lumber and have demanded suppliers to develop sustainable
sources. The Walt Disney Company, Mattel, and Harper Collins are
among many corporations setting sustainability standards for things
like paper and packaging.
These
threats are real and they do raise serious national security
concerns.
Water
is another resource that may not be as mobile as wood or oil, but
which has certainly reached its peak in many places. Last year, a
report from the U.S. Office of National Intelligence predicted
increasing global conflicts by 2030 as demand for water surpasses
sustainable supplies by 40%. Nearly a billion people lack safe,
sustainable water supplies already and, according to the UN and the
OECD, almost half of the world's population will live in areas of
serious "water stress" by 2030.
Former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton confirmed these findings on "peak
water" saying, "These threats are real and they do raise
serious national security concerns." And just where might peak
water create such threats first? A 2011 report from the U.S. Senate's
Committee on Foreign Relations may have an answer in its title:
"Avoiding Water Wars: Water Scarcity and Central Asia's Growing
Importance for Stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan."
Considering the price in human lives and taxpayer dollars for "peace"
in that region already, we might want to help Afghans make water more
plentiful even as our military tries to make things like guns and
ammunition more scarce.
Another
essential commodity that may soon hit its peak is food. Last year,
more than half of the world's seafood was farmed instead of wild
caught, because we have long passed "peak fish" in the
ocean. This was the last global food product where humans were mostly
hunter-gatherers and we have now industrialized its production,
however our fish farming methods are crude compared to the ways we
grow row crops, grains, and other forms of protein, meaning that
shortages and higher prices for many seafood items are already
resulting from certain species peaking. In another example, the
conversion of corn to ethanol has been well documented for several
years as a contributor to shortages and price spikes for that staple
in many parts of the globe.
These
peak trends have motivated retailers like Walmart, Tesco, and Target
to set standards for suppliers around sustainable sourcing, because
executives I have spoken with are concerned their shelves will one
day be empty or prices will exceed their customers' budgets, which in
turn impacts corporate bottom lines. Make no mistake, peak anything
is a warning signal that smart consumers will increasingly use to
make more sustainable choices and to plan for a resource-constrained
future. And that should peak the interest of any business person or
politician.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.