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Shrink and share: humanity's present and future Ecological Footprint
Authors:Kitzes Justin  Wackernagel Mathis  Loh Jonathan  Peller Audrey  Goldfinger Steven  Cheng Deborah  Tea Kallin
Affiliation:Global Footprint Network, 1050 Warfield Ave, Oakland, CA 94610, USA. justin@footprintnetwork.org
Abstract:Sustainability is the possibility of all people living rewarding lives within the means of nature. Despite ample recognition of the importance of achieving sustainable development, exemplified by the Rio Declaration of 1992 and the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, the global economy fails to meet the most fundamental minimum condition for sustainability--that human demand for ecosystem goods and services remains within the biosphere's total capacity. In 2002, humanity operated in a state of overshoot, demanding over 20% more biological capacity than the Earth's ecosystems could regenerate in that year. Using the Ecological Footprint as an accounting tool, we propose and discuss three possible global scenarios for the future of human demand and ecosystem supply. Bringing humanity out of overshoot and onto a potentially sustainable path will require managing the consumption of food, fibre and energy, and maintaining or increasing the productivity of natural and agricultural ecosystems.
Keywords:Ecological Footprint   sustainability   land use   future demand   ecological debt   scenarios
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