The nine planetary boundaries & Realimiteit
On our website, we talk about systems that can only maintain stability and sustainability when they operate within natural boundaries of functionality. Here is a listing of nine planetary boundaries suggested by the Stockholm University Resiliance Centre we already crossed. Yesterday the US President decided to ignore the 2016 Paris Climate Agreement. This will inevitably lead to non-linear effects beyond anyone's control and will end in entropy. This can be predicted by our Realimiteit Principle. We are in for a rough ride....
The nine planetary boundaries
Stratospheric ozone
depletion
The stratospheric ozone layer in the
atmosphere filters out ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the sun. If this
layer decreases, increasing amounts of UV radiation will reach ground level.
This can cause a higher incidence of skin cancer in humans as well as damage to
terrestrial and marine biological systems. The appearance of the Antarctic
ozone hole was proof that increased concentrations of anthropogenic
ozone-depleting chemical substances, interacting with polar
stratospheric clouds, had passed a threshold and moved the Antarctic
stratosphere into a new regime. Fortunately, because of the actions taken as a
result of the Montreal Protocol, we appear to be on the path that will
allow us to stay within this boundary.
Loss of biosphere
integrity (biodiversity loss and extinctions)
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment of 2005 concluded that
changes to ecosystems due to human activities were more rapid in the
past 50 years than at any time in human history, increasing the risks of
abrupt and irreversible changes. The main drivers of change are the demand for
food, water, and natural resources, causing severe biodiversity loss and
leading to changes in ecosystem services. These drivers are either steady,
showing no evidence of declining over time, or are increasing in intensity. The
current high rates of ecosystem damage and extinction can
be slowed by efforts to protect the integrity of living systems (the
biosphere), enhancing habitat, and improving connectivity between ecosystems
while maintaining the high agricultural productivity that humanity needs.
Further research is underway to improve the availability of reliable data for
use as the 'control variables' for this boundary.
Chemical pollution and the
release of novel entities
Emissions of toxic and long-lived substances such as synthetic
organic pollutants, heavy metal compounds and radioactive materials
represent some of the key human-driven changes to the planetary
environment. These compounds can have potentially irreversible effects on living
organisms and on the physical environment (by affecting atmospheric processes
and climate). Even when the uptake and bioaccumulation of chemical pollution is
at sub-lethal levels for organisms, the effects of reduced fertility and the
potential of permanent genetic damage can have severe effects on ecosystems far
removed from the source of the pollution. For example, persistent organic
compounds have caused dramatic reductions in bird populations and impaired
reproduction and development in marine mammals. There are many examples of
additive and synergic effects from these compounds, but these are still poorly
understood scientifically. At present, we are unable to quantify a single
chemical pollution boundary, although the risk of crossing Earth system
thresholds is considered sufficiently well-defined for it to be included in the
list as a priority for precautionary action and for further research.
Climate Change
Recent evidence suggests that the Earth, now passing
390 ppmv CO2 in the atmosphere, has already transgressed the planetary
boundary and is approaching several Earth system thresholds. We have
reached a point at which the loss of summer polar sea-ice is almost certainly
irreversible. This is one example of a well-defined threshold above which
rapid physical feedback mechanisms can drive the Earth system into a much
warmer state with sea levels metres higher than present. The weakening or
reversal of terrestrial carbon sinks, for example through the
on-going destruction of the world's rainforests, is another potential
tipping point, where climate-carbon cycle feedbacks accelerate Earth's warming
and intensify the climate impacts. A major question is how long we can remain
over this boundary before large, irreversible changes become unavoidable.
Ocean acidification
Around a quarter of the CO2 that humanity emits into the
atmosphere is ultimately dissolved in the oceans. Here it forms carbonic acid,
altering ocean chemistry and decreasing the pH of the surface water. This
increased acidity reduces the amount of available carbonate ions, an essential
'building block' used by many marine species for shell and
skeleton formation. Beyond a threshold concentration, this rising
acidity makes it hard for organisms such as corals and some shellfish and plankton
species to grow and survive. Losses of these species would change the structure
and dynamics of ocean ecosystems and could potentially lead to drastic
reductions in fish stocks. Compared to pre-industrial times, surface ocean
acidity has already increased by 30 percent. Unlike most other human
impacts on the marine environment, which are often local in scale,
the ocean acidification boundary has ramifications for the whole planet.
It is also an example of how tightly interconnected the boundaries are, since
atmospheric CO2 concentration is the underlying controlling variable for
both the climate and the ocean acidification boundaries, although they are
defined in terms of different Earth system thresholds.
Freshwater consumption and
the global hydrological cycle
The freshwater cycle is strongly affected by climate change
and its boundary is closely linked to the climate boundary, yet human
pressure is now the dominant driving force determining the functioning and
distribution of global freshwater systems. The consequences of human
modification of water bodies include both global-scale river flow changes
and shifts in vapour flows arising from land use change. These shifts in the
hydrological system can be abrupt and irreversible. Water is becoming
increasingly scarce - by 2050 about half a billion people are likely to be
subject to water-stress, increasing the pressure to intervene in water systems.
A water boundary related to consumptive freshwater use and environmental
flow requirements has been proposed to maintain the overall resilience of
the Earth system and to avoid the risk of 'cascading' local and regional
thresholds.
Land system change
Land is converted to human use all over the planet. Forests,
grasslands, wetlands and other vegetation types have primarily
been converted to agricultural land. This land-use change is one
driving force behind the serious reductions in biodiversity, and it has impacts
on water flows and on the biogeochemical cycling of carbon, nitrogen and
phosphorus and other important elements. While each incident of land
cover change occurs on a local scale, the aggregated impacts can have
consequences for Earth system processes on a global scale. A boundary for human
changes to land systems needs to reflect not just the absolute quantity of
land, but also its function, quality and spatial distribution. Forests
play a particularly important role in controlling the linked dynamics of land
use and climate, and is the focus of the boundary for land system change.
Nitrogen and phosphorus
flows to the biosphere and oceans
The biogeochemical cycles of nitrogen and phosphorus have been
radically changed by humans as a result of many industrial and agricultural
processes. Nitrogen and phosphorus are both essential elements for plant
growth, so fertilizer production and application is the main concern. Human
activities now convert more atmospheric nitrogen into reactive forms than
all of the Earth's terrestrial processes combined. Much of this new
reactive nitrogen is emitted to the atmosphere in various forms rather
than taken up by crops. When it is rained out, it pollutes
waterways and coastal zones or accumulates in the terrestrial
biosphere. Similarly, a relatively small proportion of phosphorus
fertilizers applied to food production systems is taken up by plants; much of
the phosphorus mobilized by humans also ends up in aquatic systems. These can
become oxygen-starved as bacteria consume the blooms of algae that grow in
response to the high nutrient supply. A significant fraction of the applied nitrogen
and phosphorus makes its way to the sea, and can push marine and aquatic
systems across ecological thresholds of their own. One regional-scale example
of this effect is the decline in the shrimp catch in the Gulf of Mexico's
'dead zone' caused by fertilizer transported in rivers from the US Midwest.
Atmospheric aerosol
loading
An atmospheric aerosol planetary boundary was proposed primarily
because of the influence of aerosols on Earth's climate system. Through their
interaction with water vapour, aerosols play a critically important role in the
hydrological cycle affecting cloud formation and global-scale and regional
patterns of atmospheric circulation, such as the monsoon systems in tropical
regions. They also have a direct effect on climate, by changing how much solar
radiation is reflected or absorbed in the atmosphere. Humans change the aerosol
loading by emitting atmospheric pollution (many pollutant gases condense into
droplets and particles), and also through land-use change that increases the
release of dust and smoke into the air. Shifts in climate regimes and monsoon
systems have already been seen in highly polluted environments, giving a
quantifiable regional measure for an aerosol boundary. A further reason for an
aerosol boundary is that aerosols have adverse effects on many living
organisms. Inhaling highly polluted air causes roughly 800,000 people to die
prematurely each year. The toxicological and ecological effects of aerosols may
thus relate to other Earth system thresholds. However, the behaviour of
aerosols in the atmosphere is extremely complex, depending on their chemical
composition and their geographical location and height in the atmosphere. While
many relationships between aerosols, climate and ecosystems are well established,
many causal links are yet to be determined.
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