Oakland, CA, USA, August 22, 2012 - Humanity
has surpassed nature' budget for the year, and is now operating in
overdraft, according to data from Global Footprint Network.
But it is possible to turn the tide and reverse current
consumption trends to help close the ecological budget gap and
provide for a prosperous future in the face of changing and
challenging resource trends.
An international research organization with offices in
California and Europe, Global Footprint Network measures humanity's
demand for and supply of natural resources and ecological services.
Earth Overshoot Day, a concept originally
developed by Global Footprint Network partner and UK think tank new
economics foundation, is the annual marker of when we begin
living beyond our means in a given year.
Global Footprint Network estimated that this year, it only took
approximately 8 months to use up more renewable resources and CO2
sequestration than what the planet can sustainably provide for an
entire year: 'Earth Overshoot Day 2012' happened on August 22. For
the rest of the year, we will maintain our ecological deficit by
depleting resource stocks and accumulating carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere.
In 1992, Earth Overshoot Day-the approximate date our resource
consumption for a given year exceeds the planet's ability to
replenish-fell on October 21. In 2002, Overshoot Day was on October
3 and last year, it was September 27. Given current trends in
consumption, one thing is clear: Earth Overshoot Day tends to
arrive earlier and earlier each year.
The fact that we are using, or "spending," our natural capital
faster than it can replenish is similar to having expenditures that
continuously exceed income. In planetary terms, the costs of our
ecological overspending are becoming more evident by the day.
Climate change-a result of greenhouse gases being emitted faster
than they can be absorbed by forests and oceans-is the most obvious
and arguably pressing result. But there are others-shrinking
forests, species loss, fisheries collapse, higher commodity prices
and civil unrest, to name a few.
"Nations around the world, and particularly in the south of
Europe, have started to painfully experience what it means to spend
more money than what they earn," said Dr. Mathis Wackernagel,
President of Global Footprint Network.
"The resource pressure is similar to such financial
overspending, and can become devastating. As resource deficits get
larger, and resource prices remain high, the costs to nations
become unbearable."
Our ecological overspending has become a vicious cycle, in which
we draw down more and more principal at the same time our level of
consumption grows. The social and economic costs could be
staggering.
"From soaring fossil fuel prices to crippling national debts
partly due to rising natural resource prices, our economies are now
confronting the reality of years of spending beyond our means," Dr.
Wackernagel said.
"If we are to maintain stable societies and productive lives, we
can no longer sustain a widening budget gap between what nature is
able to provide and how much our infrastructure, economies and
lifestyles require."

Today, humanity is using the equivalent of just over 1.5 Earth's
worth of ecological resources and services. If current trends
continue unchanged, we are on track to require the resources of two
planets well before mid-century.
China's total ecological footprint-that is, its demand for
natural resources and the services they provide-is the world's
largest, yet its per-person footprint remains modest. As its
economy grows and its people prosper, China's large population and
increasing per-capita consumption will have an ever-greater impact
on the world's widening ecological deficit.
Already, we see how consumption patterns of individual countries
grow global Overshoot: the per-capita resource demands of the
United States, which went into Overshoot on March 28, are still
equivalent to the supply of more than four Earths. The per-capita
demands of Brazil, which went into Overshoot on July 6, require the
resources of just under two Earths. In Qatar, the typical citizen
requires the resources of six and a half Earths.
But it is not all doom and gloom. It is possible to turn the
tide and reverse current consumption trends.
Global Footprint Network and its network of partners are working
with organizations, governments and financial institutions around
the globe to make decisions that are aligned with ecological
reality-decisions that can help close the ecological budget gap and
provide for a prosperous future in the face of changing and
challenging resource trends.
"Now is the time to come up with ways of running our economies
that will continue to work into the future," Dr. Wackernagel said.
"Long-term recovery will only succeed if it occurs along with
systematic reductions to our demand on resources and ecosystem
services."