Title: Planetary Boundaries
1Planetary Boundaries
Exploring the Safe Operating Space for Humanity
Prof. Johan Rockström Stockholm Resilience Centre
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3A biosphere shaped by humanity
4Humanity in the Anthropocene
Steffen, W., et al. 2004
5Humanitys period of grace the last 10000
years
6Critical transitions or regime shifts
7Valuable Ecosystem Services Loss of
ecosystem services (Desirable)
(Undesirable)
1
4
coral dominance clear water grassland
algal dominance turbid water shrub-bushla
nd
state shift
2
3
- overfishing, coastal
- eutrophication
- phosphorous accum-
- ulation in soil and mud
- fire prevention
- disease,
- hurricane
-
- flooding, warming,
- overexploitation
- of predators
- good rains, continu-
- ous heavy grazing
8The Resilience of the Earth System
9Our precarious predicament
10Planetary Boundaries Exploring the safe
operating space for humanity in the Anthropocene
(Nature, 461 472 475, Sept 24 - 2009)
Johan Rockström, Will Steffen, Kevin Noone, Åsa
Persson, F. Stuart Chapin, Eric F. Lambin,
Timothy M. Lenton, Marten Scheffer, Carl Folke,
Hans Joachim Schellnhuber, Björn Nykvist, Cynthia
A. de Wit, Terry Hughes, Sander van der Leeuw,
Henning Rodhe, Sverker Sörlin, Peter K. Snyder,
Robert Costanza, Uno Svedin, Malin Falkenmark,
Louise Karlberg, Robert W. Corell, Victoria J.
Fabry, James Hansen, Brian Walker, Diana
Liverman, Katherine Richardson, Paul Crutzen,
Jonathan A. Foley
11PB concept rests on three branches of Scientific
inquiry
- Earth System and sustainability science
(Understanding Earth System processes ICSU,
IGBP, ESSP, IPCC, MEA, evolution of
sustainability science) - Scale of human action in relation to the capacity
of the planet to sustain it (Kenneth Boulding
Spaceship Earth, Herman Daly, Club of Rome,
Ecological Economics reserach agenda, Ecological
Footprint...) - Shocks and Abrupt change in Social-Ecological
systems from local to global scales - (Resilience, GAIA, tipping elements,
guardrails...)
Planetary Boundaries concept
12From Limits to growth Carrying
capacity Guardrails Tipping Elements To
Planetary Boundaries
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14Two different types ofplanetary boundary
processes
2. No known global threshold effect
1. Critical continental to global threshold
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16Climate Change
Ozone depletion
Atmospheric Aerosol Loading
Biogeochemical loading Global N P Cycles
Planetary Boundaries
Ocean acidification
Rate of Biodiversity Loss
Global Freshwater Use
Land System Change
Chemical Pollution
17Climate Change lt 350 ppm CO2 lt 1W m2 (350 500
ppm CO2 1-1.5 W m2)
Ozone depletion lt 5 of Pre-Industrial 290 DU (5
- 10)
Biogeochemical loading Global N P Cycles
Limit industrial fixation of N2 to 35 Tg N
yr-1(25 of natural fixation) (25-35) P lt 10
natural weathering inflow to Oceans (10 100)
Atmospheric Aerosol Loading To be determined
Planetary Boundaries
Ocean acidification Aragonite saturation ratio gt
80 above pre-industrial levels (gt 80 - gt 70 )
Global Freshwater Use lt4000 km3/yr (4000 6000
km3/yr)
Rate of Biodiversity Loss lt 10 E/MSY (lt 10 - lt
1000 E/MSY)
Land System Change 15 of land under
crops (15-20)
Chemical Pollution Plastics, Endocrine
Desruptors, Nuclear Waste Emitted globally To be
determined
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19Rate of Biodiversity LossAvoid large scale
irreversible loss of functional diversity and
ecological resilience
- The current and projected rate of biodiversity
loss constitutes the sixth major extinction event
in the history of life on Earth the first to be
driven by human activities on the planet - Local and regional biodiversity changes can have
pervasive effects on Earth System functioning - Biodiversity plays a key role for functional
diversity and thereby ecosystem resilience - Humans have increased the rate of species
extinction by 100-1,000 times the background
rates that were typical over Earths history - Average global extinction rate projected to
increase another 10-fold, to 1,000-10,000 E/MSY
during the current century - Suggesting a safe planetary boundary (here placed
at 10 E/MSY) of an extinction rate within an
order of magnitude of the natural background rate
20Global Freshwater UseAvoid water induced
environmental change at regional scale
- Humans now alter global runoff flows, through
withdrawals of blue water, and changes in green
water flows, affecting water partitioning and
moisture feedback - Physical water scarcity when withdrawals exceed
5000 6000 km3 yr-1 - Final availability of runoff determined by
consumptive use of green and blue water flows - Consumptive use of blue water an aggregate
control variable with boundary set at lt 4000 km3
yr-1
21Climate Changewhat is required to avoid the
crossing of critical thresholds that separate
qualitatively different climate system states
- We suggest boundary values of 350 ppm CO2 and 1 W
m-2 above pre-industrial level
22Planetary Inter-connections
Peter Snyder et al. 2004
23Climate Change
Ozone depletion
?
Phosphorus flow
Latest data
Atmospheric aerosol load
?
?
90-00
?
Nitrogen flow
Ocean acidity
70-80
?
50-60
Biodiversity loss
Freshwater consumption
?
Pre- Ind.
Chemical pollution
Agricultural land use
24Conclusions
- In the Anthropocene Humanity is, for the first
time, influencing hard-wired processes at the
Earth System scale - We define the Holocene as the desired stable
state providing necessary environmental
pre-conditions for human development - We need a new approach to global sustainability
and development. Scientific insights from
research on resilience and complex systems, and
Earth System Science, on the risks of human
induced tipping points in a multitude of Earth
system processes and sub-systems - We propose that a Planetary Boundary framework
may provide one step towards this necessary
redefinition
25- The Planetary Boundaries analysis presented in
Nature is a proof-of-concept analysis, with
many of the proposed boundaries being first best
guesses. Many uncertainties remain, and will
continue to remain. - What we suggest is a challenge to the Earth
System Science community to advance further
research on Earth system interactions and
non-linear dynamics - Large Knowledge gaps remain
- Understanding of threshold dynamics
- Boundary interactions and feedbacks
- Spatial variability and patchiness may require
global and regional boundaries - Allowed overshoot time unclear
26- No doubt, a Planetary Boundaries approach to
sustainable development would have profound
implications for governance and policy across
scales. Large scientific challenges to address
the human dimensions and governance implications
of development within Planetary Boundaries - Despite uncertainties on allowed overshoot before
large discontinuities, we have enough evidence to
act now. Time is running out on several of the
Planetary Boundaries, and the momentum of driving
forces tremendous. This is a first attempt to
define the safe space for human development,
which may prove critical in turbulent times
ahead.
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28Ozone depletionAvoiding the risk of large
impacts for humans and ecosystem from thinning of
extra-polar ozone layer
- Antarctic ozone depletion a classic example of an
unexpected crossing of a threshold - Our framing on extra-polar ozone layer depletion
- Identifying a threshold remains uncertain
- a less than 5 decrease in column ozone levels
for any particular latitude
29Atmospheric Aerosol LoadingAvoid major influence
on climate system and human health at regional to
global scales
- Human activities have doubled the global
concentration of most aerosols since the
pre-industrial era - Influence on the Earths radiative balance
- May have substantial implications on hydrological
cycle and, e.g., Asian monsoon circulation - Fine particle (PM2.5) air pollution
- Processes and mechanisms behind these
correlations remain to be fully explained
30Ocean acidificationChallenge to marine
biodiversity and ability of oceans to function as
sink of CO2
- 0.1 pH units decline, 30 H increase, 100 x
faster than pre-industrial - Rising pH ? dissolution of Calcium Carbonate
(Aragonite) shells of marine organisms (corals
and other marine life) - Globally surface aragonite saturation state is
declining (?arag 3.44 to a current value of
2.9) - 2CO2 ? ?arag 2.29
- Global average above unity, still Southern Ocean
and Arctic ocean projected to become corrosive to
aragonite by 2030-2060 - Deleterious effects on marine organisms start
well above Aragonite unity. - Proposed boundar gt 80 pre-industrial ?arag
2.75
31Chemical PollutionSteer away from irreversible
impacts on living organisms
- Global, ubiquitous impact on the physiological
development and demography of humans and other
organisms with ultimate impacts on ecosystem
functioning and structure - By acting as a slow variable that affects other
planetary boundaries (e.g., rate of biodiversity
loss) - 2 complementary approaches amounts of persistent
pollutants with global distribution (e.g.,
mercury) Effects of chemical pollution on living
organisms - Difficult to find an appropriate aggregate
control variable. Close interactions with Aerosol
loading may require sub-boundaries based on
sub-impacts/categories of chemicals
32Land System ChangeAvoid unsustainable land
system change predominantly from intensive
agricultural use
- Contributes to global environmental change with
the risk of undermining human well-being and long
term sustainability - Threat to biodiversity and undermining of
regulatory capacity of ecosystems - Complex global aggregate where the spatial
distribution and intensity of land system change
is critically important - Concentrate agricultural land use to most
productive land. - No more than 15 of the global ice-free land
surface should be converted to cropland
33Biogeochemical flows Human interference with
global N cycle
- Local to regional scale interference with N and P
flows has pushed aquatic and marine systems
across thresholds generating abrupt non-linear
change - Human modification of the nitrogen cycle is now
profound (converting more N2 from the atmosphere
into reactive forms than all of the Earths
terrestrial processes combined) - N and P slow variables eroding resilience of
important sub-systems of the Earth system - First guess of boundary level return to 25 of
the current human fixation of N2 from the
atmosphere
34Biogeochemical flows Human interference with
global P cycle
- The crossing of a critical threshold of P inflow
to the oceans could explain global-scale ocean
anoxic events (OAE), and past mass extinctions of
marine life - A boundary level should be set that (with current
knowledge) allows humanity to safely steer away
from the risk of triggering an OAE even over
longer time horizons (gt 1,000 yrs) - May require that anthropogenic P inflow to the
ocean is not allowed to exceed a human induced
level of 10 times the natural background rate of
1 Mt P yr-1. This is higher than the proposed
trigger rate of past OAEs - There are very large uncertainties in these
analyses, due to the complex interactions between
oxic-anoxic states - bi-stable oxic and anoxic conditions believed to
be induced by positive feedbacks between anoxia,
phosphorus recycling from sediments and marine
productivity - Past OAEs could have been induced by P inflow to
the oceans exceeding 20 of the natural
background weathering rate - The increase of reactive P to the oceans from
human activities has been estimated (year 2000)
at 9 Mt yr-1 - 10-fold increase of P inflow to the oceans (i.e.,
slightly higher than the current level), if
sustained for 1,000 years, would raise the anoxic
fraction to critical levels - Current estimates of available phosphate rock
reserves (up to 20 Gt of P) suggest that such an
input could not be sustained for more than 1000
years.