8月20日,是今年的“地球生态超载日”,也就是说,我们已经用光了这一年地球能够提供给我们的各类自然资源,人类在余下几个月使用的资源都是在透支下一年的“生态预算”。提出这一概念的全球生态足迹网络表示,目前,人类需要1.5个地球提供的资源才能存活发展;而到本世纪中叶,大概要两个地球才能满足人类的资源需求。
Humans have used up the natural resources the Earth can provide for the year and are now in '
overdraft1', campaigners have warned.
The world has reached 'earth overshoot day' today, August 20, the point in the year that humans have
exhausted2 supplies such land, trees and fish and
outstripped4(超过) the planet's annual capacity to absorb waste products including carbon dioxide.
For the rest of the year, the world is in
ecological5 debt, with fish stocks and forests being
depleted6, land degraded and carbon dioxide building up in the atmosphere, the Global Footprint Network said.
Earth overshoot day is calculated by comparing the demands made by humans on global resources - our 'ecological footprint' - with the planet's ability to
replenish7 resources and absorb waste.
This year, in less than nine months we have used as much of nature as the Earth can
regenerate8 in a year. Earth overshoot day has fallen a couple of days earlier than it did last year.
The Global Footprint Network said that in 1961, humanity only used around two-thirds of the available natural resources on Earth, but by the 1970s increased carbon
emissions9 and consumption began to
outstrip3 what the planet could provide.
Humans now need the equivalent of 1.5 planets to sustain us, and by
mid10 century it will have risen to two planets, the campaigners said.
China has the biggest total ecological footprint, because of its large population, but other countries have much higher demands on resources per person. If everyone were to live like U.S. residents we would need four planets to supply demand, the report said.
Four-fifths of the world's population live in countries that use more than their own natural systems can provide. In this country, we would need the equivalent of three and a half UKs to sustain current consumption levels.
The world can no longer sustain the widening budget gap between what nature is able to provide and how much our
infrastructure11, economies and lifestyles require, they said.
Alessandro Galli, Global Footprint Network regional director, said: 'Everyday life in many
Mediterranean12 countries is showing us what it means to live beyond financial limits.
'Ecological and financial
deficits14 are two sides of the same coin. Over the long run, nations cannot deal with one
deficit13 without addressing the other.'
Andrew Simms, climate
economist15 at Global Witness, who came up with the concept of earth overshoot day at UK think tank the New Economics Foundation, said: 'The Government consistently tells us that we must
buckle16 down and live within our financial means, but seems intent on pushing us to break our environmental budget.
'The maths is simple - the UK consumes and produces waste at a rate three and a half times greater than we can sustain, and today humanity has already exhausted what the planet's
ecosystems17 can provide in a year.
'We're in the red and
gambling18 with ecological
bankruptcy19, as the fracking debate shows. If it chose to, the Government can always print more money, but it can't print more planet. Ecological overshoot should lead the political agenda.'