The Limits to Growth was right ?  

Posted by Big Gav in ,

The Guardian has an article on "The Limits to Growth", written by a pair of Australians researchers from the University of Melbourne, claiming we are currently tracking to LTG's "baseline scenario" - Limits to Growth was right. New research shows we're nearing collapse.

Unlike most media reports referencing LTG it demonstrates the authors actually read and understood the book. The paper it is based on is here (pdf).

The 1972 book Limits to Growth, which predicted our civilisation would probably collapse some time this century, has been criticised as doomsday fantasy since it was published. Back in 2002, self-styled environmental expert Bjorn Lomborg consigned it to the “dustbin of history”.

It doesn’t belong there. Research from the University of Melbourne has found the book’s forecasts are accurate, 40 years on. If we continue to track in line with the book’s scenario, expect the early stages of global collapse to start appearing soon.

Limits to Growth was commissioned by a think tank called the Club of Rome. Researchers working out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, including husband-and-wife team Donella and Dennis Meadows, built a computer model to track the world’s economy and environment. Called World3, this computer model was cutting edge.

The task was very ambitious. The team tracked industrialisation, population, food, use of resources, and pollution. They modelled data up to 1970, then developed a range of scenarios out to 2100, depending on whether humanity took serious action on environmental and resource issues. If that didn’t happen, the model predicted “overshoot and collapse” – in the economy, environment and population – before 2070. This was called the “business-as-usual” scenario.

The book’s central point, much criticised since, is that “the earth is finite” and the quest for unlimited growth in population, material goods etc would eventually lead to a crash.

So were they right? We decided to check in with those scenarios after 40 years. Dr Graham Turner gathered data from the UN (its department of economic and social affairs, Unesco, the food and agriculture organisation, and the UN statistics yearbook). He also checked in with the US national oceanic and atmospheric administration, the BP statistical review, and elsewhere. That data was plotted alongside the Limits to Growth scenarios.

The results show that the world is tracking pretty closely to the Limits to Growth “business-as-usual” scenario. The data doesn’t match up with other scenarios.

These graphs show real-world data (first from the MIT work, then from our research), plotted in a solid line. The dotted line shows the Limits to Growth “business-as-usual” scenario out to 2100. Up to 2010, the data is strikingly similar to the book’s forecasts.

I'd like to think with a bit of determined effort that instead of falling into the "baseline scenario" outlined above that we can instead switch gears to "scenario 9" as outlined in Limits to Growth (shown below).

6 comments

The Limits to Growth model can't be validated, because it's not a realistic model of the world.

Why? Because it doesn't recognize renewable energy. It assumes that the only "real" energy is fossil fuels, and that the only renewable energy is biofuels (basically, food).

The downward "resources" curve is deeply unrealistic, when you consider the 100,000TW of energy the earth is bathed in every second of every day. The roughly 10TW humans generate isn't even a rounding error on that scale, and we certainly aren't depleting the energy available to us.

Do you mean the baseline scenario doesn't include the takeup of renewables or that none of the scenarios do ?

If you read LTG, following the scenarios is a section entitled "Transitions to a sustainable system", which recommends a wide range of practices to be implemented in order to make scenario 9 the one which eventuates (which presumably is the one most people would choose if given the option).

The recommendations include renewables - I once summarised them like this:

* improved monitoring of our impact on the environment and the resource base
* improved response times to signals from the monitoring described above
* extending planning horizons
* increased use of renewable resource (such as clean energy sources)
* aiming for maximum efficiency in use of resources
* closed loop industrial techniques (commonly known as "cradle to cradle" manufacturing)
* regenerative agricultural practices
* poverty reduction
* nonviolent conflict resolution
* accurate/unbiased media
* “decentralisation of economic power, political influence and scientific expertise”
* “stable populations” and “low birth rates” by “individual choice”

I'm assuming renewable resources meant more than biofuels - will have to go back and check !

Yes, it's my understanding that none of the models include what we think of as renewables: wind and solar, hydro. The model is just too simple: it has two categories: non-renewable energy and agriculture (which I presume includes biofuels).

That's how you can get that highly unrealistically declining "resource" curve.

Here's an article on The Oil Drum site which makes it clear that the original LTG model was unrealistic about energy, yet relied on limits to fossil fuels as a foundation for it's approach:

"This is a guest post from Dolores GarcĂ­a, an independent researcher based in Brighton, UK.

Recently Jorgen Randers (best known for being one of the co-authors of The Limits to Growth, 1972) asked me to do some modelling work on the World3-Energy model, an updated version of the classic World3 computer model that was used in The Limits to Growth that includes a much larger amount of information about energy. He’d like to use it for the next book that he intends to publish sometime in 2012.

I have published on The Oil Drum before the details of World3-Energy (a dynamic systems model), can be found in:

A New World Model Including Energy and Climate Change Data

And a few answers to reader’s questions can be found here:

New World Model – EROEI issues

Part of the work I’m doing for Jorgen Randers is comparing the results of World3-Energy with IEA’s results. I thought the readers of The Oil Drum would be interested in this."

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/8103
-------------

Here's my discussion:

http://europe.theoildrum.com/node/5145

1) Energy is presented as a key, foundational element to the model:

"in a world with unlimited energy, any chemical compounds useful as a raw material but not as an energy source could be easily obtained "

2) EROEI is presented as a key, foundational element to the energy component of the model:

"The available data on EROEI is very spotty, but it’s such a crucial concept to explain what may happen in the future with energy sources that I believe a model would be inaccurate if it didn’t include it in some way."

3) This model assumes that renewable EROEI is low:

"Renewables aren’t used until the end of the 21st century, due to their low EROEI: "

4) Reneweables have high EROEI*, therefore, the energy component of the model is incorrect, and so is the overall model.

So, the model needs a basic revision to be valid.

*According to the Hall reference, it's 18:1. That's clearly high enough. OTOH, that number is outdated - the correct number is closer to 50:1. Also, Hall's numbers for solar are badly out of date, and should be much higher. Also, the idea that nuclear fuel will be depleted within the 21st century is unrealistic.

At some point, every model fails.
I guess the interesting question is has this model failed yet?

The authors of the latest paper suggest no, and given the standard run of the model is doing so well after 40 years should be cause for pause.

Given the base run version of the model projects so many turning points near 2020, we wont have to wait long to find out if the extraordinary run continues.

The points made by Nick G may be true, but it would really only become important sometime in the future. The model appears to be tracking reality most probably because renewables simply are not, globally, a very large contributor yet. If as BG suggests a concerted switch is made then the standard model will no longer be accurate, but a different run by the LTG team may. So...?

Instead of saying the model is not valid, exploring why this model run is still relatively accurate given its weaknesses might point us to interesting new information.
And wasn't that the point of the authors of LTG? Given a set of explicitly stated assumptions this suite of models was used to explore, crudely, probable trajectories. Anyone is free to take the code, improve the "invalid" empirical bits and rerun.

Point me to any "valid" economic model, they are all lumpy aggregated empirical beasts that assume a certain kind of human behavior.

has this model failed yet?

In the words of a famous physicist, "it's not even wrong". These are scenarios - something that even the authors seem to have forgotten. They're intended to test a very narrow set of propositions. In particular, they tell us something interesting about the behavior of a system with hard limits and feedback lags, which is that you can get a dangerous "overshoot". But, they're not models of our familiar world.

In particular, the "resources" curve has very little to do with the real world: it models fossil fuels with hard limits and no good, fast substitutes. That doesn't match up with the reality of the resources available to us, where the limits to fossil fuels are very "fuzzy", and there are very good substitutes right at hand.

given the standard run of the model is doing so well after 40 years should be cause for pause.

Most of the "historical" curves we see here don't differ from the model because the model doesn't differ from conventional wisdom. The LTG model's significant differences with conventional models are in the future, which is not yet tested.

The one interesting phenomenon where the LTG scenarios might actually be useful is for Climate Change, where there are very large feedback lags, and where there may be sharp limits beyond which we see enormous damage to our environment. But that's not what "peakers" focus on, apparently because it doesn't fit with their focus on limits to commodity resources.

The fact is that Peak Fossil Fuel would be to our benefit. The fact that we're only getting Peak-Oil "lite", and that there's very little sign of Peak Coal (or Peak Gas) means that we'll have to make fairly conscious political choices to keep carbon in the ground.

Sadly, the fossil fuel industry is very good at blocking that.

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