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Prometheans vs. Soterians

The philosophical battle at the heart of Rio+20.

Still from the movie Prometheus.

Since the first Rio Earth Summit in 1992, the language of science and environmental diplomacy has subtly changed in ways that emphasize technocratic and corporate thinking dangerously changing our relation to the Earth.

Twenty years ago, the environment was understood as the domain that surrounds us, the place from which we draw resources and dump wastes, or just leave alone. The economists told us environmental damage is an “externality,” an unfortunate side effect from market activity, something that could be fixed by “internalising the cost,” that is, putting a price on it. The environment was seen as important but separate from us and the language of the summit reflected this division: “environmental issues,” “the problem of environmental degradation,” “development that can be made sustainable,” all these ideas place the environment “over there.”

Today, scientific thinking has changed radically so that what we used to think of as “the environment”—the natural world spread around us—no longer exists. The environment has been replaced by the “Earth system”—the collection of interdependent parts that make up the planet. The system is divided into various “spheres”—the hydrosphere (the watery parts), the lithosphere (the Earth’s crust and what lies beneath), the biosphere (living things) and the atmosphere (the air). Earth system science conceives of these spheres as intimately connected, linked by a number of planetary processes, like the carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle and the water cycle. Everything is connected to everything else, often in startling ways we barely understand. So enormous has been humanity’s influence on the environment that there is no more “nature,” only elements of the Earth system showing various levels of human disturbance.

This momentous but so-far-unnoticed shift means that the default ecological position is no longer how to minimize our impact, but how best to intervene. The goal can no longer be to “live in harmony with nature,” the hope enshrined in the 1992 Rio Declaration, but how to manage the Earth system. In place of the first Rio summit’s call to “conserve, protect and restore” ecosystems—which now seems like wishful thinking—the task of Rio+20 will be how best to govern the Earth as a whole.

Yet we must now begin to ask ourselves a very serious question: Are we capable of managing the Earth? Are we up to the task or, by promoting ourselves from janitor to manager, are we destined to botch it?

On this, the defining question of the 21st century, we can expect the world to divide into two camps—the Prometheans, after the Greek god who gave humans the tools of technological mastery, and those who might be called Soterians, after the Greek goddess of safety, caution and deliverance.

Acutely aware of the history of hubris, Soterians will expect any Planetary Regulatory Agency to screw things up, with devastating consequences. Ever the optimists, Prometheans will be confident Homo sapiens can take control of the Earth and manage it well in perpetuity.

But what will be the “vision statement” of the planetary strategic plan? Will the ideal state be an Earth like a national park, a well-run open-plain zoo in which humans are the dominant species? Or perhaps we should aim for an English country garden, carefully tended but with corners set aside to remind us of wildness?

When Earth system science superseded environmental science the change cut both ways. On the one hand, we acknowledged the extraordinary complexity and interdependence of the Earth as a totality, and how humans have disrupted the great natural cycles that regulate it. On the other hand, characterizing the Earth as a system unleashed a style of thinking—that of the engineer—on the planet as a whole.

Earth system science is a kind of Newtonian mechanical thinking updated with the cybernetic ideas of feedback loops, control variables, critical values and so on. If we now think of the Earth as a cybernetic system then regulating it requires targeted technological intervention. We just have to work out what the control variables are and then set them at their optimal levels.

There is nothing futuristic about Earth system engineering. Technologies to regulate the climate system are being developed now. Among the various methods of geoengineering attracting the attention of scientists and venture capitalists is a plan to filter the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth’s surface by surrounding it with a layer of sulphate aerosols, tiny particles that reflect solar radiation. Designed to offset the warming effect of carbon emissions, the solar filter would work like a planetary thermostat.

Thinking like an Earth system engineer has insinuated itself into unexpected places: Achim Steiner, the chief of the UN’s environment program and a man who will play a key role at Rio+20, has called on world leaders to “better manage the planet.” The new Earth System Governance Project, a consortium of concerned scientists, argues that Rio+20 should establish new institutions of global governance, which are undoubtedly needed, but it slides unnoticed into a call for “Earth system governance,” which is quite a different proposition.

Many of those who have begun to speak of planetary management use the language of engineering metaphorically. But others are deadly serious. Lowell Wood, the legendary Pentagon weaponeer and pioneer of sulphate aerosol spraying, has declared: “We’ve engineered every other environment we live in, why not the planet?”

 It’s a message with instant appeal to those who see humans as the Promethean species whose destiny is to master the Earth, who dream of becoming planetary overlords.

But is it within our power to master the Earth? Should we even aspire to be its managers? Over the last four decades 500 environmental treaties have been signed, yet the Earth continues to ail. So the first question we must confront is whether we can master ourselves.

Even if we could get our own house in order—and, who knows, perhaps Rio+20 will be the breakthrough we desperately need—we have to ask whether the Earth itself will go along with our grand plan.

Perhaps turning the Earth into a “system,” knowable and controllable, is the last great conceit of humanity. Perhaps instead of a well-defined system the Earth is more like a wild beast, a beast that has now been disturbed from its slumber and will shrug off our attempts to tame it with our puny technologies.

Clive Hamilton is the author of Requiem for a Species: Why we resist the truth about climate change (Earthscan 2010). He is writing a book on geoengineering.

30 comments on the article “Prometheans vs. Soterians”

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Mike Ed

Relying on, and even discussing, the rhetoric of 'global governance', 'summits', 'institutions' and the like as the go to place for saving the world from destruction is a futile exercise that we surely need to detach from. The efforts that are not only the most effective, but also the most inspiring to others are often those that are free from the realm of governments and institutions, and thus free of worldly politics. Indeed, it is almost impossible to ever be free of such ties, as just like everything within the earth's system is connected, so too is everything with society. Yet, we can have freedom to a degree, a much more noble freedom, a self-imposed freedom, whereby we choose to act by asserting our morals, principles and values in our every action. The power at the individual level is astonishing in what can and has been achieved when we engage in the world from a paradoxical detached, but proactive manner. Detached from ideology, but proactive about our values and principles. By their very nature, governments, governance institutions and summits are about asserting power over others, and so in effect ones ideology, ceases to matter. The subject ceases to matter too - there are summits, institutions and government agencies for every possible sphere of human society and the natural world. At the end of the day all these types of efforts, and even comments made in relations to them are about satisfying a psychological deficit seemingly common to all humans, whereby the only way we know to satisfy this deficit is to steal power from others. I do not hesitate to accept that even this post is based on satisfying a psychological deficit of my own. Nonetheless, my point is that by detaching from such established conventions which simply transmute and poison our energy by virtue of the fact that we are obliged to have a view, and thus obliged to separate and elevate ourselves above others, we conserve that energy and can put it to good use by acting in whatever small way possible - recycling our garbage, growing our own vegetables and just generally being better human being by treating other people as equals and the earth as a place of beauty and sustenance.

Anonymous

Yet, more than just recycling, we should put an end to the needless spending and waste. While not shopping for a day is start, would not a No Shopping Week would be worth aiming at? That said, old (shopping) habits seem to die hard.

Anonymous

Not shopping for a week isn't going to stop the environmental effects of fracking or the pollutants that go into the environment from poorly regulated corporate production processes. What the little people do pales in comparison to what is being done on a grand scale. Logging, ripping the earth in search of oil, dumping industrial waste etc

Anonymous

Have you ever gone a week without buying a non-necessity? I have, many people do ALL THE TIME. Saying no to zappos or amazon for a week isn't going to change anything.

Anonymous

In order for the Author to answer his question, he must pull back from the grand over-arching view, and focus on the particulars of how this is being played out today.

And in order to focus on how this is being played out today, he must form a catalogue of all value criteria and their interactions (human vs. Animal) (human vs. Plant) (economy vs. Human) (higher class vs lower class) (innovators vs. Workers) (Human life today vs Human life tomorrow)
and then analyse how each is evolving today, under today's conditions

Finally, in order to suggest a path forward, the author must chose and state on what things he is placing higher value, equal value and lower value, and suggest a path that navigates his selection best.

Furthermore the author must repeat these steps, forever.

Anonymous

Check out the sci-fi graphic novel "UPGRADE" - fa ree ebook on Amazon. It reveals a future society, controlled by corporations for the benefit of corporations, yet nobody seems to notice. Sound familiar?

Anonymous

Humans are already the managers of and over nature and have been in that position for a long time, so it seems the author is a bit. As stewards its humans who go out of their way to conserve and to save endangered species when we can intervene and we are also the ones who decide how much of the earth's resources we shall exploit. To look at this argument now as if the role of manager or steward has just come up seems a bit silly.

Anonymous

Western humans have wanted to believe that the Earth is there for them to use/recreate/manage since at least the modern era. So, in that way, you are right. The thought is nothing new. However, you seem to be saying that we actually are in that position and have been for a long time. I would like to point out the difference between merely believing that you have a position of power and actually having one. Delusions of grandeur run deep, and I think the author is trying to call our attention to the possibility that, when it comes to managing ecosystems, we may be out of our league. How could we ever manage something that we do not fully understand? Is the human mind/brain even capable of understanding such things? I can't answer these questions, but I think the fact that they are unanswerable points to the validity of acknowledging them. To be sure, we are powerful creatures, and we do effect our environment, but to think we could ever 'manage the planet' may turn out to be, as you say, a bit silly.

mraaron

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