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In 1972, MIT Scientists Predicted A “Global Collapse” This Century: Data May Prove Them Correct

November 19, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

A fresh look at an influential report from the 1970s has found that its predictions of global collapse within this century look worryingingly accurate.

In 1972, a team of scientists from MIT used a computer model to look into the future of humanity after receiving a commission from the Club of Rome, an international group of leading academics, scientists, business leaders, and politicians. The report – The Limits to Growth – used a systematics dynamics model, known as World3, to look at the complex interactions between the human population, industrial output, pollution, food production, and Earth’s natural resources. 

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It found that a “stabilized world” scenario – in which global collapse was avoided and living standards remained stable – could be possible, but dramatic shifts in priorities and societal values were required. If unfettered economic growth continued without regard for the environment, it could produce a global society racked by food shortages and plummeting human welfare.

Ultimately, World3 showed that a “business as usual” scenario would most likely bring around the collapse of global society within the 21st century. Collapse, in this context, doesn’t mean humanity would be thrown into extinction like the dinosaurs – instead, it refers to the total stagnation of industrial growth and a significant decline in human welfare.

The work attracted a bunch of criticisms and controversy, but another look at the data suggests that the model’s prediction, so far, has been surprisingly on track.

As reported in the Journal of Industrial Ecology in November 2020, Gaya Herrington, a director for the accountancy firm KPMG, looked at how the empirical data over the past decades lined up with the report’s predictions. Using the new data, she looked at four different possible scenarios: two different “business as usual” scenarios, a “stabilized world,” and “comprehensive technology,” in which humanity is able to innovate its way out of environmental constraints using technological development.

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Both “business usual scenarios” sparked a global collapse within the 21st century, one through the depletion of natural resources and the other through pollution, climate change, and/or environmental devastation. Comprehensive technology was able to avoid a total collapse within the century, although eventually declines in human welfare were caused due to the rising cost of technology.

The stabilized world scenario, in which the world has dramatically changed societal values and priorities, saw the human population stabilize by the end of the 21st century and living standards were maintained. 

Above all, Herrington’s work affirms that the 50-year-old forecasts were surprisingly accurate, and it appears the world is still not on a path to a stable world. If there’s one glimmer of hope, the work does suggest that a stabilized world and an optimistic future are still within our grasp. However, to achieve this, radical changes will be needed. 

“Hidden behind a seemingly ambiguous outcome of two best fit scenarios that marginally align closer than the other two, hails the message that it’s not yet too late for humankind to change course and alter the trajectory of future data points,” Herrington wrote in a LinkedIn post describing her work.  

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“We have another choice. Although SW [stabilized world] tracks least closely, a deliberate trajectory change is still possible. That window of opportunity is closing fast.”

The findings are reported in the Journal of Industrial Ecology.

An earlier version of this article was published in July 2021.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

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Source Link: In 1972, MIT Scientists Predicted A "Global Collapse" This Century: Data May Prove Them Correct

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