Green Shoots
by Jonathon Porritt
Can sustainability really hope to beat consumerism? Yes, and
all without a vow of poverty or a change in human nature
Sustainability is often described as a big idea in waiting.
In the pantheon of today’s big ideas, though, it’s still relatively small fry,
while the seductive appeal of consumerism has grown only more formidable over
the past few decades.
The governments of countries in the Organisation for
Economic Co‑operation and Development (OECD) depend more and more on
increased consumption to keep the engine of growth turning. Governments in
countries such as China, Brazil and Indonesia use its promise as a way to
maintain social stability. The harsh truth for the sustainability community is
that most citizens the world over seem more or less content with the conflation
of ‘better lives’ and ‘increased consumption’. For politicians, this is
powerful incantatory magic, reinforced at every turn by the hundreds of
billions of dollars that are spent each year on advertising and marketing. The
devils of consumerism still have all the best tunes.
In the world of non-governmental organisations (NGOs), on
the other hand, things have got very stuck. The field is dominated by what I
can only describe as ‘minority mindsets’; the kind of people who assume that,
if the science says that we’re heading into a dark place for the whole of
humankind (and believe me, it does), reason alone will suffice to win broad
acceptance for change. This belief, naive as it has proven to be, has a very
disturbing counterpart. Many campaigners imagine that it will get easier to
change the behaviour of large swathes of society when things become
demonstrably more threatening and unstable – as if it wouldn’t be entirely too
late to do anything about it by then.
It’s depressing how many good discussions about these things
end in resigned and often fatalistic references to ‘human nature’. As I was
told the other day: ‘It doesn’t matter how much science or worthy exhortation
you chuck at the problem, it won’t make a jot of difference. You’re up against
much more powerful forces in human greed and self-interest.’
Psychologically, then, this is an extraordinary moment for
all those who care about creating a more sustainable world. Doom-and-gloom
advocacy appears to have run its course, and there’s convincing evidence that
the rhetoric of threats and fear actually disempowers as many people as it
energises.
If the NGOs have hit a dead end, politicians and business
leaders are stuck in a different respect. They’ve never played the doom and
gloom card anyway. ‘Can-do’ mindsets dominate the world of corporate
sustainability (though it is notable how many business people have concluded
that it is too late to prevent runaway climate change, even if they never say that
in public). As for the politicians, very few have successfully developed an
upbeat, positive way of ‘selling’ sustainability to their prospective voters.
If the discourse of doom is collapsing under the weight of
its own despair, what will take its place? It surely has to be something that
NGOs, governments and business can all get behind, albeit ‘messaged’ for very
different audiences. This is where a little hope creeps back into today’s
dismal picture. In this ‘spare me the apocalypse’ world, no fewer than three
narratives are vying for supremacy.
The first is not new. In fact, it’s as old as the hills in
which our original religious precepts were first developed. The gist is this:
live simply; find purpose beyond material consumption; be fulfilled in family,
friends and service to others. When the world’s religious leaders eventually
get the plot (laying claim, as they do, to the loyalties of most of human
beings on Earth), it is to this fundamental teaching that the optimist in me
believes they will return. And one can’t help but be impressed by some of the
early speeches from Pope Francis, ushering in a very modern take on what was
once described at ‘liberation theology’.
There are, however, rationales for the simple life that have
nothing to do with religion. In these constrained times, when young people
increasingly expect to be worse off than their parents, simplicity lends itself
to an ever more compelling secular justification: it is cheap. This is not an
argument that will sit comfortably with every interest group.
I doubt that politicians will go there unless they
absolutely have to, because it undermines the pursuit of conventional economic
growth as the measure of good things. Businesses will struggle to weld it onto
their ‘more is better’ philosophies, even though splendidly disruptive
campaigns from companies such Patagonia, Ecover, and the Brazilian group Natura
suggest that ‘smart brands’ could still thrive in such a world. But
cash-strapped, asset-poor young people might make it happen come what may.
Some politicians feel quite uncomfortable drawing on
religious or spiritual insights of this kind. There is, however, a second
alternative discourse that is likely to seem far more attractive to politicians
and the business community. This is the idea of a growth so lean, efficient,
low-carbon and waste-free that its economic benefits are entirely ‘decoupled’
from the negative impact of business-as-usual.
the appeal of this
way of thinking appears to be a no-brainer – we keep the cake and (temporarily,
at least) carry on eating it
Over the past decade, there has been a huge investment by
bodies such as the World Bank, the OECD, various UN agencies and even the
International Energy Agency to give this idea of ‘green growth’ traction. NGO
literature is awash with catchy related concepts such as ‘closed-loop
manufacturing’, ‘cradle-to-cradle’, ‘the circular economy’, ‘net positive’ and
so on, going right back to the original ‘Factor Four’ idea in 1997 (‘doubling
wealth, halving resource use’). For those politicians who have come to terms
with the physical impossibility of business-as-usual, the appeal of this way of
thinking would appear to be a no-brainer – we keep the cake and (temporarily,
at least) carry on eating it. The idea has caught on in Germany and
Scandinavia, and even China is now trying to find its own stability-enhancing
version of the green economy.
Unlike the ideal of simplicity, which poses a direct
challenge to everything that consumerism stands for, politicians can frame
green growth as a pro-consumer concept. All of which makes it remarkable that
centre-right governments in the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have
failed to seize hold of this opportunity to square the circle.
Will the third option fare any better? In this final
scenario, young people redefine aspiration to suit their hyper-connected
lifestyles. This means maximising the benefits of digital technology, saving
money without going down-market, still ‘keeping up with the Joneses’ but
without the kind of materialistic arms race that powered growth in the late
20th century.
At the heart of this new discourse lies the idea of
‘collaborative consumption’. Why buy your very own power drill at considerable
expense when you can rent one for a few hours? Why take on the hassle and
expense of owning a car when you can enjoy all the advantages simply by joining
a car club?
There’s now quite a buzz of excitement about this idea. It’s
positive and upbeat, and wins out every time over pious appeals to put on the
sackcloth and ashes. Personally, I’m not entirely persuaded that it will make
that much of a contribution to the radical decoupling that we now need, but it
will certainly help prepare the way for it. Most importantly, this discourse
acknowledges that most people remain mindful of their status and relative
position in their peer group. At the same time, it avoids the grotesque appeals
to excess and competitive consumption that lie so malevolently at the heart of
today’s marketing and advertising industries.
At its most exuberant, the idea of collaborative consumption
can be talked up into the kind of high-tech cornucopia that Peter Diamandis
captures so brilliantly in his book Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You
Think (2012). But it can also be articulated much more modestly, with the
emphasis on personal responsibility and compassion for others – in effect, a
digital, more aspirational variation on the discourse of voluntary simplicity.
Three alternative discourses, and politicians ought to be
able to make use of all of them, rather than sell their souls, election after
election, to the devilish call of Earth-trashing consumerism.
But 22 years since that ‘moment of truth’ at the 1992 Earth
Summit, when world leaders formally recognised that prosperity for 9 billion
people could not be secured using the same economic drivers that brought
prosperity to the first 1 billion, I am pretty disappointed at how little
progress has been made.
Still, the abiding truth of our times is that sustainability
and conventional consumption-driven economic growth are incompatible – and the
sooner we get good at coping with that reality, the rosier our prospects will
be. Sooner or later, our politicians will have to get good at re‑framing
the politics of the 21st century through a combination of these three lenses.
Jonathon Porritt is a founder and director of Forum for the
Future and the former director of Friends of the Earth. His latest book is The
World We Made (2013). He lives in Cheltenham.
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