A network of global rifts

Facing the Anthropocene: An Update

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Recent scientific work strengthens and extends the arguments in Ian Angus’s pathbreaking book on fossil capitalism and the crisis of the Earth System

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by Ian Angus

I’ve been pleased and deeply honored by the international response to my book Facing the Anthropocene: Fossil Capitalism and  the Crisis of the Earth System (Monthly Review Press, 2016). Now in its fourth printing in the US, it has also been published in India by Aakar Books, in French by Éditions Écosociété, in Italian by Asterios Editore, and in German by Unrast Verlag.

I wrote this Update for the German edition, which was published in August. An article adapted from it appears in the November issue of Monthly Review.


(Canada, April 2020) I wrote this book to help bridge the gap between Earth System science and ecosocialism — to show socialists why they must understand the Anthropocene, and to show Earth System scientists why they must understand ecological Marxism. I am honored that Unrast Verlag is making it available in German, and I hope it will expand dialogue at the intersections of science and socialism.

When Facing the Anthropocene was published in 2016, it reflected, to the best of my ability, the state of scientific knowledge and debate at the time. But the world does not stand still, so it may be helpful to outline some important recent developments in Anthropocene science in the two main fields involved: geology, which has mainly been concerned with formally defining the new epoch; and Earth System science, which studies the global biological, chemical and physical changes that are reshaping the conditions of life on this planet.

Formalization

As I discuss in Chapter 3, geologists have divided the Earth’s 4.5 billion years into a hierarchy of eons, eras, periods, epochs and ages — divisions which reflect major changes in the dominant conditions and forms of life on Earth, as revealed in geological strata. The procedures for changing the Geological Time Scale, developed over two centuries, are rigorous and time-consuming: it isn’t unusual for a proposed change to be investigated and debated for decades before a decision is made.

By 2016, a clear majority in the Anthropocene Working Group favored recognizing a new epoch, but they needed more specifically stratigraphic evidence before a formal proposal could be made to geology’s governing bodies, where a required 60% majority vote is required to approve any change to the Geological Time Scale. Subsequent research has focused on two questions.

When did the Anthropocene begin? In May 2019, after extensive evaluation of multiple possibilities, 88% of AWG members voted that a new epoch began in the mid-twentieth century. That was a binding vote, so the other possibilities discussed in Chapter 3 are now off the table.

What physical evidence in the geological strata — known informally as a “golden spike” — is the best indicator for the new beginning of the new epoch? Many possibilities are being considered, each with advantages and disadvantages. For example, a 2018 study discusses multiple examples of “Anthropocene deposits” in England alone, including radioactive fallout, plastics, ash from fossil fuels, concrete, and various chemical pollutants that leave long-lasting and readily identifiable traces. All were rare or non-existent before the second world war, and all have been widely deposited since.[1]

Another recent article proposes the remains of modern broiler chickens, which are “morphologically, genetically and isotopically distinct from domestic chickens prior to the mid-twentieth century … [and] vividly symbolize the transformation of the biosphere to fit evolving human consumption patterns, and show clear potential to be a biostratigraphic marker species of the Anthropocene.”[2]

A golden spike must unambiguously identify the beginning of the new epoch and must be accessible for study by geologists, now and in the future. Choosing one that will be accepted by geologists around the world — a community which is scientifically conservative about timescale changes — will require detailed geological research. AWG chair Jan Zalasiewicz describes the work as “extensive, fiddly and expensive,” and says that “it probably won’t be until late 2022, at the earliest, before the data is collected and collated so that the proposal can be formulated properly.”[3] The Covid-19 pandemic may delay that further.

Beyond geology

It is important to bear in mind that the debates over formal acceptance of the Anthropocene are specific to geology. In other Earth sciences, the idea that a qualitatively new stage in planetary history has begun is now widely accepted, and has become a key part of analysis of global change.

In 2018, for example, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said that the “overarching context” for its report on the impact of 1.5ºC warming is that “human influence has become a principal agent of change on the planet, shifting the world out of the relatively stable Holocene period into a new geological era, often termed the Anthropocene. Responding to climate change in the Anthropocene will require approaches that integrate multiple levels of inter-connectivity across the global community.”[4]

In the IPCC’s view, “the Anthropocene offers a structured understanding of the culmination of past and present human-environmental relations and provides an opportunity to better visualize the future to minimize pitfalls, while acknowledging the differentiated responsibility and opportunity to limit global warming and invest in prospects for climate-resilient sustainable development.”[5]

Such statements mark an important advance in the IPCC’s approach to climate change, going beyond that single (very important) issue to viewing it as part of the global emergency that threatens society’s metabolic relationship with the rest of the Earth System — the core issue in Anthropocene science.

Does Anthropocene science blame all humanity?

In the Appendix to Facing the Anthropocene, I showed that Earth System scientists have repeatedly rejected claims that “everyone is responsible” for climate change. But, apparently because the word Anthropocene is derived from the Greek word anthropos, meaning human being, some critics continue to charge that Anthropocene science blames all of humanity for the global environmental crisis. Some even claim that naming the new epoch Anthropocene is part of a deliberate effort to distract attention from capitalism’s responsibility.

Anyone who still believes that should read two recent scientific papers.

In August 2018, leading Anthropocene scientists wrote: “different societies around the world have contributed differently and unequally to pressures on the Earth System and will have varied capabilities to alter future trajectories.” In their supplementary information section they add: “the wealthiest one billion people produce 60% of GHGs [Greenhouse Gases] whereas the poorest three billion produce only 5%.”[6]

Even more decisively, Will Steffen, who led the research programs that identified and defined the Anthropocene, has directly challenged the common claim that population growth is a major driver of the Great Acceleration. In a 2019 book edited by members of the Anthropocene Working Group, he pointed out that “nearly all of the population growth from 1950 to 2010 occurred in the BRICS and poor countries … [and] in 2010, the 18% of the world’s population that lives in OECD countries accounted for 74% of global economic activity. He concluded that  “industrial capitalists of the wealthy countries, not ‘mankind as a whole,’ are largely responsible for the Anthropocene, as seen in the Great Acceleration patterns.”[7]

These may not be perfect ecosocialist analyses, but they certainly explode the myth that Anthropocene science blames everyone. Let’s put that confusion to rest.

Towards Hothouse Earth?

Continuing research in Earth System science is producing ever more evidence confirming, as the radical environmentalist Barry Commoner wrote 50 years ago, that “the present system of production is self-destructive; the present course of human civilization is suicidal.” Here are some examples from recently published studies:

  • Global heating: The hottest five years on record were 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019.
  • Biodiversity: Land-insect populations have fallen 25% since 1990.
  • Arctic Ocean: Summer ice cover is declining by nearly 13% a year.
  • Fish: About 90% of marine fish populations are now fully exploited, overexploited or depleted.
  • Land destruction. Depending on location, fertile soil is being eroded between 10 and 100 times faster than new soil can form.
  • Deforestation: On average, an area of tree cover the size of the United Kingdom was lost every year from 2014 to 2018.

This list could be extended at great length — almost every part of the biosphere is being degraded at unprecedented rates. But the Anthropocene involves more than an accumulation of environmental problems. It is a crisis of the Earth System — disruption of the global biological, chemical and physical processes that constantly interact and in which a change to any part can affect the rest. Some of the most important current research focuses on the potential for climate-stressed processes to destabilize each other, leading to feedback cascades that could disrupt the entire system.

A 2018 report signed by sixteen of the world’s leading Earth System scientists examined possible effects of global warming on the complex cycles and feedbacks that shape the entire planet. They identified ten processes that have global impacts and that could be radically accelerated by relatively small temperature increases, including thawing permafrost, release of ocean floor methane hydrates, weakened land and oceanic CO2 absorption, increasing bacterial respiration in the oceans, dieback of Amazon and/or boreal forests, reduced northern snow cover, loss of Arctic and/or Antarctic sea ice, and melting of polar ice sheets.

Any one of these could substantially accelerate global warming by itself, and if one passes a tipping point, it may trigger a “tipping cascade,” that permanently accelerates others. “For example, tipping (loss) of the Greenland Ice Sheet could trigger a critical transition in the Atlantic Meridional Ocean Circulation (AMOC), which could together, by causing sea-level rise and Southern Ocean heat accumulation, accelerate ice loss from the East Antarctic Ice Sheet.”

If such a cascade happens, the Earth could be propelled unstoppably toward “a much higher global average temperature than any interglacial in the past 1.2 million years and to sea levels significantly higher than at any time in the Holocene.” The resulting “Hothouse Earth” would experience “conditions that would be inhospitable to current human societies and to many other contemporary species.”[8]

Another study published in Science examined how major shifts in 30 different natural systems could affect each other. They found that in 45% of cases, exceeding a tipping point in one system can push others over the edge. “Regional ecosystems can be transformed by ecosystem management far away and, conversely, can themselves drive the transformations of other distant ecosystems.”[9]

And an article in Nature in 2019 addressed “the growing threat of abrupt and irreversible climate changes.” The authors concluded:

“If damaging tipping cascades can occur and a global tipping point cannot be ruled out, then this is an existential threat to civilization. No amount of economic cost-benefit analysis is going to help us. We need to change our approach to the climate problem….

“The intervention time left to prevent tipping could already have shrunk towards zero, whereas the reaction time to achieve net zero emissions is 30 years at best. Hence we might already have lost control of whether tipping happens. A saving grace is that the rate at which damage accumulates from tipping — and hence the risk posed — could still be under our control to some extent.

“The stability and resilience of our planet is in peril. International action — not just words — must reflect this.”[10]

By firmly placing climate change in the context of the Anthropocene, studies such as these challenge the view that global warming can be solved by minor changes and market reforms. Incremental measures such as carbon pricing cannot possibly address the systemic problems that are relentlessly driving global temperatures upward and pushing the Earth into a new and unprecedented state in which the future of civilization itself is in peril.

In Facing the Anthropocene, I have tried to show how changes in capitalism during and after World War II caused the global changes that scientists have named the Great Acceleration. As a result, what Marx called “an irreparable rift in the interdependent process of social metabolism” has become an interrelated network of global rifts. The greatest challenge facing our generation is to heal those immense breaks in Earth’s life support systems before it is too late.


Notes

[1] Jan Zalasiewicz et al., “The stratigraphical signature of the Anthropocene in England and its wider context,” Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association, June 2018, 482-91.

[2] Carys E. Bennett et al., “The broiler chicken as a signal of a human reconfigured biosphere,” Royal Society Open Science, December 12, 2018.

[3] Private correspondence, April 23, 2022.

[4] Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Global Warming of 1.5ºC, 53.

[5] Ibid, 54.

[6] Will Steffen et al.,”Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). August 6, 2018, 8252-8259.

[7] Will Steffen, “Mid-20th-Century ‘Great Acceleration,’ in Jan Zalasiewicz et al., The Anthropocene as a Geological Time Unit, (Cambridge University Press, 2019), 254-60.

[8] Will Steffen et al., “Trajectories of the Earth System in the Anthropocene,” 8252-59.

[9] Juan C. Rocha et al., “Cascading regime shifts within and across scales,” Science, Dec 21, 2018, 1379-83.

[10] Timothy Lenton et al., “Climate tipping points — too risky to bet against,” Nature, Nov. 27, 2019, 592-95.