WORLD DEVELOPMENT PROBLEMS: YOU CANNOT SOLVE THESE PROBLEMS WITH THE SAME THINKING THAT CREATED THEM Dr. Hans R Herren President Millennium Institute April.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
THE GHANA POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY Integration and Progress of Environmental Issues By Winfred Nelson NDPC November
Advertisements

Monitoring the Transition Towards a Green Economy
Science for the MDGs: The need for new policy development tools and methods Hans R. Herren AAAS.
Sustainable Development: Thinking Outside the Box Dr. John Shilling Chairman Board of Trustees Millennium Institute May 16, 2012 You cannot solve the problem.
EuropeanCommission Carbon, Food Security and Sustainable Development Carbon, Food Security and Sustainable Development MRV systems for carbon in soils.
The economics of climate change: the messages to Africa Presentation for the CDM DNA Forum Addis Ababa, 6 th October 2007 Hannah Muthoni Ryder.
PARTNERSHIP S IN SUPPORT OF CAADP Vision for next 10 years: Commitments to Sustain the CAADP Momentum Martin Bwalya
Macro Economic Policy Analysis Applications Dr. John Shilling Millennium Institute January 28, 2013 You cannot solve the problem with the same thinking.
“The Green Economy and the Caribbean: Issues, Ideas and Initiatives” Launch of the Caribbean Green Economy Action Learning Group Nicole Leotaud Caribbean.
Simulation Models, ICTs, and Decision Making Dr. John Shilling Millennium Institute January 28, 2013 You cannot solve the problem with the same thinking.
Scenario 2 "Future water use and the challenge of hydropower development in Western Balkan" February 2013, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Maradan| © Ecosys PEI | Poverty-Environment Initiative | UNEP - UNDP Economic assessment of poverty and environment linkages in Mozambique Maputo, VIP.
FAO Investment Centre Making Investments in AWM Work TCI Investment Days 17 December 2014 Rome Dr Zhijun Chen TCIB.
Policy formulation and evaluation Combining society, economy and environment - A Green Economy Perspective Dr. Andrea M. Bassi Deputy Director, Millennium.
Towards an integrated South African Green Economy Model (SAGEM)
Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance IAASTD: From Johannesburg to Rio+20
1 Capacity Development for Water and Food Security Dr. Jens Liebe UN-Water Decade Programme on Capacity Development (UNW-DPC) GEOSS S+T Stakeholder Workshop.
PRESENTATION ON GREEN ECONOMY OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES BY PETER J.DERY DEPUTY DIRECTOR MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENT,SCIENCE,TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION GHANA.
Matteo Pedercini Millennium Institute, Washington D.C. System Dynamics for Urban Sustainability Analysis.
Climate Change & Green Jobs Decent Work In A Sustainable Low-Carbon World May 17/2007 Roberto Ocon Occupational and Environmental Health & Safety Specialist.
Derek Eaton Division of Technology, Industry & Economics Economics & Trade Branch Geneva, Switzerland “Designing the Green Economy” Centre for International.
The Resilient Coasts Initiative A Partnership Response.
System of Environmental-Economic Accounting SEEA Implementation Guide and Diagnostic Tool Alessandra Alfieri UNSD.
Green Economy Initiative Derek Eaton UNEP UNCEEA, June 2010.
Post Rio+20: What data and monitoring needs? Maria Martinho UNDESA/Division for Sustainable Development (DSD)
Land as a Resource State of play 5 March Land as a Resource: at the crossroad of objectives 1 and 2 of 7 th Environmental Action Programme (EAP)
“The Green Economy and the Caribbean: Issues, Ideas and Initiatives” Launch of the Caribbean Green Economy Action Learning Group Nicole Leotaud Caribbean.
Introduction to the Session 6 - Theme 4 – on “Water Resources Management and Governance”
R ISK MANAGEMENT : A POWERFUL INSTRUMENT FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT S ADEGH B AKHTIARI (2014) Roxane Doll - Noëlia Collado 1.
Center for International Climate and Environmental Research-Oslo: Research Priorities and Interest in China Lin Gan SINCIERE Member Workshop October 19,
Towards an integrated approach for implementing the SDGs within National Planning Processes: Cross-country Experiences of Integrated Approaches, Opportunities.
Panel on Water, Food and Energy Overview of the Water & Energy issues and their linkages with food Richard Taylor, Executive Director, International Hydropower.
UNITED NATIONS ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA NORTH AFRICA OFFICE Sustainable development in North Africa interactions between the three economic, social.
Natural England State of the Natural Environment, Strategic Direction refresh, and Manifesto Dr Helen Phillips, Chief Executive, Natural England.
Global Strategy to Improve Agricultural Statistics Food and Agriculture June 22, 2009 Organization.
ICTs Tackling Climate Changes Dr. Amr Badawi Executive President NTRA.
Integrated Approach to Climate Change in Bangladesh Jed Shilling, Chairman Board of Trustees DFID -- October 7, 2009 You cannot.
DO NOW Journal Entry – answer the following: Journal Entry – answer the following: What is environmental science?
SESSION 2: Making the case for public investment in SLM.
Investment in Sustainable Natural Resource Management (focus: Agriculture) increases in agricultural productivity have come in part at the expense of deterioration.
ODA and EU recent financing initiatives Biodiversity Unit, DG Environment, European Commission CBD Dialogue Seminar on Scaling up biodiversity financing,
Policy Issues Facing the Food, Agriculture and Rural Sectors and Implications for Agricultural Statistics Mary Bohman and Mary Ahearn Economic Research.
Antonis Constantinou Director, Rural Development Programmes II DG Agriculture and Rural Development, European Commission DEVELOPING A VISION ON THE FUTURE.
8 TH -11 TH NOVEMBER, 2010 UN Complex, Nairobi, Kenya MEETING OUTCOMES David Smith, Manager PEI Africa.
Kyrgyzstan priorities in environment protection B. Tolongutov, Director, State Regulation Center on Environment Protection & Ecological Safety Sector State.
Agriculture: Transforming Farming Systems for Food & Climate Security & Sustainable Rural Development The new policy and institutional environment from.
T21 Millennium Institute Systems Know-How and Tools to wise, inclusive and equitable SDGs 2.0 Hans R. Herren President Millennium Institute
Outreach Event for the AR5 Kampala, Uganda August Balgis Osman-Elasha (PhD) Lead Author, Chapter 14- IPCC AR5 Adaptation options, needs, opportunities.
PRESENTATION ON ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME (UNEP) SUMMIT IMPLEMENTATION REVIEW GROUP (SIRG)OEA/Ser.E First Regular.
Assessing Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate-related Risks A Flavour of SEI Activities Stockholm Environment Institute Frank Thomalla with contributions.
1 Bringing Global Thinking to Local Sustainability Efforts: A Collaborative Project for the Boston Region James Goldstein Tellus Institute.
Dr. Hans R. Herren President Millennium Institute Founder & Chairman of Biovision Foundation How.
1 SDGs – National and Sub-national Implementation and Indicators International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD)
Seventh Meeting of the UN Committee of Experts on Environmental-Economic Accounting (UNCEEA) Rio de Janeiro, 12 June 2012 Ecosystem Accounts – International.
Strategic opportunities for sustainable crop production: FAO Perspective Gavin Wall, Director and OiC, Plant Production and Protection Division, FAO.
Six global challenges were identified in policy for development cooperation: Oppression Economic exclusion Migration flows Climate change and environmental.
Country over-arching strategies for inclusive, green economy approaches Usman Iftikhar UNDP New York.
Dr. Sarah A. H Olembo, Technical expert and advisor-SPS and Food safety, RURAL ECONOMY and AGRICULTURE, AFRICAN UNION COMMISSION ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA.
Pillars of Sustainable Development: Opportunities for Rio + 20 Collaborating Centers Meeting 2011 Carlos Corvalan Sustainable Development and Environmental.
Integrated Development and Climate Policies: How to realize benefits at national and international level? 20 – 22 September 2006, Paris, France Development.
| Paul Lucas 1 Future energy system challenges for Africa: Insights from Integrated Assessment Models 1 st Africa Sustainable Development Forum.
ORGANIC AGRICULTURE AND ECOLOGICAL ECONOMY: A WAY FORWARD IN AGRICULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY Dragiša Milošev, Srđan Šeremešić, Milorad Živanov, Bosiljka Todić.
State of the Global Change Grand Challenge Report to the Portfolio Committee on Science and Technology 15 September 2010.
International Union for Conservation of Nature Conserving biodiversity Pioneering nature’s solutions to global challenges.
An Evaluation Agenda for USAID’s Global Climate Change Initiative
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY OF THE REPUBLIC OF TAJIKISTAN UNTIL 2030
Rural Proofing Martin Scheele
Rural Proofing Martin Scheele
Power and Decision Making In INRM
Presentation transcript:

WORLD DEVELOPMENT PROBLEMS: YOU CANNOT SOLVE THESE PROBLEMS WITH THE SAME THINKING THAT CREATED THEM Dr. Hans R Herren President Millennium Institute April 18, 2012 Knowledge, Technology, and Social Systems Seminar at Columbia University

The Millennium Institute MI was established in 1983 to promote holistic, long- term strategic planning based on lessons learned in Global 2000 MI’s Vision is to help countries and people reduce poverty, increase sustainable growth, and improve living standards MI’s Mission is to achieve this by Providing countries tools for better strategic decision making Helping them convert strategic visions into achievable sustainable development plans with the tools Building capacity in countries to use the tools so they can achieve their development goals sooner Incorporating stakeholders’ concerns into the process

Our experience Sustainable strategic development, customized models, and reports Assisted many countries CC Mitigation and Adaptation: USA, China, Denmark, Ecuador. Bhutan, Bangladesh, Kenya Energy: USA, North America, China, Denmark, Mozambique, Jamaica, Ecuador, ECOWAS Poverty, MDGs, Malaria, HIV/AIDS: Ghana, Mali, Malawi, Mozambique, Jamaica, Bhutan, Swaziland, Kenya Natural disasters and External shocks: Jamaica, Mali, Mozambique, USA, Denmark Sustainable Development: Papua, Abu Dhabi, Maui, ECOWAS Business: GM, National Commission on Energy Policy Current activities: Swaziland, Mauritius, Senegal, Ohio, Maui, Abu Dhabi, China, USA, GM, Mongolia, UNEP GER, ECOWAS, Namibia, Malaysia Post conflict: West Balkan

MI Around the World T 21 Countries MI Partner MI Head Office M 3 Countries MEG Countries

The need for sustainability Human survival depends on natural resources and ecosystems, as do our societies and economies In the 21 st Century, we have reached the limits of environmental sustainability and must adapt Climate change, resulting from expanded economic activities, is a major example of the risk we face Others include food, water, and energy security, protecting our eco-systems. Continuing business-as-usual leads to serious problems as our footprint exceeds the Earth’s capacity We need to make transformations at all levels in order to assure sustainability for this and the next generations

The development challenges Managing energy and natural resources to assure the sustainability of the ecological foundation Enabling social structures and governance to function equitably Providing social and environmental services as well economic growth to reduce poverty Taking account of the vital interactions among the Economic, Environmental, and Social factors Adapting to climate change and protecting the environment requires serious and urgent changes in our economic and social activities

…more challenges challenges Economies and societies depend on energy and natural resources – the foundation of development Economies depend on social structures and governance to function equitably Reducing poverty requires social and environmental services as well economic growth Economic, Environmental, and Social factors all interact, which poses challenges and risks Climate change results from economic and social activities and raises hurdles for sustainability Exponential growth exceeding global footprint

How best address these challenges Understand real relations in the situations we face, within and beyond economics Take account of interactions and feedback loops across different sectors and from different policies Manage depletion of natural capital and allocate resources to investment in human and appropriate physical capital Take account of longer term effects and lags Examine the results of different assumptions, investments, and policies to make better decisions This needs to be done at the country level, where the key policy decisions are made, but in the context of the global commons

Factors to take into account Economic and social externalities –Impacts of depletion of resources – forests, fish, minerals –Impacts of waste and pollution on health and resources –Impacts of urban development on land and water Public Goods and the Global Commons –Climate change impacts and clean air –Water scarcity –Access to resources and biosystem protection Assuring wellbeing of all humans and bio-systems How to keep track of all these factors

….so far Growth based models Focus on market economics –Promotion of free trade –Attention to GDP/capita, not Gini coefficient or well being/happiness –Assumption private sector is efficient –Lack of attention to governance –Ignoring externalities and commons –Potential sources of conflicts

Limitation of usual tools Conventional models focus on sector specific and beneficial economic results, assuming markets work Normal economic models –Accounting models –Econometric models –Simultaneous solution models: CGEs They typically take a short term or comparative static view without attention to the environment or social externalities or equity and the Gini coefficient Environmental models provide information about climate change and other environmental factors, but few economic impacts More comprehensive approach is needed

A complementary, “Systemic and integrated” approach It can take account of the relations among economic, social, and environmental issues comprehensively –Economic activities affect society and the environment (ie, Pollution, GHG emissions, etc.) –Social activities affect the economy and environment (ie, Migration, deforestation, etc.) –Environmental factors affect the economy and society (ie, Soil erosion, heat waves, floods, etc.) It can incorporate any factor considered important It illustrates how activities in any sector can effect other sectors: direct and indirect -- good and bad It takes account of lags before impacts are evident, which many be many years

Why take a systemic view?

…we need to be careful

...and avoid unintended consequences

System dynamics methodology  Based on existing sector analyses  Reflects observed real world relations  Analyzes cross-sector links and feedback loops Composed of three main pillars  Economic -- SAM, key market balances, and production  Social -- dynamics in population, health, HIV/AIDS, education  Environmental -- area specific issues and information The Threshold 21 model

The Threshold 21 model cont’d Adapted to priority goals and vision for each individual country based on its own data, structure, and patterns of activity Highlights inter-sectoral feedbacks Tracks progress on MDGs (soon the SDGs) and other indicators Calibrated against history to provide reality checks Generates multiple medium-to-long-term scenarios Transparent and easy to use

The basic T21 structure

The key connections in T21

First steps in SD model development Identify key variables in area of focus Establish basic links Determine causal relations and quantify relations Extend to additional variables to give more complete picture - both input and output Initial example with MDGs

Examples of T21 Work USA T21 model and CAFE standards (+game) China (T21 and sector models on GHG emissions) Jamaica (full T21 and natural disasters) Bhutan (equitable distribution of public expenditures) Mozambique and other countries (megaprojects) UNEP (Green Economy Report models (+game)) Climate Change adaptation policies (Kenya, Namibia, Mozambique, BF, Mali, Sénégal, etc.)

Work on CC Adaptation Include impacts of changes in temperature and rainfall patterns Assess impacts on water, energy, helath and food security Illustrate effects of different coping policies to address these issues Builds local capacity to deal with these issues over the longer term (changing conditions)

T21 and sector models China Work with GM and early country model Expanded to Cement and Steel sectors on GHG emissions Now covers full economy with focus on energy and productivity Shows importance of life style change as well as technology change to meet China’s goal of reducing GHG/GDP emissions Link with the PADIS population model

Bhutan and Ghana Bhutan, –promoting cooperation among ministries to help Gross National Happiness index Ghana –Coordinating sector programs aimed at MDGs could reduce the cost of achieving them by 15% and increase growth

T21 Jamaica Sponsored by PIOJ for 2030 Strategy Learned about several unexpected factors, like the effect of Crime on industry and tourism Included effects of natural disasters Still being used and expanded by the Jamaica Team

UNEP and the GER GER focus: positive macro economic effects of green investments, jobs etc. Model applied in twelve sectors and global scale Incorporate links across sectors, and within them Demonstrates effects of Green investments and shows long term benefits compared to BAU Helps policymakers follow greener paths

Example for LT: Conventional model of agriculture is ecologically and economically unsustainable “GR is linear thinking” David Tilman et al. Science 2001

Grain Unctad 2011 GHG contribution of agriculture

-50%-15% 0% +35%+15% 2080 CC impact on and of agriculture

Biodiversity loss (just when we need it)

Waste of natural resources ( GR bases is also socially unsustainable)

Sustainable Un-sustainable Low productivity High productivity Transitioning: ….. sustainable, organic, agroecological, resilient, equitable agriculture

SD in the field :“Push – Pull” approach, makes ecological sense….

Ecological agriculture the main solution: Multifunctionality paradigm for sustainable development sustainable viable livable equitable

Thinking in system: in agriculture….

Global investments across sectors (1% and 2% of GDP, Stern report); 0.1% and 0.16% of GDP invested in agriculture for: - Pre harvest losses (training activities and effective bio- pesticide use) - Ag management practices (cover transition costs from till to no till, organic, agroecological agriculture, training, access to small scale mechanization and irrigation) - R&D (research in soil science and agronomy, crop improvement (orphan crops), appropriate mechanization, irrigation, and more) - Food processing (better storage and processing in rural areas, efficient processing, marketing) A system model for the transition: scenarios from the UNEP GER ag chapter 2011

…some results (UNEP GER Report – 2011), Investing 0.1% or 0.16% of total GDP ($83-$141 Billion) / year Year ScenarioUnit BaselineGreen BAU Ag productionBn US$/Yr1,9212,8522,559 CropsBn US$/Yr EmploymentM People1,0751,7031,656 Soil qualityDmnl Ag water useKM3/Yr3,3893,2074,878 Harvested landBn ha DeforestationM ha/Yr Calories p/c/day for consumption Kcal/C/D2,

Strengths of Dynamic Approach Provides a transparent tool to unite various parties around consistent policies and build support for necessary actions. Helps link short- medium- and long-term planning to assure more sustainable policy choices Identifies needed behavioral changes that influence all society, economic, and environmental spheres. Provides scenarios, not perfect projections

Promoting Cooperation T21 is a tool to bring stakeholders together Builds support by taking account of each party’s concerns Generates integrated scenarios, compares them and visualizes the results Helps understand synergies and negative feedbacks to reach consensus Would be valuable for OneUN

Thank You Questions and comments are welcome You cannot solve the problem with the same kind of thinking that created the problem Albert Einstein

“MI’s integrated dynamic models have been vital for GM’s sales forecasts” Paul Ballew, GM “MI’s long-term, integrated perspective is essential” Pablo Guerrero, World Bank “MI’s T21 analytical tool is essential for effective national development strategies” Ed Cain, Carter Center Fascinating! David Cohen, Counterparts International If only we had known such a tool existed…. Chorus of planning experts from 11 countries in Southern Africa We need to use this tool at the Headquarters, in our embassies and help our country partner acquire it… Dutch Ambassador Ton Boon von Ochsen I want that T 21 planning team in my office… Président Amadou T Touré, Mali It has been my dream since ten years to get the the POIJ departments to work together…now its happening with T21; With T21 I can see team building and networking across the ministries and government agencies and effective communication Wesley Hugh, Director Planning office Jamaica What Partners and Clients Are Saying

My Experience with Development 16 years with the CGIAR (R&D, CB Africa) 11 years ICIPE 6 years CGIAR Science Council Co-Chair IAASTD President and Founder Biovision Foundation for Ecological Development, President Millennium Institute, 2005-