What rise in temperature can plants and living beings cope with? What levels of ocean acidification and deforestation are acceptable? In 2009, the Planetary Boundaries project investigated how much pressure the Earth’s ecosystems can tolerate before becoming unbalanced.
Led by scientist Johan Rockström, climate and environmental researchers designed a model for assessing the impact of global environmental changes. Threshold limits were defined for nine natural systems to consider developments such as climate change (measured by the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere), ozone depletion, land use change (measured by the proportion of forest area), water conditions and decline in biodiversity.
If humanity wants to continue to maintain stable ecosystems and an environment worth living in, it should not exceed these limits. “They created a kind of alarm system for the planet,” says ethicist Simon Meisch from the University of Tübingen. The concept of Planetary Boundaries has been much discussed since then. It also influenced debate on the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Despite this political relevance, there is hardly any literature that systematically examines the ethical implications of planetary boundaries, as Jeremy Schmidt from Queen Mary University of London reports. Schmidt and Meisch began work on the “Planetary Ethics” project to close this gap.
Dr. Simon Meisch, a political scientist and ethicist, works at the International Center for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities (IZEW) at the University of Tübingen. Jeremy Schmidt was an associate professor of geography at Durham at the beginning of the project and now teaches environmental geography at Queen Mary University of London. As part of the Planetary Ethics project, Schmidt and Meisch held discussions with researchers from the humanities, natural and social sciences, political consultants and artists worldwide.