IT’S scary to watch the video from Japan, and not just because of the frightening explosions at the Fukushima plant or the unstoppable surge of tsunami-wash through the streets. It’s almost as unnerving to see the aftermath — the square kilometres of rubble, with boats piled on cars; the completely bare supermarket shelves.

What the events reveal is the thinness of the margin on which modernity lives. There’s not a country in the world more modern and civilised than Japan; its building codes and engineering prowess kept its great buildings from collapsing when the much milder quake in Haiti last year flattened everything. But clearly it’s not enough. That thin edge on which we live provided nowhere near enough buffer against the power of the natural world.

We’re steadily narrowing the margin. Global warming didn’t cause the earthquake and tsunami that devastated the Miyagi coast, but it is shrinking the leeway on which civilisation everywhere depends. Consider: sea levels have begun to rise. We’re seeing record temperatures that depress harvests — the amount of grain per capita has been falling for years. Because warm air holds more water vapour than cold, the chance of severe flooding keeps going up: countries from Pakistan to Australia have recently ended up on the wrong side of those odds.

Those changes steadily eat away at that safety margin. With less food stored in our warehouses, each harvest becomes critical. With each massive flood, we have to spend more money rebuilding what was there before: there are still as many as four million homeless from Pakistan’s floods, which means ‘development’ has given way to ‘getting a tarp over your head’.

Even rich countries face this trouble. Just the increasing cost of insurance can be a big drag on economies: a study by Harvard and Swiss Re found that even in rich nations such as the US, larger and more frequent storms could “overwhelm adaptive capacities”. The bottom line was that, “in effect, parts of developed countries would experience developing nation conditions for prolonged periods”.

There have always been natural disasters, and there always will be. For 10,000 years the planet has been by and large benign; you could tell where the safe margin for civilisation was. But if the sea level rises a metre, that margin shrinks considerably: on a beach that slopes in at one degree, the sea is nearly 90 metres nearer. And it’s not just a literal shrinkage — the insecurity that comes with smaller food stocks or more frequent floods also takes a psychological toll.

We can try to deal with this in two ways. One is to attempt to widen it with more technology. If the Earth’s temperature is rising, maybe we could ‘geoengineer’ the planet, tossing sulphur into the atmosphere in an effort to block incoming sunlight. It’s theoretically possible. But researchers warn it could do more harm than good.

The other possibility is to try to build down a little: to focus on resilience, on safety. And to do that — here’s the controversial part — instead of focusing on growth. What would that mean? Buses and bikes and trains, not SUVs. Local food. Having learned that banks are ‘too big to fail’, we might guess that our food and energy systems fall into that same category.

Imagine, for instance, a nation that got most of its power from rooftop solar panels knitted together in a vast distributed grid. It would take investment to get there — we’d have to divert money from other tasks, slowing some kinds of growth.

In the end, though, you’d have not only less carbon in the atmosphere, but also a country far less failure-prone. Such changes wouldn’t make the world safe: climatologists promise us we’ve already put enough carbon out there to raise our planet’s temperature two degrees in the decades to come, which will make for a miserably difficult century. But they also promise that if we don’t stop burning coal and oil, that number will double, and miserable will become impossible.

With Japan’s horror still unfolding, there’s nothing to do for the moment except watch, pray and try to find some small ways to help people caught up in forces beyond their control. But the lesson we should learn, perhaps, is that it’s time to back off a little. Those plain words — ‘durable’, ‘stable’, ‘robust’ — sound sweeter to the ear.

— The Guardian, London

Opinion

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