A Just World On A Safe Planet: A Lancet Planetary Health–Earth Commission Report On Earth-System Boundaries, Translations, And Transformations
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Lancet Planet Health
Abstract
The health of the planet and its people are at risk. The
deterioration of the global commons—ie, the natural
systems that support life on Earth—is exacerbating
energy, food, and water insecurity, and increasing the risk
of disease, disaster, displacement, and conflict. In this
Commission, we quantify safe and just Earth-system
boundaries (ESBs) and assess minimum access to
natural resources required for human dignity and to
enable escape from poverty. Collectively, these describe a
safe and just corridor that is essential to ensuring
sustainable and resilient human and planetary health
and thriving in the Anthropocene. We then discuss
the need for translation of ESBs across scales to inform
science-based targets for action by key actors (and
the challenges in doing so), and conclude by identifying
the system transformations necessary to bring about a
safe and just future.
Our concept of the safe and just corridor advances
research on planetary boundaries and the justice and
Earth-system aspects of the Sustainable Development
Goals. We define safe as ensuring the biophysical
stability of the Earth system, and our justice principles
include minimising harm, meeting minimum access
needs, and redistributing resources and responsibili ties to enhance human health and wellbeing. The
ceiling of the safe and just corridor is defined by
the more stringent of the safe and just ESBs to mini mise significant harm and ensure Earth-system
stability. The base of the corridor is defined by
the impacts of minimum global access to food,
water, energy, and infrastructure for the global population, in the domains of the variables for which we
defined the ESBs. Living within the corridor is necessary, because exceeding the ESBs and not meeting basic
needs threatens human health and life on Earth.
However, simply staying within the corridor does not
guarantee justice because within the corridor resources
can also be inequitably distributed, aggravating human
health and causing environmental damage. Procedural
and substantive justice are necessary to ensure that
the space within the corridor is justly shared.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Gupta, J., Bai, X., Liverman, D. M., Rockstrom, J., Qin, D., Stewart-Koster, B., ... & Hasan, S. (2024). A just world on a safe planet: a lancet planetary health-earth commission report on earth-system boundaries, translations, and transformations. Lancet Planet Health 8 (10), e813–e873.
