As of Today, Humanity Has Exhausted its 2015 Supply of Natural Resources
As of Thursday, August 13, human beings have officially exhausted the planet’s yearly supply of natural resources, meaning that for the rest of 2015, earth will be running an “ecological deficit”—accumulating carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and depleting the planet for future generations.
This is the disturbing estimate of the Global Footprint Network (GFN), which calculates the planet’s “overshoot day” on an annual basis. The troubling milestone comes less than eight months into 2015 and six days earlier than last year’s—a symptom of what the organization warns is a “looming catastrophe.”
“We have a metabolism problem,” Mathis Wackernagel, president of GFN, told Common Dreams. “In the end, the biggest knowledge gap we have is whether physical reality matters or not. Most of the planning we do assumes resource reality is a minor issue.”
“Earth Overshoot Day” is calculated by dividing the biocapacity of the planet—defined by the group as “the ability of an ecosystem to regenerate biological resources and absorb wastes generated by humans”—by humanity’s overall ecological footprint, and then multiplying this ratio by 365.
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT