The Limits to Growth: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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* Donella H. Meadows
* [[Donella H. Meadows]]
* Dennis L. Meadows
* [[Dennis L. Meadows]]
* Jørgen Randers
* [[Jørgen Randers]]
* [https://www.revisionenergy.com/solar-company/local-solar/our-people/william-behrens-phd William W. Behrens III]}}
* [https://www.revisionenergy.com/solar-company/local-solar/our-people/william-behrens-phd William W. Behrens III]}}
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'''''Die Grenzen des Wachstums''''' (oft abgekürzt mit '''''LTG''''') ist ein Bericht aus dem Jahr 1972, in dem die Möglichkeit eines exponentiellen Wirtschafts- und Bevölkerungswachstums bei endlichen Ressourcen erörtert und mittels Computersimulationen untersucht wurde. In der Studie wurde das World3-Computermodell verwendet, um die Folgen der Wechselwirkungen zwischen der Erde und den menschlichen Systemen zu simulieren. Das Modell basierte auf der Arbeit von Jay Forrester vom [[MIT]], die er in seinem Buch ''World Dynamics'' beschrieben hat.


Die Studie wurde vom Club of Rome in Auftrag gegeben und ihre Ergebnisse wurden erstmals im Sommer 1971 auf internationalen Treffen in Moskau und Rio de Janeiro vorgestellt. Die Autoren des Berichts sind Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jørgen Randers und William W. Behrens III, die ein Team von 17 Forschern vertreten.
'''''The Limits to Growth''''' (often abbreviated '''''LTG''''') is a 1972 report that discussed the possibility of exponential economic and population growth with finite supply of resources, studied by computer simulation. The study used the World3 computer model to simulate the consequence of interactions between the Earth and human systems. The model was based on the work of [[Jay Forrester]] of [[MIT]], as described in his book ''World Dynamics''.


Die Ergebnisse des Berichts deuten darauf hin, dass es ohne signifikante Änderungen in der Ressourcennutzung höchstwahrscheinlich zu einem abrupten und nicht zu bewältigenden Rückgang der Bevölkerung und der industriellen Kapazität kommen wird. Obwohl der Bericht bei seiner Veröffentlichung heftig kritisiert und hinterfragt wurde, hat er die Umweltreformen über Jahrzehnte beeinflusst. Nachfolgende Analysen stellen fest, dass die globale Nutzung natürlicher Ressourcen nicht ausreichend reformiert wurde, um das erwartete Ergebnis zu ändern. Die Preisvorhersagen, die auf der Knappheit der Ressourcen basieren, haben sich in den Jahren seit der Veröffentlichung nicht bewahrheitet.
Commissioned by the [[Club of Rome]], the study saw its findings first presented at international gatherings in Moscow and Rio de Janeiro in the summer of 1971. The report's authors are [[Donella H. Meadows]], [[Dennis L. Meadows]], [[Jørgen Randers]], and William W. Behrens III, representing a team of 17 researchers.


Seit seiner Veröffentlichung wurden etwa 30 Millionen Exemplare des Buches in 30 Sprachen gekauft. Es sorgt weiterhin für Diskussionen und war Gegenstand mehrerer Folgepublikationen.
The report's findings suggest that, in the absence of significant alterations in resource utilization, it is highly likely that there will be an abrupt and unmanageable decrease in both population and industrial capacity. Although it faced severe criticism and scrutiny upon its release, the report influenced environmental reforms for decades. Subsequent analysis notes that global use of natural resources has been inadequately reformed to alter its expected outcome. Yet price predictions based on resource scarcity failed to materialize in the years since publication.


Beyond the Limits" und "Die Grenzen des Wachstums: The 30-Year Update'' wurden 1992 bzw. 2004 veröffentlicht; 2012 wurde eine 40-Jahres-Prognose von Jørgen Randers, einem der ursprünglichen Autoren des Buches, als ''2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years'' veröffentlicht; und 2022 schlossen sich zwei der ursprünglichen ''Grenzen des Wachstums''-Autoren, Dennis Meadows und Jørgen Randers, mit 19 weiteren Autoren zusammen, um ''Limits and Beyond'' zu verfassen.
Since its publication, some 30 million copies of the book in 30 languages have been purchased. It continues to generate debate and has been the subject of several subsequent publications.
 
''Beyond the Limits'' and ''The Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update'' were published in 1992 and 2004 respectively; in 2012, a 40-year forecast from Jørgen Randers, one of the book's original authors, was published as ''2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years''; and in 2022 two of the original ''Limits to Growth'' authors, Dennis Meadows and Jørgen Randers, joined 19 other contributors to produce ''Limits and Beyond''.


[[File:Limits-to-growth-figure-35.svg|thumb|World3 Model Standard Run as shown in ''The Limits to Growth'']]
[[File:Limits-to-growth-figure-35.svg|thumb|World3 Model Standard Run as shown in ''The Limits to Growth'']]


==Zweck==
==Purpose==
Als der Club of Rome das MIT-Team mit dem Projekt beauftragte, das zu ''LTG'' führte, verfolgte er drei Ziele:
In commissioning the MIT team to undertake the project that resulted in ''LTG'', the [[Club of Rome]] had three objectives:
# Einblicke in die Grenzen unseres Weltsystems und die Beschränkungen, die es der menschlichen Zahl und Aktivität auferlegt, zu gewinnen.
# Gain insights into the limits of our world system and the constraints it puts on human numbers and activity.
# Die vorherrschenden Elemente und ihre Wechselwirkungen, die das langfristige Verhalten der Weltsysteme beeinflussen, zu identifizieren und zu untersuchen.
# Identify and study the dominant elements, and their interactions, that influence the long-term behavior of world systems.
# Warnung vor den wahrscheinlichen Folgen der gegenwärtigen Wirtschafts- und Industriepolitik, um einen Wandel hin zu einem nachhaltigen Lebensstil zu bewirken.
# To warn of the likely outcome of contemporary economic and industrial policies, with a view to influencing changes to a sustainable lifestyle.


==Methode==
==Method==
Das World3-Modell basiert auf fünf Variablen: "Bevölkerung, Nahrungsmittelproduktion, Industrialisierung, Umweltverschmutzung und Verbrauch von nicht erneuerbaren natürlichen Ressourcen". Zum Zeitpunkt der Studie nahmen alle diese Variablen zu und es wurde angenommen, dass sie weiterhin exponentiell wachsen würden, während die Fähigkeit der Technologie, die Ressourcen zu steigern, nur linear zunahm. Die Autoren beabsichtigten, die Möglichkeit eines nachhaltigen Rückkopplungsmusters zu erforschen, das durch die Veränderung der Wachstumstrends der fünf Variablen in drei Szenarien erreicht werden könnte. Sie wiesen darauf hin, dass ihre Projektionen für die Werte der Variablen in jedem Szenario nur Vorhersagen "im engsten Sinne des Wortes" waren und nur Hinweise auf die Verhaltenstendenzen des Systems darstellten. Zwei der Szenarien sahen ein "Überschießen und einen Zusammenbruch" des globalen Systems bis Mitte oder Ende des 21. Jahrhunderts, während ein drittes Szenario zu einer "stabilisierten Welt" führte.
The World3 model is based on five variables: "population, food production, industrialization, pollution, and consumption of nonrenewable natural resources". At the time of the study, all these variables were increasing and were assumed to continue to grow exponentially, while the ability of technology to increase resources grew only linearly. The authors intended to explore the possibility of a sustainable feedback pattern that would be achieved by altering growth trends among the five variables under three scenarios. They noted that their projections for the values of the variables in each scenario were predictions "only in the most limited sense of the word", and were only indications of the system's behavioral tendencies. Two of the scenarios saw "overshoot and collapse" of the global system by the mid- to latter-part of the 21st century, while a third scenario resulted in a "stabilized world".


===Exponentieller Reserveindex===
===Exponential reserve index===
Ein zentraler Gedanke in ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'' ist der Gedanke, dass die Anzahl der Reserven bei einer zunehmenden Ressourcennutzung nicht einfach dadurch berechnet werden kann, dass die derzeit bekannten Reserven durch den aktuellen jährlichen Verbrauch geteilt werden, wie dies normalerweise getan wird, um einen statischen Index zu erhalten. Im Jahr 1972 betrug die Menge der Chromreserven beispielsweise 775 Millionen Tonnen, von denen jährlich 1,85 Millionen Tonnen abgebaut wurden. Der statische Index beträgt 775/1,85=418 Jahre, aber die Rate des Chromverbrauchs wuchs jährlich um 2,6 Prozent, also exponentiell. Wenn man statt von einer konstanten Verbrauchsrate von einer konstanten Wachstumsrate von 2,6 Prozent jährlich ausgeht, reicht die Ressource stattdessen
A key idea in ''The Limits to Growth'' is the notion that if the rate of resource use is increasing, the number of reserves cannot be calculated by simply taking the current known reserves and dividing them by the current yearly usage, as is typically done to obtain a static index. For example, in 1972, the amount of chromium reserves was 775 million metric tons, of which 1.85 million metric tons were mined annually. The static index is 775/1.85=418 years, but the rate of chromium consumption was growing at 2.6 percent annually, or exponentially. If instead of assuming a constant rate of usage, the assumption of a constant rate of growth of 2.6 percent annually is made, the resource will instead last
:<math> R = \int_0^y C e^{\rho t}\ dt = \frac{C}{\rho} \left(e^{\rho y} - 1\right) </math>
:<math>\frac{\ln(1+0.026\times 418)}{0.026} \approx \text{95 years}</math>


Im Allgemeinen lautet die Formel zur Berechnung der verbleibenden Zeit für eine Ressource mit konstantem Verbrauchswachstum:
In general, the formula for calculating the amount of time left for a resource with constant consumption growth is:
:<math> R = \int_0^y C e^{\rho t}\ dt = \frac{C}{\rho} \left(e^{\rho y} - 1\right) </math> reverts to <math>y = \frac{\ln \left( 1 + \rho \frac{R}{C}\right)}{\rho}.</math>
:<math>y = \frac{\ln((rs) + 1)}{r}</math>
:<math>y = \frac{\ln((rs) + 1)}{r}</math>
wobei:
where:
:''y'' = verbleibende Jahre;
:''y'' = years left;
:''r'' = die kontinuierliche zusammengesetzte Wachstumsrate;
:''r'' = the continuous compounding growth rate;
:''s'' = R/C oder statische Reserve;
:''s'' = R/C or static reserve;
:''R'' = Reserve;
:''R'' = reserve;
:''C'' = (jährlicher) Verbrauch.
:''C'' = (annual) consumption.


==== Extrapolation der Rohstoffreserven ====
==== Commodity reserve extrapolation ====
Das Kapitel enthält eine umfangreiche Tabelle, die sich über insgesamt fünf Seiten erstreckt. Sie basiert auf den tatsächlichen geologischen Reserven von insgesamt 19 nicht erneuerbaren Ressourcen und analysiert deren Reserven zum Zeitpunkt der Erschöpfung 1972 unter drei Szenarien: statisch (konstantes Wachstum), exponentiell und exponentiell mit den Reserven multipliziert mit 5, um mögliche Entdeckungen zu berücksichtigen. Im Folgenden finden Sie einen kurzen Auszug aus der Tabelle:
The chapter contains a large table that spans five pages in total, based on actual geological reserves data for a total of 19 non-renewable resources, and analyzes their reserves at 1972 modeling time of their exhaustion under three scenarios: static (constant growth), exponential, and exponential with reserves multiplied by 5 to account for possible discoveries. A short excerpt from the table is presented below:
:{| class="wikitable"
:{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="2" | !! colspan="3" | Years
! colspan="2" | !! colspan="3" | Years
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|}
|}


Das Kapitel enthält auch ein detailliertes Computermodell der Chromverfügbarkeit mit den aktuellen (ab 1972) und den doppelt so hohen bekannten Reserven sowie zahlreiche Aussagen zu den aktuell steigenden Preistrends für die diskutierten Metalle:
The chapter also contains a detailed computer model of chromium availability with current (as of 1972) and double the known reserves as well as numerous statements on the current increasing price trends for discussed metals:


{{Blockquote|text=Given present resources consumption rates and the projected increase in the rates, the great majority of the currently important nonrenewable resources will be extremely costly 100 years from now. (...) The prices of those resources with the shortest static reserve indices have already begun to increase. The price of mercury, for example, has gone up 500 percent in the last 20 years; the price of lead has increased 300 percent in the last 30 years.|author=|title=|source=Chapter 2, page 66}}
{{Blockquote|text=Given present resources consumption rates and the projected increase in the rates, the great majority of the currently important nonrenewable resources will be extremely costly 100 years from now. (...) The prices of those resources with the shortest static reserve indices have already begun to increase. The price of mercury, for example, has gone up 500 percent in the last 20 years; the price of lead has increased 300 percent in the last 30 years.|author=|title=|source=Chapter 2, page 66}}


==== Interpretationen des Erschöpfungsmodells ====
==== Interpretations of the exhaustion model ====
Aufgrund der detaillierten Beschaffenheit und Nutzung der tatsächlichen Ressourcen und ihrer realen Preisentwicklung wurden die Indizes als Vorhersage der Anzahl der Jahre interpretiert, bis der Welt die Ressourcen "ausgehen" würden, und zwar sowohl von Umweltschützern, die eine stärkere Erhaltung und Einschränkung der Nutzung fordern, als auch von Skeptikern, die die Genauigkeit der Vorhersagen kritisieren. {{failed verification|date=November 2017}} Diese Interpretation wurde von Medien und Umweltorganisationen sowie von Autoren, die diese Interpretation, abgesehen von einem Hinweis auf die Möglichkeit, dass die zukünftigen Ströme "komplizierter" sein könnten, nicht eindeutig einschränkten oder dementierten, weit verbreitet.
Due to the detailed nature and use of actual resources and their real-world price trends, the indexes have been interpreted as a prediction of the number of years until the world would "run out" of them, both by environmentalist groups calling for greater conservation and restrictions on use and by skeptics criticizing the accuracy of the predictions.{{failed verification|date=November 2017}} This interpretation has been widely propagated by media and environmental organizations, and authors who, apart from a note about the possibility of the future flows being "more complicated", did not clearly constrain or deny this interpretation.


Während Umweltorganisationen sie zur Unterstützung ihrer Argumente verwendeten, nutzten eine Reihe von Ökonomen sie, um kurz nach der Veröffentlichung in den 1970er Jahren die ''LTG'' als Ganzes zu kritisieren (Peter Passel, Marc Roberts und Leonard Ross), wobei ähnliche Kritik in den 1990er Jahren von Ronald Baily, George Goodman und anderen wieder aufkam. Im Jahr 2011 argumentierte Ugo Bardi in "The Limits to Growth Revisited", dass "nirgendwo im Buch steht, dass die Zahlen als Vorhersagen zu verstehen sind", doch da sie die einzigen greifbaren Zahlen waren, die sich auf tatsächliche Ressourcen bezogen, wurden sie sowohl von Befürwortern als auch von Gegnern prompt als solche aufgefasst.  
While environmental organizations used it to support their arguments, a number of economists used it to criticize ''LTG'' as a whole shortly after publication in the 1970s (Peter Passel, Marc Roberts, and Leonard Ross), with similar criticism reoccurring from Ronald Baily, George Goodman and others in the 1990s. In 2011 Ugo Bardi in "The Limits to Growth Revisited" argued that "nowhere in the book was it stated that the numbers were supposed to be read as predictions", nonetheless as they were the only tangible numbers referring to actual resources, they were promptly picked as such by both supporters as well as opponents.


Während Kapitel 2 als Einführung in das Konzept der exponentiellen Wachstumsmodellierung dient, verwendet das eigentliche World3-Modell eine abstrakte Komponente "nicht-erneuerbare Ressourcen", die auf statischen Koeffizienten basiert und nicht auf den oben beschriebenen tatsächlichen physischen Rohstoffen.
While Chapter 2 serves as an introduction to the concept of exponential growth modeling, the actual World3 model uses an abstract "non-renewable resources" component based on static coefficients rather than the actual physical commodities described above.


==Schlussfolgerungen==
==Conclusions==
Nach der Überprüfung ihrer Computersimulationen kam das Forschungsteam zu den folgenden Schlussfolgerungen:
After reviewing their computer simulations, the research team came to the following conclusions:
{{blockquote| <!-- note to editors: this is a verbatim quotation, please do not try to change it -->
{{blockquote| <!-- note to editors: this is a verbatim quotation, please do not try to change it -->
# If the present growth trends in world population, industrialization, pollution, food production, and resource depletion continue unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime within the next one hundred years. The most probable result will be a rather sudden and uncontrollable decline in both population and industrial capacity.
# If the present growth trends in world population, industrialization, pollution, food production, and resource depletion continue unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime within the next one hundred years. The most probable result will be a rather sudden and uncontrollable decline in both population and industrial capacity.
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|source=''Limits to Growth'', Introduction}}
|source=''Limits to Growth'', Introduction}}


In der Einleitung heißt es weiter:
The introduction goes on to say:
{{blockquote|These conclusions are so far-reaching and raise so many questions for further study that we are quite frankly overwhelmed by the enormity of the job that must be done. We hope that this book will serve to interest other people, in many fields of study and in many countries of the world, to raise the space and time horizons of their concerns, and to join us in understanding and preparing for a period of great transition{{snd}} the transition from growth to global equilibrium.}}
{{blockquote|These conclusions are so far-reaching and raise so many questions for further study that we are quite frankly overwhelmed by the enormity of the job that must be done. We hope that this book will serve to interest other people, in many fields of study and in many countries of the world, to raise the space and time horizons of their concerns, and to join us in understanding and preparing for a period of great transition{{snd}} the transition from growth to global equilibrium.}}


==Kritik==
==Criticism==


LTG'' rief eine Vielzahl von Reaktionen hervor, darunter auch sofortige Kritik fast unmittelbar nach seiner Veröffentlichung.
''LTG'' provoked a wide range of responses, including immediate criticisms almost as soon as it was published.


Peter Passell und zwei Mitautoren veröffentlichten am 2. April 1972 einen Artikel in der ''New York Times'', in dem sie ''LTG'' als "ein leeres und irreführendes Werk&nbsp;... am besten zusammengefasst&nbsp;... als eine Wiederentdeckung der ältesten Maxime der Computerwissenschaft: Garbage In, Garbage Out". Passell hält die Simulation der Studie für zu simpel und misst der Rolle des technologischen Fortschritts bei der Lösung der Probleme der Ressourcenerschöpfung, der Umweltverschmutzung und der Nahrungsmittelproduktion wenig Bedeutung bei. Sie beschuldigten, dass alle ''LTG''-Simulationen im Kollaps endeten und das baldige Ende unersetzlicher Ressourcen vorhersagten. Passell warf auch vor, dass hinter dem ganzen Unterfangen eine versteckte Absicht steckte: das Wachstum in seinen Bahnen zu stoppen.
Peter Passell and two co-authors published a 2 April 1972 article in the ''New York Times'' describing ''LTG'' as "an empty and misleading work&nbsp;... best summarized&nbsp;... as a rediscovery of the oldest maxim of computer science: Garbage In, Garbage Out". Passell found the study's simulation to be simplistic while assigning little value to the role of technological progress in solving the problems of resource depletion, pollution, and food production. They charged that all ''LTG'' simulations ended in collapse, predicting the imminent end of irreplaceable resources. Passell also charged that the entire endeavour was motivated by a hidden agenda: to halt growth in its tracks.


1973 kam eine Gruppe von Forschern der Science Policy Research Unit an der Universität von Sussex zu dem Schluss, dass die Simulationen in ''Limits to Growth'' sehr empfindlich auf einige wenige Schlüsselannahmen reagierten und darauf hindeuteten, dass die Annahmen des MIT übermäßig pessimistisch und die Methodik, Daten und Projektionen des MIT fehlerhaft warenIn einem Papier mit dem Titel "A Response to Sussex" (Eine Antwort auf Sussex) beschrieb und analysierte das ''LTG''-Team jedoch fünf wichtige Bereiche, in denen sie mit den Autoren von Sussex nicht übereinstimmten. Das Team behauptete, dass die Sussex-Kritiker "Mikro-Argumente auf Makro-Probleme" anwandten und schlug vor, dass ihre eigenen Argumente entweder missverstanden oder absichtlich falsch dargestellt worden waren. Sie wiesen darauf hin, dass die Kritiker kein alternatives Modell für die Interaktion von Wachstumsprozessen und Ressourcenverfügbarkeit vorgeschlagen hätten und "auch nicht die Art des sozialen Wandels und des technologischen Fortschritts genau beschrieben hätten, von denen sie glauben, dass sie den aktuellen Wachstumsprozessen entgegenkommen würden."
In 1973, a group of researchers at the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex concluded that simulations in ''Limits to Growth'' were very sensitive to a few key assumptions and suggest that the MIT assumptions were unduly pessimistic, and the MIT methodology, data, and projections were faultyHowever, the ''LTG'' team, in a paper entitled "A Response to Sussex", described and analyzed five major areas of disagreement between themselves and the Sussex authors. The team asserted that the Sussex critics applied "micro reasoning to macro problems", and suggested that their own arguments had been either misunderstood or wilfully misrepresented. They pointed out that the critics had failed to suggest any alternative model for the interaction of growth processes and resource availability, and "nor had they described in precise terms the sort of social change and technological advances that they believe would accommodate current growth processes."


In dieser Zeit stieß die Idee einer weltweiten Beschränkung, wie sie in der Studie angedeutet wurde, sowohl bei den Unternehmen als auch bei der Mehrheit der Wirtschaftswissenschaftler auf Skepsis und Widerstand. Die Kritiker erklärten, die Geschichte habe bewiesen, dass die Prognosen falsch seien, wie z.B. die vorhergesagte Erschöpfung der Ressourcen und der damit verbundene wirtschaftliche Zusammenbruch bis zum Ende des 20Die Methodik, der Computer, die Schlussfolgerungen, die Rhetorik und die Menschen hinter dem Projekt wurden kritisiert. Der Wirtschaftswissenschaftler Henry C. Wallich aus Yale stimmte zu, dass das Wachstum nicht unbegrenzt fortgesetzt werden könne, dass aber ein natürliches Ende des Wachstums einer Intervention vorzuziehen sei. Wallich erklärte, dass die Technologie alle Probleme lösen könne, um die sich der Bericht sorgte, aber nur, wenn das Wachstum weiter anhielt. Ein vorzeitiges Anhalten des Fortschritts, so Wallichs warnende Aussage, würde zur dauerhaften Verarmung von Milliarden Menschen führen.
During that period, the very idea of any worldwide constraint, as indicated in the study, was met with scepticism and opposition by both businesses and the majority of economists. Critics declared that history proved the projections to be incorrect, such as the predicted resource depletion and associated economic collapse by the end of the 20th centuryThe methodology, the computer, the conclusions, the rhetoric and the people behind the project were criticised. Yale economist [[Henry C. Wallich]] agreed that growth could not continue indefinitely, but that a natural end to growth was preferable to intervention. Wallich stated that technology could solve all the problems the report was concerned about, but only if growth continued apace. According to Wallich's cautionary statement, prematurely halting progress would result in the perpetual impoverishment of billions.


Julian Simon, ein Professor an den Universitäten von Illinois und später Maryland, argumentierte, dass die grundlegenden Konzepte der LTG-Szenarien fehlerhaft seien, weil sich die Vorstellung davon, was eine "Ressource" ausmacht, im Laufe der Zeit ändert. So war zum Beispiel Holz bis in die 1800er Jahre die wichtigste Ressource für den Schiffbau, und ab 1500 gab es Sorgen über eine mögliche Holzknappheit. Doch dann wurden Boote aus Eisen und später aus Stahl hergestellt, und das Problem der Knappheit verschwand. Simon argumentiert in seinem Buch "Die ultimative Ressource", dass der menschliche Einfallsreichtum aus den Rohstoffen des Universums je nach Bedarf neue Ressourcen schafftKupfer zum Beispiel wird nie "ausgehen". Die Geschichte zeigt, dass es immer knapper wird, sein Preis steigt und mehr davon gefunden wird, mehr recycelt wird, neue Techniken weniger davon verbrauchen und irgendwann ein besserer Ersatz dafür gefunden wird. Sein Buch wurde überarbeitet und 1996 als ''The Ultimate Resource 2'' neu aufgelegt.
Julian Simon, a professor at the Universities of Illinois and, later, Maryland, argued that the fundamental underlying concepts of the LTG scenarios were faulty because the very idea of what constitutes a "resource" varies over time. For instance, wood was the primary shipbuilding resource until the 1800s, and there were concerns about prospective wood shortages from the 1500s on. But then boats began to be made of iron, later steel, and the shortage issue disappeared. Simon argued in his book ''The Ultimate Resource'' that human ingenuity creates new resources as required from the raw materials of the universeFor instance, copper will never "run out". History demonstrates that as it becomes scarcer its price will rise and more will be found, more will be recycled, new techniques will use less of it, and at some point a better substitute will be found for it altogether. His book was revised and reissued in 1996 as ''The Ultimate Resource 2''.


1973 sagten Allen V. Kneese und Ronald Riker von Resources for the Future (RFF) vor dem US-Kongress aus, dass ihrer Meinung nach "die Autoren ihre Argumente dadurch aufladen, dass sie einige Dinge exponentiell wachsen lassen und andere nicht. Die Bevölkerung, das Kapital und die Umweltverschmutzung wachsen in allen Modellen exponentiell, aber die Technologien zur Erweiterung der Ressourcen und zur Kontrolle der Umweltverschmutzung dürfen, wenn überhaupt, nur in diskreten Schritten wachsen."  In ihrer Stellungnahme wiesen sie jedoch auch auf die Möglichkeit "relativ fester langfristiger Grenzen" im Zusammenhang mit den Kohlendioxidemissionen hin, darauf, dass die Menschheit "sich selbst oder die Ökosystemleistungen, von denen sie abhängt, einer katastrophalen virulenten Substanz aussetzen könnte", und (was bedeutet, dass das Bevölkerungswachstum in "Entwicklungsländern" problematisch ist), dass "wir nicht wissen, was wir dagegen tun sollen".
To the US Congress in 1973Allen V. Kneese and Ronald Riker of Resources for the Future (RFF) testified that in their view, "The authors load their case by letting some things grow exponentially and others not. Population, capital and pollution grow exponentially in all models, but technologies for expanding resources and controlling pollution are permitted to grow, if at all, only in discrete increments."  However, their testimony also noted the possibility of "relatively firm long-term limits" associated with carbon dioxide emissions, that humanity might "loose upon itself, or the ecosystem services on which it depends, a disastrously virulent substance", and (implying that population growth in "developing countries" is problematic) that "we don't know what to do about it".


1997 stellte der italienische Wirtschaftswissenschaftler Giorgio Nebbia fest, dass die negative Reaktion auf die ''LTG''-Studie aus mindestens vier Quellen kam: von denjenigen, die das Buch als Bedrohung für ihr Geschäft oder ihre Branche ansahen; von professionellen Ökonomen, die in ''LTG'' einen nicht legitimierten Eingriff in ihre beruflichen Privilegien sahen; von der katholischen Kirche, die sich gegen die Andeutung wehrte, dass die Überbevölkerung eines der größten Probleme der Menschheit sei; und schließlich von der politischen Linken, die die ''LTG''-Studie als einen Betrug der Eliten ansah, der den Arbeitern vorgaukeln sollte, dass ein proletarisches Paradies ein Wunschtraum sei. In einem Bericht der britischen Regierung heißt es: "In den 1990er Jahren konzentrierte sich die Kritik vor allem auf den Irrtum, dass ‚‘Grenzen des Wachstums‚‘ die Erschöpfung der weltweiten Ressourcen und den sozialen Zusammenbruch bis zum Ende des Jahres 2000 vorhersagte".
In 1997, the Italian economist Giorgio Nebbia observed that the negative reaction to the ''LTG'' study came from at least four sources: those who saw the book as a threat to their business or industry; professional economists, who saw ''LTG'' as an uncredentialed encroachment on their professional perquisites; the Catholic church, which bridled at the suggestion that overpopulation was one of mankind's major problems; finally, the political left, which saw the ''LTG'' study as a scam by the elites designed to trick workers into believing that a proletarian paradise was a pipe dream. A UK government report found that "In the 1990s, criticism tended to focus on the misconception that ''Limits to Growth'' predicted global resource depletion and social collapse by the end of the year 2000".


Peter Taylors und Frederick Buttles Interpretation der ''LTG''-Studie und der damit verbundenen systemdynamischen Modelle (SD) ergab, dass die ursprüngliche SD für Unternehmen geschaffen wurde und das Muster für städtische, globale und andere SD-Modelle vorgab. Diese unternehmensbasierten SDs stützten sich auf übergeordnete Manager, um unerwünschte Kreisläufe und Rückkopplungsschleifen zu verhindern, die durch getrennte, vernünftige Entscheidungen der einzelnen Sektoren verursacht wurden. Dem späteren globalen Modell fehlten jedoch übergeordnete Manager, die zusammenhängende Veränderungen auf globaler Ebene erzwangen, so dass unerwünschte Zyklen sowie exponentielles Wachstum und Zusammenbruch in fast allen Modellen unabhängig von den Parametereinstellungen auftraten. Es gab keine Möglichkeit für einige wenige Individuen in dem Modell, die Struktur des Systems außer Kraft zu setzen, selbst wenn sie das System als Ganzes verstanden. Das bedeutete, dass es nur zwei Lösungen gab: jeden im System davon zu überzeugen, die grundlegende Struktur des Bevölkerungswachstums und des Zusammenbruchs zu ändern (moralische Antwort) und/oder eine übergeordnete Behörde zu haben, die das System als Ganzes analysiert und Änderungen anordnet (technokratische Antwort). Der 'LTG'-Bericht kombinierte diese beiden Ansätze mehrfach. Systemdynamiker konstruierten Eingriffe in das Weltmodell, um zu zeigen, wie ihre vorgeschlagenen Eingriffe das System verbesserten, um einen Zusammenbruch zu verhindern. Das SD-Modell aggregierte auch die Weltbevölkerung und die Ressourcen, was bedeutete, dass es nicht aufzeigte, wie Krisen zu unterschiedlichen Zeiten und auf unterschiedliche Weise entstehen, ohne eine streng globale Logik oder Form aufgrund der ungleichen Verteilung von Bevölkerungen und Ressourcen. Diese Probleme deuten darauf hin, dass die lokale, nationale und regionale Differenzierung in Politik und Wirtschaft, die den sozio-ökologischen Wandel umgibt, aus dem von ''LTG'' verwendeten SD ausgeklammert wurde, so dass es nicht in der Lage war, die Dynamik der realen Welt genau zu demonstrieren.
Peter Taylor and Frederick Buttle’s interpretation of the ''LTG'' study and the associated system dynamics (SD) models found that the original SD was created for firms and set the pattern for urban, global, and other SD models. These firm-based SDs relied on superintending managers to prevent undesirable cycling and feedback loops caused by separate common-sense decisions made by individual sectors. However, the later global model lacked superintending managers that enforce interrelated world-level changes, making undesirable cycles and exponential growth and collapse happen in nearly all models no matter the parameter settings. There was no way for a few individuals in the model to override the structure of the system even if they understood the system as a whole. This meant there were only two solutions: convincing everyone in the system to change the basic structure of population growth and collapse (moral response) and/or having a superintending agency analyzing the system as a whole and directing changes (technocratic response). The ''LTG'' report combined these two approaches multiple times. System dynamists constructed interventions into the world model to demonstrate how their proposed interventions improved the system to prevent collapse. The SD model also aggregated the world’s population and resources which meant that it did not demonstrate how crises emerge at different times and in different ways without any strictly global logic or form because of the unequal distributions of populations and resources. These issues indicate that the local, national, and regional differentiation in politics and economics surrounding socioenvironmental change was excluded from the SD used by ''LTG'', making it unable to accurately demonstrate real-world dynamics.


==Positive Kritiken==
==Positive reviews==
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| quote = With few exceptions, economics as a discipline has been dominated by a perception of living in an unlimited world, where resource and pollution problems in one area were solved by moving resources or people to other parts. The very hint of any global limitation as suggested in the report ''The Limits to Growth'' was met with disbelief and rejection by businesses and most economists. However, this conclusion was mostly based on false premises.
| quote = With few exceptions, economics as a discipline has been dominated by a perception of living in an unlimited world, where resource and pollution problems in one area were solved by moving resources or people to other parts. The very hint of any global limitation as suggested in the report ''The Limits to Growth'' was met with disbelief and rejection by businesses and most economists. However, this conclusion was mostly based on false premises.
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1980 kam der Global 2000 Report to the President zu ähnlichen Schlussfolgerungen hinsichtlich der zu erwartenden globalen Ressourcenknappheit und der Notwendigkeit einer multilateralen Koordination, um sich auf diese Situation vorzubereiten.
In 1980, the Global 2000 Report to the President arrived at similar conclusions regarding expected global resource scarcity, and the need for multilateral coordination to prepare for this situation.


In einem Blogbeitrag aus dem Jahr 2008 kommentierte Ugo Bardi: "Obwohl ‚‘LTG‚‘ in den 1990er Jahren zum Gespött aller geworden war, werden die ‚‘LTG‚‘-Ideen bei einigen wieder populär". Matthew Simmons, der ''LTG'' zum ersten Mal im Jahr 2000 las, schloss seine Ansichten über den Bericht mit den Worten: "Im Nachhinein hat der Club of Rome recht behalten. Wir haben einfach 30 wichtige Jahre damit verschwendet, diese Arbeit zu ignorieren."
In a 2008 blog post, [[Ugo Bardi]] commented that "Although, by the 1990s ''LTG'' had become everyone's laughing stock, among some the ''LTG'' ideas are becoming again popular". Reading ''LTG'' for the first time in 2000, Matthew Simmons concluded his views on the report by saying, "In hindsight, The [[Club of Rome]] turned out to be right. We simply wasted 30 important years ignoring this work."


Robert Solow, der ein lautstarker Kritiker der LTG gewesen war, sagte 2009: "Dreißig Jahre später mag sich die Situation geändert haben... es wird in Zukunft wahrscheinlich wichtiger sein, sich intellektuell, quantitativ und auch praktisch mit der gegenseitigen Abhängigkeit von Wirtschaftswachstum, der Verfügbarkeit natürlicher Ressourcen und Umweltauflagen zu befassen".
Robert Solow, who had been a vocal critic of LTG, said in 2009 that "thirty years later, the situation may have changed... it will probably be more important in the future to deal intellectually, quantitatively, as well as practically, with the mutual interdependence of economic growth, natural resource availability, and environmental constraints".


In einer 2008 durchgeführten Studie entdeckte Graham Turner von CSIRO eine signifikante Korrelation zwischen den beobachteten historischen Daten von 1970 bis 2000 und den simulierten Ergebnissen, die sich aus den "Standardlauf"-Grenzwerten des Wachstumsmodells ergeben. Diese Korrelation war bei fast allen berichteten Ergebnissen offensichtlich. Der Vergleich liegt für fast alle verfügbaren Daten innerhalb des Unsicherheitsbereichs, sowohl was die Größenordnung als auch was die im Laufe der Zeit beobachteten Muster betrifft. Turner analysierte zahlreiche Studien, insbesondere solche, die von Wirtschaftswissenschaftlern verfasst wurden und die über mehrere Jahre hinweg immer wieder versucht haben, das Konzept der Wachstumsgrenzen zu diskreditieren. Laut Turner weisen die genannten Studien Mängel auf und zeigen, dass das Modell nicht verstanden wird.
In a study conducted in 2008, Graham Turner from CSIRO discovered a significant correlation between the observed historical data spanning from 1970 to 2000 and the simulated outcomes derived from the "standard run" limits of the growth model. This correlation was apparent across nearly all the reported outputs. The comparison falls comfortably within the range of uncertainty for almost all the available data, both in terms of magnitude and the patterns observed over time. Turner conducted an analysis of many studies, with a special focus on those authored by economists, that have consistently aimed to discredit the limits-to-growth concept over the course of several years. According to Turner, the aforementioned studies exhibit flaws and demonstrate a lack of comprehension regarding the model.


Turner wiederholte diese Beobachtungen in einem weiteren Meinungsartikel in "The Guardian" am 2. September 2014. Turner nutzte Daten der UNO, um zu behaupten, dass die Graphen fast genau dem 'Standard Run' aus dem Jahr 1972 entsprechen (d.h. dem Worst-Case-Szenario, das davon ausgeht, dass eine 'business as usual'-Haltung eingenommen wird und es keine Änderungen des menschlichen Verhaltens als Reaktion auf die Warnungen im Bericht gibt). Sowohl die Geburten- als auch die Sterberaten waren etwas niedriger als prognostiziert, aber diese beiden Effekte hoben sich gegenseitig auf, so dass das Wachstum der Weltbevölkerung fast genau den Prognosen entsprach.
Turner reprised these observations in another opinion piece in ''[[The Guardian]]'' on 2 September 2014. Turner used data from the UN to claim that the graphs almost exactly matched the 'Standard Run' from 1972 (i.e. the worst-case scenario, assuming that a 'business as usual' attitude was adopted, and there were no modifications of human behaviour in response to the warnings in the report). Birth rates and death rates were both slightly lower than projected, but these two effects cancelled each other out, leaving the growth in world population almost exactly as forecast.


Im Jahr 2010 bezeichneten Nørgård, Peet und Ragnarsdóttir das Buch als "bahnbrechenden Bericht" und sagten, dass es "dem Test der Zeit standgehalten hat und in der Tat nur noch mehr an Bedeutung gewonnen hat."
In 2010, Nørgård, Peet and Ragnarsdóttir called the book a "pioneering report", and said that it "has withstood the test of time and, indeed, has only become more relevant."


Im Jahr 2012 zog Christian Parenti Vergleiche zwischen der Rezeption von ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'' und der aktuellen Kontroverse um die globale Erwärmung. Parenti bemerkte weiter, dass die intellektuellen Hüter einflussreicher Wirtschaftsinteressen LTG trotz seiner wissenschaftlichen Strenge und Glaubwürdigkeit aktiv als Warnung abtaten. Eine parallele Geschichte spielt sich derzeit im Bereich der Klimaforschung ab.
In 2012, Christian Parenti drew comparisons between the reception of ''The Limits to Growth'' and the ongoing global warming controversy. Parenti further remarked that despite its scientific rigour and credibility, the intellectual guardians of influential economic interests actively dismissed LTG as a warning. A parallel narrative is currently unfolding within the realm of climate research.


Im Jahr 2012 unterstützte John Scales Avery, ein Mitglied der mit dem Nobelpreis (1995) ausgezeichneten Gruppe, die mit den Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs verbunden ist, die Grundthese von ''LTG'', indem er erklärte: <blockquote>Obwohl die spezifischen Vorhersagen zur Ressourcenverfügbarkeit in ''Grenzen des Wachstums'' ungenau waren, war ihre Grundthese - dass unbegrenztes Wirtschaftswachstum auf einem endlichen Planeten unmöglich ist - unbestreitbar richtig.</blockquote>
In 2012, John Scales Avery, a member of the Nobel Prize (1995) winning group associated with the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, supported the basic thesis of ''LTG'' by stating, <blockquote>Although the specific predictions of resource availability in ''Limits to Growth'' lacked accuracy, its basic thesis&nbsp;– that unlimited economic growth on a finite planet is impossible – was indisputably correct.</blockquote>
<!-- Hinweis für Redakteure: In diesem Abschnitt geht es um Rezensionen des Buches. Spätere Erkenntnisse, die seine Vorhersagen bestätigen oder widerlegen, finden Sie unter #Validierung weiter unten. -->
<!-- Note to editors: this section is about reviews of the book. For subsequent findings that confirm or deny its predictions, see #Validation below. -->


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
===Aktualisierungen und Symposien===
===Updates and symposia===
[[File:Already Beyond - 40 Years Limits to Growth, 280, Liang Shi Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organisation Xiaoxi Wang Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research Tonni Kurniawan United Nations University.jpg|thumb|Researchers from China and Indonesia with Dennis Meadows]]
[[File:Already Beyond - 40 Years Limits to Growth, 280, Liang Shi Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organisation Xiaoxi Wang Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research Tonni Kurniawan United Nations University.jpg|thumb|Researchers from China and Indonesia with Dennis Meadows]]
Der Club of Rome hat auch nach ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'' weitergemacht und im Allgemeinen alle fünf Jahre umfassende Aktualisierungen des Buches vorgelegt.
The [[Club of Rome]] has persisted after ''The Limits to Growth'' and has generally provided comprehensive updates to the book every five years.


Ein unabhängiger Rückblick auf die öffentliche Debatte über ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'' kam 1978 zu dem Schluss, dass die optimistische Haltung gesiegt hatte und die Umweltbewegung insgesamt an Schwung verlor. Der Artikel fasste zwar eine große Anzahl von Gegenargumenten zusammen, kam aber zu dem Schluss, dass "wissenschaftliche Argumente für und gegen jede Position&nbsp;... anscheinend nur eine kleine Rolle bei der allgemeinen Akzeptanz alternativer Perspektiven gespielt haben."
An independent retrospective on the public debate over ''The Limits to Growth'' concluded in 1978 that optimistic attitudes had won out, causing a general loss of momentum in the environmental movement. While summarizing a large number of opposing arguments, the article concluded that "scientific arguments for and against each position&nbsp;... have, it would seem, played only a small part in the general acceptance of alternative perspectives."


1989 fand in Hannover ein Symposium mit dem Titel "Jenseits der Grenzen des Wachstums: Globale Industriegesellschaft, Vision oder Alptraum?" und 1992 wurde ‚‘Beyond the Limits‚‘ (BTL) als 20-jährige Aktualisierung des ursprünglichen Materials veröffentlicht. Es "kam zu dem Schluss, dass zwei Jahrzehnte Geschichte die Schlussfolgerungen, die wir 20 Jahre zuvor gezogen hatten, im Wesentlichen bestätigen. Aber das Buch von 1992 bot eine wichtige neue Erkenntnis. In BTL schlugen wir vor, dass die Menschheit die Grenzen der Tragfähigkeit der Erde bereits überschritten hatte."
In 1989, a symposium was held in Hanover, entitled "Beyond the Limits to Growth: Global Industrial Society, Vision or Nightmare?" and in 1992, ''Beyond the Limits'' (BTL) was published as a 20-year update on the original material. It "concluded that two decades of history mainly supported the conclusions we had advanced 20 years earlier. But the 1992 book did offer one major new finding. We suggested in BTL that humanity had already overshot the limits of Earth's support capacity."


''Grenzen des Wachstums: The 30-Year Update'' wurde 2004 veröffentlicht. Die Autoren stellten fest: "Es ist eine traurige Tatsache, dass die Menschheit die letzten 30 Jahre weitgehend mit sinnlosen Debatten und gut gemeinten, aber halbherzigen Antworten auf die globale ökologische Herausforderung vergeudet hat. Wir haben keine weiteren 30 Jahre zum Zaudern. Es wird sich viel ändern müssen, wenn auf den anhaltenden Overshoot nicht der Kollaps im einundzwanzigsten Jahrhundert folgen soll."
''Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update'' was published in 2004. The authors observed that "It is a sad fact that humanity has largely squandered the past 30 years in futile debates and well-intentioned, but halfhearted, responses to the global ecological challenge. We do not have another 30 years to dither. Much will have to change if the ongoing overshoot is not to be followed by collapse during the twenty-first century."


Im Jahr 2012 veranstaltete die Smithsonian Institution ein Symposium mit dem Titel "Perspectives on ‚‘Limits to Growth‚‘". Ein weiteres Symposium wurde im selben Jahr von der Volkswagen-Stiftung unter dem Titel "Already Beyond?" veranstaltet.
In 2012, the Smithsonian Institution held a symposium entitled "Perspectives on ''Limits to Growth''". Another symposium was held in the same year by the Volkswagen Foundation, entitled "Already Beyond?"


''Grenzen des Wachstums'' wurde 2012 nicht offiziell aktualisiert, aber einer seiner Mitautoren, Jørgen Randers, veröffentlichte ein Buch, ''2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years''.
''Limits to Growth'' did not receive an official update in 2012, but one of its coauthors, [[Jørgen Randers]], published a book, ''2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years''.


===Vergleiche und aktualisierte Modelle <span class="anchor" id="Validierung"></span>===
===Comparisons and updated models <span class="anchor" id="Validation"></span>===
Im Jahr 2008 veröffentlichte der Physiker Graham Turner von der Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australien ein Papier mit dem Titel "A Comparison of ‚The Limits to Growth‘ with Thirty Years of Reality". Darin werden die Daten der letzten dreißig Jahre mit den in dem Buch von 1972 dargelegten Szenarien verglichen und es wird festgestellt, dass die Veränderungen in der industriellen Produktion, der Nahrungsmittelproduktion und der Umweltverschmutzung alle mit einem der drei Szenarien des Buches übereinstimmen - dem "business as usual". Dieses Szenario in ''Limits'' deutet auf einen wirtschaftlichen und gesellschaftlichen Zusammenbruch im 21. Im Jahr 2010 nannten Nørgård, Peet und Ragnarsdóttir das Buch einen "bahnbrechenden Bericht". Sie sagten, dass "sein Ansatz nach wie vor nützlich ist und dass seine Schlussfolgerungen immer noch erstaunlich gültig sind ... leider wurde der Bericht von Kritikern weitgehend als Weltuntergangsprophezeiung abgetan, die einer Überprüfung nicht standgehalten hat."
In 2008, physicist Graham Turner at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia published a paper called "A Comparison of 'The Limits to Growth' with Thirty Years of Reality". It compared the past thirty years of data with the scenarios laid out in the 1972 book and found that changes in industrial production, food production, and pollution are all congruent with one of the book's three scenarios—that of "business as usual". This scenario in ''Limits'' points to economic and societal collapse in the 21st century. In 2010, Nørgård, Peet, and Ragnarsdóttir called the book a "pioneering report". They said that, "its approach remains useful and that its conclusions are still surprisingly valid ... unfortunately the report has been largely dismissed by critics as a doomsday prophecy that has not held up to scrutiny."


Ebenfalls im Jahr 2008 schrieb der Forscher Peter A. Victor, dass das ''Limits''-Team die Rolle des Preismechanismus bei der Anpassung der Ergebnisse wahrscheinlich unterschätzt, seine Kritiker sie jedoch überschätzt haben. Er stellt fest, dass ''Grenzen des Wachstums'' einen bedeutenden Einfluss auf die Konzeption von Umweltfragen gehabt hat und merkt an, dass (seiner Ansicht nach) die Modelle in dem Buch als Vorhersagen "nur im engsten Sinne des Wortes" zu verstehen waren.
Also in 2008, researcher Peter A. Victor wrote that even though the ''Limits'' team probably underestimated price mechanism's role in adjusting outcomes, their critics have overestimated it. He states that ''Limits to Growth'' has had a significant impact on the conception of environmental issues and notes that (in his view) the models in the book were meant to be taken as predictions "only in the most limited sense of the word".


In einem 2009 im "American Scientist" veröffentlichten Artikel mit dem Titel "Revisiting the Limits to Growth After Peak Oil" stellen Hall und Day fest, dass "die vom Modell der Grenzen des Wachstums vorhergesagten Werte und die tatsächlichen Daten für 2008 sehr nahe beieinander liegen". Diese Ergebnisse stehen im Einklang mit der CSIRO-Studie von 2008, die zu dem Schluss kam: "Die Analyse zeigt, dass 30 Jahre historischer Daten im Vergleich zu den Schlüsselmerkmalen ... [des ''Grenzen des Wachstums''-Szenarios], das in der Mitte des 21. Jahrhunderts zum Zusammenbruch des globalen Systems führt."
In a 2009 article published in ''American Scientist'' entitled ''Revisiting the Limits to Growth After Peak Oil,'' Hall and Day noted that "the values predicted by the limits-to-growth model and actual data for 2008 are very close." These findings are consistent with the 2008 CSIRO study which concluded: "The analysis shows that 30 years of historical data compares favorably with key features ... [of the ''Limits to Growth''] "standard run" scenario, which results in collapse of the global system midway through the 21st Century."


2011 veröffentlichte Ugo Bardi eine akademische Studie in Buchlänge über ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'', seine Methoden und die historische Rezeption und kam zu dem Schluss, dass "die Warnungen, die wir 1972 erhalten haben, ... immer besorgniserregender werden, da die Realität genau den Kurven zu folgen scheint, die das ... Szenario erzeugt hatte." Eine populäre Analyse der Genauigkeit des Berichts von Wissenschaftsautor Richard Heinberg wurde ebenfalls veröffentlicht.
In 2011, [[Ugo Bardi]] published a book-length academic study of ''The Limits to Growth'', its methods, and historical reception and concluded that "The warnings that we received in 1972 ... are becoming increasingly more worrisome as reality seems to be following closely the curves that the ... scenario had generated." A popular analysis of the accuracy of the report by science writer Richard Heinberg was also published.


Im Jahr 2012 schrieb Brian Hayes im "American Scientist", dass das Modell "eher ein polemisches Werkzeug als ein wissenschaftliches Instrument" sei. Er fuhr fort, dass die von dem Computerprogramm erzeugten Grafiken nicht, wie die Autoren anmerken, als Vorhersagen verwendet werden sollten.
In 2012, writing in ''American Scientist'', Brian Hayes stated that the model is "more a polemical tool than a scientific instrument". He went on to say that the graphs generated by the computer program should not, as the authors note, be used as predictions.


Im Jahr 2014 kam Turner zu dem Schluss, dass "die Vorbereitung auf ein kollabierendes globales System noch wichtiger sein könnte als der Versuch, den Zusammenbruch zu vermeiden." Eine weitere Studie der Universität Melbourne aus dem Jahr 2014 bestätigte, dass die Daten dem World3 BAU-Modell sehr nahe kommen.
In 2014, Turner concluded that "preparing for a collapsing global system could be even more important than trying to avoid collapse." Another 2014 study from the University of Melbourne confirmed that data closely tracked the World3 BAU model.


Im Jahr 2015 wurde eine Kalibrierung des aktualisierten World3-03 Modells mit historischen Daten von 1995 bis 2012 vorgenommen, um die Dynamik des heutigen Wirtschafts- und Ressourcensystems besser zu verstehen. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass die menschliche Gesellschaft mehr investiert hat, um die anhaltende Umweltverschmutzung einzudämmen, die Nahrungsmittelproduktivität zu erhöhen und einen produktiveren Dienstleistungssektor zu haben, aber die allgemeinen Trends der "Grenzen des Wachstums" sind nach wie vor gültig.
In 2015, a calibration of the updated World3-03 model using historical data from 1995 to 2012 to better understand the dynamics of today's economic and resource system was undertaken. The results showed that human society has invested more to abate persistent pollution, increase food productivity and have a more productive service sector however the broad trends within ''Limits to Growth'' still held true.


Im Jahr 2016 hat die britische Regierung eine parteiübergreifende parlamentarische Gruppe für die Grenzen des Wachstums eingesetzt. Ihr erster Bericht kam zu dem Schluss, dass "es beunruhigende Beweise dafür gibt, dass die Gesellschaft immer noch dem ‚Standardlauf‘ der ursprünglichen Studie folgt - bei dem eine Überschreitung zu einem letztendlichen Zusammenbruch von Produktion und Lebensstandard führt". Der Bericht weist auch darauf hin, dass einige Themen, die im ursprünglichen Bericht von 1972 nicht vollständig behandelt wurden, wie der Klimawandel, zusätzliche Herausforderungen für die menschliche Entwicklung darstellen.
In 2016, the UK government established an All-party parliamentary group on Limits to Growth. Its initial report concluded that "there is unsettling evidence that society is still following the 'standard run' of the original study – in which overshoot leads to an eventual collapse of production and living standards". The report also points out that some issues not fully addressed in the original 1972 report, such as climate change, present additional challenges for human development.


Im Jahr 2020 wurde eine Analyse von Gaya Herrington, damals Director of Sustainability Services bei KPMG US, im ''Journal of Industrial Ecology'' der Yale University veröffentlicht. Die Studie bewertete, ob angesichts der im Jahr 2020 bekannten Schlüsseldaten über Faktoren, die für den Bericht "Grenzen des Wachstums" wichtig waren, die Schlussfolgerungen des ursprünglichen Berichts unterstützt werden. Insbesondere untersuchte die Studie 2020 aktualisierte quantitative Informationen über zehn Faktoren, nämlich Bevölkerung, Fruchtbarkeitsraten, Sterblichkeitsraten, Industrieproduktion, Nahrungsmittelproduktion, Dienstleistungen, nicht erneuerbare Ressourcen, anhaltende Umweltverschmutzung, menschliches Wohlergehen und ökologischer Fußabdruck, und kam zu dem Schluss, dass die Vorhersage der "Grenzen des Wachstums" im Wesentlichen richtig ist, dass ein fortgesetztes Wirtschaftswachstum im Rahmen eines "business as usual"-Modells nicht nachhaltig ist. Die Studie kam zu dem Ergebnis, dass die aktuellen empirischen Daten weitgehend mit den Projektionen von 1972 übereinstimmen und dass das Wirtschaftswachstum bis etwa 2040 seinen Höhepunkt erreichen und dann rapide zurückgehen wird, wenn keine größeren Veränderungen beim Ressourcenverbrauch vorgenommen werden.
In 2020, an analysis by Gaya Herrington, then Director of Sustainability Services of [[KPMG|KPMG US]], was published in [[Yale University]]'s ''Journal of Industrial Ecology''. The study assessed whether, given key data known in 2020 about factors important for the "Limits to Growth" report, the original report's conclusions are supported. In particular, the 2020 study examined updated quantitative information about ten factors, namely population, fertility rates, mortality rates, industrial output, food production, services, non-renewable resources, persistent pollution, human welfare, and ecological footprint, and concluded that the "Limits to Growth" prediction is essentially correct in that continued economic growth is unsustainable under a "business as usual" model. The study found that current empirical data is broadly consistent with the 1972 projections and that if major changes to the consumption of resources are not undertaken, economic growth will peak and then rapidly decline by around 2040.


Im Jahr 2023 wurden die Parameter des World3-Modells anhand empirischer Daten bis 2022 neu kalibriert. Dieser verbesserte Parametersatz führt zu einer World3-Simulation, die im kommenden Jahrzehnt den gleichen Überschreitungs- und Kollapsmodus zeigt wie das ursprüngliche Business-as-usual-Szenario des Standardlaufs der Grenzen des Wachstums. Der Haupteffekt der Aktualisierung der Rekalibrierung besteht darin, dass die Spitzenwerte der meisten Variablen angehoben und um einige Jahre in die Zukunft verschoben werden.
In 2023, the parameters of the World3 model were recalibrated using empirical data up to 2022. This improved parameter set results in a World3 simulation that shows the same overshoot and collapse mode in the coming decade as the original business-as-usual scenario of the Limits to Growth standard run. The main effect of the recalibration update is to raise the peaks of most variables and move them a few years into the future.


==Verwandte Bücher==
==Related books==
Im Laufe der Jahre sind regelmäßig Bücher über die ungewisse Zukunft der Menschheit erschienen. Einige von ihnen, einschließlich der oben erwähnten Bücher als Referenz, umfassen:
Books about humanity's uncertain future have appeared regularly over the years. A few of them, including the books mentioned above for reference, include:


* ''An Essay on the Principle of Population'' von Thomas Malthus (1798);  
* ''[[An Essay on the Principle of Population]]'' by [[Thomas Robert Malthus|Thomas Malthus]] (1798);
* ''Unser geplünderter Planet'' von Henry Fairfield Osborn Jr. (1948);  
* ''Our Plundered Planet'' by [[Henry Fairfield Osborn Jr.]] (1948);
* ''Road to Survival'' von William Vogt (1948);
* ''Road to Survival'' by [[William Vogt]] (1948);
* ''The Challenge of Man's Future'' von Harrison Brown (1956);  
* ''The Challenge of Man's Future'' by [[Harrison Brown]] (1956);
* ''Mirage of Health'' von René Dubos (1959);
* ''Mirage of Health'' by [[René Dubos]] (1959);
* ''Der hungrige Planet'' von Georg Bostrom (1965);
* ''The Hungry Planet'' by Georg Bostrom (1965);
* ''The Population Bomb'' von Paul R. Ehrlich (1968);
* ''The Population Bomb'' by [[Paul R. Ehrlich]] (1968);
* ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'' (1972);
* ''The Limits to Growth'' (1972);
* ''Overshoot'' von William R. Catton (1980);
* ''Overshoot'' by William R. Catton (1980);
* ''State of the World''-Berichte des Worldwatch Institute (seit 1984 jährlich veröffentlicht);  
* ''State of the World'' reports issued by the [[Worldwatch Institute]] (produced annually since 1984);
* ''Our Common Future'', veröffentlicht von der Weltkommission für Umwelt und Entwicklung der UN (1987);  
* ''[[Our Common Future]]'', published by the UN's World Commission on Environment and Development (1987);
* ''Earth in the Balance'', verfasst vom damaligen US-Senator Al Gore (1992);  
* ''Earth in the Balance'', written by then-US senator [[Al Gore]] (1992);
* ''Earth Odyssey'' von dem Journalisten Mark Hertsgaard (1999);
* ''Earth Odyssey'' by journalist Mark Hertsgaard (1999);
* ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums: The 30-Year Update'' (2003);
* ''The Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update'' (2003);
* ''The Party's Over'' von Richard Heinberg (2003);
* ''The Party's Over'' by Richard Heinberg (2003);
* ''Eine kurze Geschichte des Fortschritts'' von Ronald Wright (2004);
* ''A Short History of Progress'' by Ronald Wright (2004);
* ''Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World'' von Richard Heinberg (2005);
* ''Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World'' by Richard Heinberg (2005);
* ''The Long Emergency'' von James Howard Kunstler (2005);
* ''The Long Emergency'' by James Howard Kunstler (2005);
* ''Storms of My Grandchildren'' von James Hansen, {{ISBN|9781608192007}} (2009);
* ''Storms of My Grandchildren'' by [[James Hansen]], {{ISBN|9781608192007}} (2009);
* ''Zu schlau für unser eigenes Wohl'' von Craig Dilworth (2009);
* ''Too Smart for Our Own Good'' by Craig Dilworth (2009);
* ''The Limits to Growth Revisited'' von Ugo Bardi, Springer Briefs in Energy, {{ISBN|9781441994158}} (2011);
* ''The Limits to Growth Revisited'' by Ugo Bardi, Springer Briefs in Energy, {{ISBN|9781441994158}} (2011);
* ''Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind'' von Yuval Noah Harari (2011);
* ''Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind'' by [[Yuval Noah Harari]] (2011);
* ''The End of Growth: Die Anpassung an unsere neue wirtschaftliche Realität'' von Richard Heinberg (2011);
* ''The End of Growth: Adapting to Our New Economic Reality'' by Richard Heinberg (2011);
* ''2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years'' von Jørgen Randers (2012);
* ''2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years'' by Jørgen Randers (2012);
* ''10 Billionen'' von Stephen Emmott (2013);
* ''10 Billion'' by Stephen Emmott (2013);
* ''The Bet'' von Paul Sabin, Yale University Press (2014);
* ''The Bet'' by Paul Sabin, Yale University Press (2014);
* ''The Sixth Extinction'' von Elizabeth Kolbert (2014);
* ''The Sixth Extinction'' by Elizabeth Kolbert (2014);
* ''The Uninhabitable Earth'' von David Wallace-Wells (2017);
* ''The Uninhabitable Earth'' by David Wallace-Wells (2017);
* ''Power: Grenzen und Aussichten für das menschliche Überleben'' von Richard Heinberg (2021);
* ''Power: Limits and Prospects for Human Survival'' by Richard Heinberg (2021);
* ''Limits and Beyond'' herausgegeben von Ugo Bardi und Carlos Alvarez Pereira, Exapt Press, {{ISBN|9781914549038}} (2022).
* ''Limits and Beyond'' edited by [[Ugo Bardi]] and Carlos Alvarez Pereira, Exapt Press, {{ISBN|9781914549038}} (2022).
* ''Earth for All - A Survival Guide for Humanity'' (2022).
* ''Earth for All A Survival Guide for Humanity'' (2022).


==Ausgaben==
==Editions==
* {{ISBN|0-87663-165-0}}, 1972 erste Auflage ([http://collections.dartmouth.edu/teitexts/meadows/diplomatic/meadows_ltg-diplomatic.html digitale Version)]
* {{ISBN|0-87663-165-0}}, 1972 first edition ([http://collections.dartmouth.edu/teitexts/meadows/diplomatic/meadows_ltg-diplomatic.html digital version)]
* {{ISBN|0-87663-222-3}}, 1974 zweite Auflage (Leinen)
* {{ISBN|0-87663-222-3}}, 1974 second edition (cloth)
* {{ISBN|0-87663-918-X}}, 1974 zweite Auflage (Taschenbuch)
* {{ISBN|0-87663-918-X}}, 1974 second edition (paperback)
* {{Cite book |last1=Meadows |first1=Donella |url=https://archive.org/details/beyondlimitsconf00mead |title=Beyond the Limits |last2=Meadows |first2=Dennis |last3=Randers |first3=Jorgen |date=1992 |publisher=Chelsea Green Publishing |isbn=0-930031-55-5 |edition=Hardcover |url-access=registration}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Meadows |first1=Donella |url=https://archive.org/details/beyondlimitsconf00mead |title=Beyond the Limits |last2=Meadows |first2=Dennis |last3=Randers |first3=Jorgen |date=1992 |publisher=Chelsea Green Publishing |isbn=0-930031-55-5 |edition=Hardcover |url-access=registration}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Meadows |first1=Donella |title=Limits To Growth: The 30-Year Update |last2=Randers |first2=Jorgen |last3=Meadows |first3=Dennis |date=June 2004 |publisher=Chelsea Green Publishing |isbn=193149858X |edition=Paperback}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Meadows |first1=Donella |title=Limits To Growth: The 30-Year Update |last2=Randers |first2=Jorgen |last3=Meadows |first3=Dennis |date=June 2004 |publisher=Chelsea Green Publishing |isbn=193149858X |edition=Paperback}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Meadows |first1=Donella |title=Limits To Growth: The 30-Year Update |last2=Randers |first2=Jorgen |last3=Meadows |first3=Dennis |date=March 2005 |publisher=Chelsea Green Publishing |isbn=1931498512 |edition=Hardcover}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Meadows |first1=Donella |title=Limits To Growth: The 30-Year Update |last2=Randers |first2=Jorgen |last3=Meadows |first3=Dennis |date=March 2005 |publisher=Chelsea Green Publishing |isbn=1931498512 |edition=Hardcover}}


==Externe Links==
==External links==
{{Commons|The Limits to Growth}}
{{Commons category|The Limits to Growth}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikiversity|Limits To Growth}}
{{Wikiversity|Limits To Growth}}
* [http://www.donellameadows.org/wp-content/userfiles/Limits-to-Growth-digital-scan-version.pdf ''Die Grenzen des Wachstums'' Ausgabe 1972], [http://www.donellameadows.org/the-limits-to-growth-now-available-to-read-online/ lizenziert] unter einer Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial Lizenz
* [http://www.donellameadows.org/wp-content/userfiles/Limits-to-Growth-digital-scan-version.pdf ''The Limits to Growth'' 1972 edition], [http://www.donellameadows.org/the-limits-to-growth-now-available-to-read-online/ licensed] under a [[Creative Commons]] Attribution Noncommercial license


* [https://economicsfromthetopdown.com/2020/11/16/peak-oil-never-went-away/ ''Peak Oil model that correctly tracked the oil output''], [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/259780768_Forecasting_the_limits_to_the_availability_and_diversity_of_global_conventional_oil_supply_Validation Wissenschaftliche Studie: Vorhersage der Grenzen der Verfügbarkeit und Vielfalt der weltweiten konventionellen Ölversorgung: Validierung; von John L Hallock Jr].
* [https://economicsfromthetopdown.com/2020/11/16/peak-oil-never-went-away/ ''Peak Oil model that correctly tracked the oil output''], [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/259780768_Forecasting_the_limits_to_the_availability_and_diversity_of_global_conventional_oil_supply_Validation Scientific Study: Forecasting the limits to the availability and diversity of global conventional oil supply: Validation; from John L Hallock Jr].


{{DEFAULTSORT:Limits To Growth}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Limits To Growth}}

Version vom 22. September 2024, 06:30 Uhr

The Limits to Growth
Datei:Cover first edition Limits to growth.jpg
First edition cover
Authors
LanguageEnglish
Published2 March 1972; 53 years ago (1972-03-02)
PublisherPotomac Associates – Universe Books
Pages205
ISBN0-87663-165-0
OCLC307838
digital: Digitized 1972 edition

The Limits to Growth (often abbreviated LTG) is a 1972 report that discussed the possibility of exponential economic and population growth with finite supply of resources, studied by computer simulation. The study used the World3 computer model to simulate the consequence of interactions between the Earth and human systems. The model was based on the work of Jay Forrester of MIT, as described in his book World Dynamics.

Commissioned by the Club of Rome, the study saw its findings first presented at international gatherings in Moscow and Rio de Janeiro in the summer of 1971. The report's authors are Donella H. Meadows, Dennis L. Meadows, Jørgen Randers, and William W. Behrens III, representing a team of 17 researchers.

The report's findings suggest that, in the absence of significant alterations in resource utilization, it is highly likely that there will be an abrupt and unmanageable decrease in both population and industrial capacity. Although it faced severe criticism and scrutiny upon its release, the report influenced environmental reforms for decades. Subsequent analysis notes that global use of natural resources has been inadequately reformed to alter its expected outcome. Yet price predictions based on resource scarcity failed to materialize in the years since publication.

Since its publication, some 30 million copies of the book in 30 languages have been purchased. It continues to generate debate and has been the subject of several subsequent publications.

Beyond the Limits and The Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update were published in 1992 and 2004 respectively; in 2012, a 40-year forecast from Jørgen Randers, one of the book's original authors, was published as 2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years; and in 2022 two of the original Limits to Growth authors, Dennis Meadows and Jørgen Randers, joined 19 other contributors to produce Limits and Beyond.

World3 Model Standard Run as shown in The Limits to Growth

Purpose

In commissioning the MIT team to undertake the project that resulted in LTG, the Club of Rome had three objectives:

  1. Gain insights into the limits of our world system and the constraints it puts on human numbers and activity.
  2. Identify and study the dominant elements, and their interactions, that influence the long-term behavior of world systems.
  3. To warn of the likely outcome of contemporary economic and industrial policies, with a view to influencing changes to a sustainable lifestyle.

Method

The World3 model is based on five variables: "population, food production, industrialization, pollution, and consumption of nonrenewable natural resources". At the time of the study, all these variables were increasing and were assumed to continue to grow exponentially, while the ability of technology to increase resources grew only linearly. The authors intended to explore the possibility of a sustainable feedback pattern that would be achieved by altering growth trends among the five variables under three scenarios. They noted that their projections for the values of the variables in each scenario were predictions "only in the most limited sense of the word", and were only indications of the system's behavioral tendencies. Two of the scenarios saw "overshoot and collapse" of the global system by the mid- to latter-part of the 21st century, while a third scenario resulted in a "stabilized world".

Exponential reserve index

A key idea in The Limits to Growth is the notion that if the rate of resource use is increasing, the number of reserves cannot be calculated by simply taking the current known reserves and dividing them by the current yearly usage, as is typically done to obtain a static index. For example, in 1972, the amount of chromium reserves was 775 million metric tons, of which 1.85 million metric tons were mined annually. The static index is 775/1.85=418 years, but the rate of chromium consumption was growing at 2.6 percent annually, or exponentially. If instead of assuming a constant rate of usage, the assumption of a constant rate of growth of 2.6 percent annually is made, the resource will instead last

In general, the formula for calculating the amount of time left for a resource with constant consumption growth is:

reverts to

where:

y = years left;
r = the continuous compounding growth rate;
s = R/C or static reserve;
R = reserve;
C = (annual) consumption.

Commodity reserve extrapolation

The chapter contains a large table that spans five pages in total, based on actual geological reserves data for a total of 19 non-renewable resources, and analyzes their reserves at 1972 modeling time of their exhaustion under three scenarios: static (constant growth), exponential, and exponential with reserves multiplied by 5 to account for possible discoveries. A short excerpt from the table is presented below:

Years
Resource Consumption, projected average annual growth rate Static index Exponential index 5× reserves exponential index
Chromium 2.6% 420 95 154
Gold 4.1% 11 9 29
Iron 1.8% 240 93 173
Lead 2.0% 26 21 64
Petroleum 3.9% 31 20 50

The chapter also contains a detailed computer model of chromium availability with current (as of 1972) and double the known reserves as well as numerous statements on the current increasing price trends for discussed metals:

Given present resources consumption rates and the projected increase in the rates, the great majority of the currently important nonrenewable resources will be extremely costly 100 years from now. (...) The prices of those resources with the shortest static reserve indices have already begun to increase. The price of mercury, for example, has gone up 500 percent in the last 20 years; the price of lead has increased 300 percent in the last 30 years.

— Chapter 2, page 66

Interpretations of the exhaustion model

Due to the detailed nature and use of actual resources and their real-world price trends, the indexes have been interpreted as a prediction of the number of years until the world would "run out" of them, both by environmentalist groups calling for greater conservation and restrictions on use and by skeptics criticizing the accuracy of the predictions.[failed verification] This interpretation has been widely propagated by media and environmental organizations, and authors who, apart from a note about the possibility of the future flows being "more complicated", did not clearly constrain or deny this interpretation.

While environmental organizations used it to support their arguments, a number of economists used it to criticize LTG as a whole shortly after publication in the 1970s (Peter Passel, Marc Roberts, and Leonard Ross), with similar criticism reoccurring from Ronald Baily, George Goodman and others in the 1990s. In 2011 Ugo Bardi in "The Limits to Growth Revisited" argued that "nowhere in the book was it stated that the numbers were supposed to be read as predictions", nonetheless as they were the only tangible numbers referring to actual resources, they were promptly picked as such by both supporters as well as opponents.

While Chapter 2 serves as an introduction to the concept of exponential growth modeling, the actual World3 model uses an abstract "non-renewable resources" component based on static coefficients rather than the actual physical commodities described above.

Conclusions

After reviewing their computer simulations, the research team came to the following conclusions:

  1. If the present growth trends in world population, industrialization, pollution, food production, and resource depletion continue unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime within the next one hundred years. The most probable result will be a rather sudden and uncontrollable decline in both population and industrial capacity.
  2. It is possible to alter these growth trends and to establish a condition of ecological and economic stability that is sustainable far into the future. The state of global equilibrium could be designed so that the basic material needs of each person on earth are satisfied and each person has an equal opportunity to realize his individual human potential.
  3. If the world's people decide to strive for this second outcome rather than the first, the sooner they begin working to attain it, the greater will be their chances of success.
— Limits to Growth, Introduction

The introduction goes on to say:

These conclusions are so far-reaching and raise so many questions for further study that we are quite frankly overwhelmed by the enormity of the job that must be done. We hope that this book will serve to interest other people, in many fields of study and in many countries of the world, to raise the space and time horizons of their concerns, and to join us in understanding and preparing for a period of great transition – the transition from growth to global equilibrium.

Criticism

LTG provoked a wide range of responses, including immediate criticisms almost as soon as it was published.

Peter Passell and two co-authors published a 2 April 1972 article in the New York Times describing LTG as "an empty and misleading work ... best summarized ... as a rediscovery of the oldest maxim of computer science: Garbage In, Garbage Out". Passell found the study's simulation to be simplistic while assigning little value to the role of technological progress in solving the problems of resource depletion, pollution, and food production. They charged that all LTG simulations ended in collapse, predicting the imminent end of irreplaceable resources. Passell also charged that the entire endeavour was motivated by a hidden agenda: to halt growth in its tracks.

In 1973, a group of researchers at the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex concluded that simulations in Limits to Growth were very sensitive to a few key assumptions and suggest that the MIT assumptions were unduly pessimistic, and the MIT methodology, data, and projections were faulty. However, the LTG team, in a paper entitled "A Response to Sussex", described and analyzed five major areas of disagreement between themselves and the Sussex authors. The team asserted that the Sussex critics applied "micro reasoning to macro problems", and suggested that their own arguments had been either misunderstood or wilfully misrepresented. They pointed out that the critics had failed to suggest any alternative model for the interaction of growth processes and resource availability, and "nor had they described in precise terms the sort of social change and technological advances that they believe would accommodate current growth processes."

During that period, the very idea of any worldwide constraint, as indicated in the study, was met with scepticism and opposition by both businesses and the majority of economists. Critics declared that history proved the projections to be incorrect, such as the predicted resource depletion and associated economic collapse by the end of the 20th century. The methodology, the computer, the conclusions, the rhetoric and the people behind the project were criticised. Yale economist Henry C. Wallich agreed that growth could not continue indefinitely, but that a natural end to growth was preferable to intervention. Wallich stated that technology could solve all the problems the report was concerned about, but only if growth continued apace. According to Wallich's cautionary statement, prematurely halting progress would result in the perpetual impoverishment of billions.

Julian Simon, a professor at the Universities of Illinois and, later, Maryland, argued that the fundamental underlying concepts of the LTG scenarios were faulty because the very idea of what constitutes a "resource" varies over time. For instance, wood was the primary shipbuilding resource until the 1800s, and there were concerns about prospective wood shortages from the 1500s on. But then boats began to be made of iron, later steel, and the shortage issue disappeared. Simon argued in his book The Ultimate Resource that human ingenuity creates new resources as required from the raw materials of the universe. For instance, copper will never "run out". History demonstrates that as it becomes scarcer its price will rise and more will be found, more will be recycled, new techniques will use less of it, and at some point a better substitute will be found for it altogether. His book was revised and reissued in 1996 as The Ultimate Resource 2.

To the US Congress in 1973, Allen V. Kneese and Ronald Riker of Resources for the Future (RFF) testified that in their view, "The authors load their case by letting some things grow exponentially and others not. Population, capital and pollution grow exponentially in all models, but technologies for expanding resources and controlling pollution are permitted to grow, if at all, only in discrete increments." However, their testimony also noted the possibility of "relatively firm long-term limits" associated with carbon dioxide emissions, that humanity might "loose upon itself, or the ecosystem services on which it depends, a disastrously virulent substance", and (implying that population growth in "developing countries" is problematic) that "we don't know what to do about it".

In 1997, the Italian economist Giorgio Nebbia observed that the negative reaction to the LTG study came from at least four sources: those who saw the book as a threat to their business or industry; professional economists, who saw LTG as an uncredentialed encroachment on their professional perquisites; the Catholic church, which bridled at the suggestion that overpopulation was one of mankind's major problems; finally, the political left, which saw the LTG study as a scam by the elites designed to trick workers into believing that a proletarian paradise was a pipe dream. A UK government report found that "In the 1990s, criticism tended to focus on the misconception that Limits to Growth predicted global resource depletion and social collapse by the end of the year 2000".

Peter Taylor and Frederick Buttle’s interpretation of the LTG study and the associated system dynamics (SD) models found that the original SD was created for firms and set the pattern for urban, global, and other SD models. These firm-based SDs relied on superintending managers to prevent undesirable cycling and feedback loops caused by separate common-sense decisions made by individual sectors. However, the later global model lacked superintending managers that enforce interrelated world-level changes, making undesirable cycles and exponential growth and collapse happen in nearly all models no matter the parameter settings. There was no way for a few individuals in the model to override the structure of the system even if they understood the system as a whole. This meant there were only two solutions: convincing everyone in the system to change the basic structure of population growth and collapse (moral response) and/or having a superintending agency analyzing the system as a whole and directing changes (technocratic response). The LTG report combined these two approaches multiple times. System dynamists constructed interventions into the world model to demonstrate how their proposed interventions improved the system to prevent collapse. The SD model also aggregated the world’s population and resources which meant that it did not demonstrate how crises emerge at different times and in different ways without any strictly global logic or form because of the unequal distributions of populations and resources. These issues indicate that the local, national, and regional differentiation in politics and economics surrounding socioenvironmental change was excluded from the SD used by LTG, making it unable to accurately demonstrate real-world dynamics.

Positive reviews

With few exceptions, economics as a discipline has been dominated by a perception of living in an unlimited world, where resource and pollution problems in one area were solved by moving resources or people to other parts. The very hint of any global limitation as suggested in the report The Limits to Growth was met with disbelief and rejection by businesses and most economists. However, this conclusion was mostly based on false premises.

Meyer & Nørgård (2010)

In 1980, the Global 2000 Report to the President arrived at similar conclusions regarding expected global resource scarcity, and the need for multilateral coordination to prepare for this situation.

In a 2008 blog post, Ugo Bardi commented that "Although, by the 1990s LTG had become everyone's laughing stock, among some the LTG ideas are becoming again popular". Reading LTG for the first time in 2000, Matthew Simmons concluded his views on the report by saying, "In hindsight, The Club of Rome turned out to be right. We simply wasted 30 important years ignoring this work."

Robert Solow, who had been a vocal critic of LTG, said in 2009 that "thirty years later, the situation may have changed... it will probably be more important in the future to deal intellectually, quantitatively, as well as practically, with the mutual interdependence of economic growth, natural resource availability, and environmental constraints".

In a study conducted in 2008, Graham Turner from CSIRO discovered a significant correlation between the observed historical data spanning from 1970 to 2000 and the simulated outcomes derived from the "standard run" limits of the growth model. This correlation was apparent across nearly all the reported outputs. The comparison falls comfortably within the range of uncertainty for almost all the available data, both in terms of magnitude and the patterns observed over time. Turner conducted an analysis of many studies, with a special focus on those authored by economists, that have consistently aimed to discredit the limits-to-growth concept over the course of several years. According to Turner, the aforementioned studies exhibit flaws and demonstrate a lack of comprehension regarding the model.

Turner reprised these observations in another opinion piece in The Guardian on 2 September 2014. Turner used data from the UN to claim that the graphs almost exactly matched the 'Standard Run' from 1972 (i.e. the worst-case scenario, assuming that a 'business as usual' attitude was adopted, and there were no modifications of human behaviour in response to the warnings in the report). Birth rates and death rates were both slightly lower than projected, but these two effects cancelled each other out, leaving the growth in world population almost exactly as forecast.

In 2010, Nørgård, Peet and Ragnarsdóttir called the book a "pioneering report", and said that it "has withstood the test of time and, indeed, has only become more relevant."

In 2012, Christian Parenti drew comparisons between the reception of The Limits to Growth and the ongoing global warming controversy. Parenti further remarked that despite its scientific rigour and credibility, the intellectual guardians of influential economic interests actively dismissed LTG as a warning. A parallel narrative is currently unfolding within the realm of climate research.

In 2012, John Scales Avery, a member of the Nobel Prize (1995) winning group associated with the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, supported the basic thesis of LTG by stating,

Although the specific predictions of resource availability in Limits to Growth lacked accuracy, its basic thesis – that unlimited economic growth on a finite planet is impossible – was indisputably correct.

Legacy

Updates and symposia

Researchers from China and Indonesia with Dennis Meadows

The Club of Rome has persisted after The Limits to Growth and has generally provided comprehensive updates to the book every five years.

An independent retrospective on the public debate over The Limits to Growth concluded in 1978 that optimistic attitudes had won out, causing a general loss of momentum in the environmental movement. While summarizing a large number of opposing arguments, the article concluded that "scientific arguments for and against each position ... have, it would seem, played only a small part in the general acceptance of alternative perspectives."

In 1989, a symposium was held in Hanover, entitled "Beyond the Limits to Growth: Global Industrial Society, Vision or Nightmare?" and in 1992, Beyond the Limits (BTL) was published as a 20-year update on the original material. It "concluded that two decades of history mainly supported the conclusions we had advanced 20 years earlier. But the 1992 book did offer one major new finding. We suggested in BTL that humanity had already overshot the limits of Earth's support capacity."

Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update was published in 2004. The authors observed that "It is a sad fact that humanity has largely squandered the past 30 years in futile debates and well-intentioned, but halfhearted, responses to the global ecological challenge. We do not have another 30 years to dither. Much will have to change if the ongoing overshoot is not to be followed by collapse during the twenty-first century."

In 2012, the Smithsonian Institution held a symposium entitled "Perspectives on Limits to Growth". Another symposium was held in the same year by the Volkswagen Foundation, entitled "Already Beyond?"

Limits to Growth did not receive an official update in 2012, but one of its coauthors, Jørgen Randers, published a book, 2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years.

Comparisons and updated models

In 2008, physicist Graham Turner at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Australia published a paper called "A Comparison of 'The Limits to Growth' with Thirty Years of Reality". It compared the past thirty years of data with the scenarios laid out in the 1972 book and found that changes in industrial production, food production, and pollution are all congruent with one of the book's three scenarios—that of "business as usual". This scenario in Limits points to economic and societal collapse in the 21st century. In 2010, Nørgård, Peet, and Ragnarsdóttir called the book a "pioneering report". They said that, "its approach remains useful and that its conclusions are still surprisingly valid ... unfortunately the report has been largely dismissed by critics as a doomsday prophecy that has not held up to scrutiny."

Also in 2008, researcher Peter A. Victor wrote that even though the Limits team probably underestimated price mechanism's role in adjusting outcomes, their critics have overestimated it. He states that Limits to Growth has had a significant impact on the conception of environmental issues and notes that (in his view) the models in the book were meant to be taken as predictions "only in the most limited sense of the word".

In a 2009 article published in American Scientist entitled Revisiting the Limits to Growth After Peak Oil, Hall and Day noted that "the values predicted by the limits-to-growth model and actual data for 2008 are very close." These findings are consistent with the 2008 CSIRO study which concluded: "The analysis shows that 30 years of historical data compares favorably with key features ... [of the Limits to Growth] "standard run" scenario, which results in collapse of the global system midway through the 21st Century."

In 2011, Ugo Bardi published a book-length academic study of The Limits to Growth, its methods, and historical reception and concluded that "The warnings that we received in 1972 ... are becoming increasingly more worrisome as reality seems to be following closely the curves that the ... scenario had generated." A popular analysis of the accuracy of the report by science writer Richard Heinberg was also published.

In 2012, writing in American Scientist, Brian Hayes stated that the model is "more a polemical tool than a scientific instrument". He went on to say that the graphs generated by the computer program should not, as the authors note, be used as predictions.

In 2014, Turner concluded that "preparing for a collapsing global system could be even more important than trying to avoid collapse." Another 2014 study from the University of Melbourne confirmed that data closely tracked the World3 BAU model.

In 2015, a calibration of the updated World3-03 model using historical data from 1995 to 2012 to better understand the dynamics of today's economic and resource system was undertaken. The results showed that human society has invested more to abate persistent pollution, increase food productivity and have a more productive service sector however the broad trends within Limits to Growth still held true.

In 2016, the UK government established an All-party parliamentary group on Limits to Growth. Its initial report concluded that "there is unsettling evidence that society is still following the 'standard run' of the original study – in which overshoot leads to an eventual collapse of production and living standards". The report also points out that some issues not fully addressed in the original 1972 report, such as climate change, present additional challenges for human development.

In 2020, an analysis by Gaya Herrington, then Director of Sustainability Services of KPMG US, was published in Yale University's Journal of Industrial Ecology. The study assessed whether, given key data known in 2020 about factors important for the "Limits to Growth" report, the original report's conclusions are supported. In particular, the 2020 study examined updated quantitative information about ten factors, namely population, fertility rates, mortality rates, industrial output, food production, services, non-renewable resources, persistent pollution, human welfare, and ecological footprint, and concluded that the "Limits to Growth" prediction is essentially correct in that continued economic growth is unsustainable under a "business as usual" model. The study found that current empirical data is broadly consistent with the 1972 projections and that if major changes to the consumption of resources are not undertaken, economic growth will peak and then rapidly decline by around 2040.

In 2023, the parameters of the World3 model were recalibrated using empirical data up to 2022. This improved parameter set results in a World3 simulation that shows the same overshoot and collapse mode in the coming decade as the original business-as-usual scenario of the Limits to Growth standard run. The main effect of the recalibration update is to raise the peaks of most variables and move them a few years into the future.

Related books

Books about humanity's uncertain future have appeared regularly over the years. A few of them, including the books mentioned above for reference, include:

  • An Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus (1798);
  • Our Plundered Planet by Henry Fairfield Osborn Jr. (1948);
  • Road to Survival by William Vogt (1948);
  • The Challenge of Man's Future by Harrison Brown (1956);
  • Mirage of Health by René Dubos (1959);
  • The Hungry Planet by Georg Bostrom (1965);
  • The Population Bomb by Paul R. Ehrlich (1968);
  • The Limits to Growth (1972);
  • Overshoot by William R. Catton (1980);
  • State of the World reports issued by the Worldwatch Institute (produced annually since 1984);
  • Our Common Future, published by the UN's World Commission on Environment and Development (1987);
  • Earth in the Balance, written by then-US senator Al Gore (1992);
  • Earth Odyssey by journalist Mark Hertsgaard (1999);
  • The Limits to Growth: The 30-Year Update (2003);
  • The Party's Over by Richard Heinberg (2003);
  • A Short History of Progress by Ronald Wright (2004);
  • Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World by Richard Heinberg (2005);
  • The Long Emergency by James Howard Kunstler (2005);
  • Storms of My Grandchildren by James Hansen, ISBN 9781608192007 (2009);
  • Too Smart for Our Own Good by Craig Dilworth (2009);
  • The Limits to Growth Revisited by Ugo Bardi, Springer Briefs in Energy, ISBN 9781441994158 (2011);
  • Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind by Yuval Noah Harari (2011);
  • The End of Growth: Adapting to Our New Economic Reality by Richard Heinberg (2011);
  • 2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years by Jørgen Randers (2012);
  • 10 Billion by Stephen Emmott (2013);
  • The Bet by Paul Sabin, Yale University Press (2014);
  • The Sixth Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert (2014);
  • The Uninhabitable Earth by David Wallace-Wells (2017);
  • Power: Limits and Prospects for Human Survival by Richard Heinberg (2021);
  • Limits and Beyond edited by Ugo Bardi and Carlos Alvarez Pereira, Exapt Press, ISBN 9781914549038 (2022).
  • Earth for All – A Survival Guide for Humanity (2022).

Editions

External links