planetary stewardship

Planetary Commons: Fostering global cooperation to safeguard critical Earth system functions

We should look at tipping elements of the Earth system as global commons, argue researchers in a new paper published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Story highlights

  • Our civilisation depends on the stability of critical Earth system functions that operate beyond national borders
  • Safeguarding these critical Earth system regulatory functions is a challenge at a unique planetary scale of governance
  • Therefore, tipping elements of the Earth system should be considered global commons

Global commons cannot — as they currently do — only include the parts of the planet outside of national borders, like the high seas or Antarctica. They must also include all the environmental systems that regulate the functioning and state of the planet, namely all systems on Earth we all depend on, irrespective of where in the world we live, according to the researchers behind the paper, including Centre researchers Johan Rockström, Jonathan Donges and Carl Folke.

We argue that tipping elements should be considered as planetary commons the world is entrusted with.

Johan Rockström, Centre professor and director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)

This calls for a new level of transnational cooperation. To limit risks for human societies and secure critical Earth system functions they propose a new framework of planetary commons to guide governance of the planet.

“Stability and wealth of nations and our civilisation depends on the stability of critical Earth system functions that operate beyond national borders. At the same time, human activities push harder and harder on the planetary boundaries of these pivotal systems. From the Amazon rainforest to the Greenland ice masses, there are rising risks of triggering irreversible and unmanageable shifts in Earth system functioning. As these shifts affect people across the globe, we argue that tipping elements should be considered as planetary commons the world is entrusted with, and consequently in need of collective governance,” explains Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and professor in sustainability science at the Centre.

The publication is the result of an almost two-year-long research process involving 22 leading international researchers. Legal, political and Earth system scientists make their case by building on the well-known idea of the global commons. They then expand it significantly to design more effective legal responses to better govern biophysical systems that regulate planetary resilience beyond and across national boundaries, such as natural carbon sinks and the major forest systems.

We believe the planetary commons have the potential to articulate and create effective stewardship obligations for nation states worldwide.

Joyeeta Gupta, professor at the University of Amsterdam

“We believe the planetary commons have the potential to articulate and create effective stewardship obligations for nation states worldwide through Earth system governance aimed at restoring and strengthening planetary resilience and promoting justice. However, since these commons are often located within sovereign territories, such stewardship obligations must also meet some clear justice criteria,” highlights professor Joyeeta Gupta at the University of Amsterdam.

A planetary shift

Other global commons or global public goods include the high seas and deep seabed, outer space, Antarctica and the atmosphere. These are shared by all states and lie outside of jurisdictional boundaries and thus sovereign entitlements. All states and people have a collective interest, especially when it comes to resource extraction, that they be protected and governed effectively for the collective good. The planetary commons expand the idea of the global commons by adding not only globally shared geographic regions to the global commons framework, but also critical biophysical systems that regulate the resilience and state, and therefore livability, on Earth.

The consequences of such a “planetary shift” in global commons governance are potentially profound, the authors argue. Safeguarding these critical Earth system regulatory functions is a challenge at a unique planetary scale of governance, characterised by the need for collective global scale solutions that transcend national boundaries.

Read "The planetary commons: a new paradigm for safeguarding Earth-regulating systems in the Anthropocene" »

Published: 2024-01-23

Citation

Rockström, J., Kotzé, L.J., Milutinović, S., Biermann, F., Brovkin, V., Donges, J.F., Ebbesson, J., French, D., Gupta, J., Kim, R.E., Lenton, T.M., Lenzi, D., Nakicenovic, N., Neumann, B., Schuppert, F., Winkelmann, R., Bosselmann, K., Folke, C., Lucht, W., Schlosberg, D., Richardson, K. & Steffen, W. 2024. The planetary commons: a new paradigm for safeguarding Earth-regulating systems in the Anthropocene. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

DOI: doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2301531121

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