Published On: 21 October 2024

August 1st marks Earth Overshoot Day, the date when humanity’s demand on nature’s resources surpasses Earth’s capacity to regenerate them for the given year. This day is calculated by Global Footprint Network, the international sustainability organization that pioneered the Ecological Footprint.

Earth Overshoot Day falling on August 1st signifies that humanity is currently using nature 1.7 times faster than our planet’s ecosystems can regenerate. This overshoot is possible because people can harvest more than is being renewed, thereby depleting natural capital. Such overuse compromises resource security. The consequences of ecological overspending are evident in deforestation, soil erosion, biodiversity loss, and the buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which leads to more frequent extreme weather events and reduced food production.

Although Earth Overshoot Day has held steady for a decade, it remains early in the year, occurring just after 7 months of the year have passed. The remainder of the year humanity lives from overuse, further depleting the biosphere. Therefore, even as the date holds steady, the pressure on the planet keeps increasing, since damage from overshoot accumulates over time.

Earth Overshoot Day

Earth Overshoot Day [https://overshoot.footprintnetwork.org/content/uploads/2024/06/EOD-2024_jpg_v4-2048×1516.jpg]

Lewis Akenji, Global Footprint Network board member, states: “Overshoot will end. The question is how: by design or by disaster. A planned transition gives us better security than ceding to the whims of a planet thrown off balance by overshoot.”

Just as athletes achieving breakthroughs through focus, innovation, and effort, humanity needs to do the same if it wants to succeed in ending overshoot by design. In 1968, Dick Fosbury revolutionized the high jump at the Mexico Olympics, at a time when humanity used just just 0.9 Earths. By 1988, when Olympian sailor Lawrence Lemieux stopped mid-race to rescue two capsized competitors, humanity’s demand on nature had jumped to 1.3 Earths. In 2008, as Usain Bolt broke his first Olympic records, it had grown to 1.6 Earths. Can we summon the same determination to reverse our ecological overshoot?

Ending overshoot is essential. It is also possible, given human potential,” comments Debora Barioni of Global Footprint Network.

Solutions that #MoveTheDate are available and financially advantageous. Opportunities exist in five key areas: Cities, Energy, Food, Population, and Planet. The Power of Possibility highlights options that move Earth Overshoot Day. For example, cutting CO2 emissions from fossil fuels by 50% would #MoveTheDate by three months. There are also businesses that #MoveTheDate as they expand. Such businesses may be the ones best positioned to gain value in a future of climate change and resource constraints.

Source: Earth Overshoot Day

In 1936, Jesse Owens won four gold medals – humanity used 0.6 Earths.

In 1968, Dick Fosbury revolutionized the high jump and won gold – humanity used 0.9 Earths.

In 1992, the US basket ball ‘dream team’ won gold – humanity used 1.2 Earths.

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