Today, I am joined by systems ecologist William E. Rees, who’s had a large and longtime influence in the field of ecological economics. Here he outlines why most of the challenges facing humanity and the biosphere have a common origin – ecological overshoot above a long term carrying capacity.

Nate Hagens

Link to interview of William E. Rees by Nate Hagens on The Great Simplification

More articles

May 09 2025

The planetary politics of everyday life

by Nils Gilman in Small Precautions…In conclusion, the analysis provided by La Fabrique Écologique powerfully argues that the ecological transition in France, and...
May 01 2025

Climate crisis on track to destroy capitalism, warns top insurer

by Damian Carrington in The Guardian…Action urgently needed to save the conditions under which markets – and civilisation itself – can operate, says senior...
Apr 30 2025

Bioregionalism in practice: Weaving local solutions in a global context

Webinar hosted by Regenerosity…This webinar kicks off a new series of bioregional conversations, designed to deepen understanding, improve practice, and expand...
Apr 28 2025

Welcome to the chaoscene

by Rupert Read in aeon.com…The climate crisis is here. In order to thrive in these dangerous and precarious times, we must build resilient communities.

Apr 25 2025

Bioregioning: the defining practice of regenerative cultures

by Daniel Wahl in Medium…..Bioregions define the appropriate scale for regional self-reliance, responsible environmental action and human participation in the...
Apr 24 2025

Ecological disruptions are a risk to national security

by Bradley J. Cardinale, et al in The Conversation…When the natural environment is stretched beyond its ability to meet basic human needs for food, clean air,...
Apr 11 2025

The future is in our roots 

from blog by Nnimmo Bassey…When one part of an ecosystem is destroyed, it impacts or destroys all the other parts. This means, nothing exists in isolation of...
Apr 09 2025

The last drops of Mexico City

by Rodrigo Cervantes and Jérôme Sessini on longlead.com…Every day, for most of her life, Norma, a 68-year-old woman from the outskirts of Mexico City, has...
Apr 07 2025

We’ve failed to stop climate change — this is what we need to do next

by Ben Spencer in The Sunday Times…While we can still limit warming by cutting emissions, we now face having to adapt to more extreme weather

Apr 01 2025

The rise of the degrowther right

by David Broder in Jacobin…A new conservative environmentalism that blends anti-modernism with nationalism and austerity is spreading across Europe.