This is a crisis: Facing up to the age of environmental breakdown
Article
Human-induced environmental change is occurring at an unprecedented scale and pace and the window of opportunity to avoid catastrophic outcomes in societies around the world is rapidly closing. These outcomes include economic instability, large-scale involuntary migration, conflict, famine and the potential collapse of social and economic systems. The historical disregard of environmental considerations in most areas of policy has been a catastrophic mistake.
In response, this paper argues that three shifts in understanding across political and policy communities are required: of the scale and pace of environmental breakdown, the implications for societies, and the subsequent need for transformative change
*This report has been amended following its initial publication. Amendments include additional context in relation to the debate around extreme weather events and an acknowledgment of the need for caution when using the EM-DAT database as a source for trends of natural disasters. These amendments have no material impact on the conclusions made by the report.
Related items

Partner to scale: How international collaboration can enable the green transition
Scaling clean industrial technologies requires a shift from fragmented national strategies to targeted, durable international cooperation.
The Europe agenda: Trade and integration
This briefing note explores the options for the UK to deepen the trading relationship and sets out a proposed path forward.
Brexit 10 years on: Time the North took back control through devolution
Why does 'take back control' not extend to devolution?