2021

There is growing data on the decline of species- which tends to have a cascading effect, as one species declines it creates pressure on other species who depend on that declining (or extinct) species for their survival. Forbes reports today on a new report that explicitly links biodiversity and economics, noting that people tend to compartmentalize business concerns around GDP during the week – and put off thinking about biodiversity “for Sundays”.

Photo by David Clode on Unsplash

The average abundance of native species in most major land-based habitats has fallen by at least 20%, mostly since 1900. More than 40% of amphibian species, almost 33% of reef-forming corals and more than a third of all marine mammals are threatened. The picture is less clear for insect species, but available evidence supports a tentative estimate of 10% being threatened. At least 680 vertebrate species had been driven to extinction since the 16th century and more than 9% of all domesticated breeds of mammals used for food and agriculture had become extinct by 2016, with at least 1,000 more breeds still threatened.

UN Report: Nature’s Dangerous Decline ‘Unprecedented’ (May 6, 2019)

As a recent research article from the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences notes, “Thousands of populations of critically endangered vertebrate animal species have been lost in a century, indicating that the sixth mass extinction is human caused and accelerating.” They looked at 29,400 species of terrestrial vertebrates and found that 1.7% (about 515 species) were close to extinction. Species labeled as close to extinction had to have less than 1,000 living members.

The Forbes article reported today about a report commissioned by the UK about biodiversity and economics by the University of Cambridge’s Professor emeritus Partha Dasgupta:

In a quite revolutionary way, Dasgupta asserts that “the contemporary practice of using Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to judge economic performance is based on a faulty application of economics” and suggests that “GDP growth is, in principle, compatible with sustainable development”.

Emanuela Barbiroglio, “Growth Is Only Real When Shared With Biodiversity, Says The New Dasgupta Review“, Forbes.com February 4, 2021

As Gupta notes, “we are all asset managers […for…] a class of assets called Nature”. These issues will likely be on the table for discussion at the upcoming COP26 conference in November 2021.

Shipping containers are measured in “twenty-foot equivalent units“, with the capacity of ships and warehouses given in TEU. As of ~2018 the largest containers ships can hold about 22,000 TEUs- and globally there are 5,222 ships as of April 2018 that can carry a total of 21.5 million TEUs. (Stats from Costamare, Inc.)

Photo by Ian Taylor on Unsplash

In Q2 2020, owners ordered 98 container ships, representing additional capacity of 1M TEU. The covid-19 impacts (labor, social distancing,etc.) led to a 40% reduction in U.S. warehouse labor supply, slowing warehouses ability to process (turn) containers.

One of the most common sources of groundwater contamination is leaking underground storage tanks (UST) like those used by convenience stores and gas stations. From the AEA blog:

About 60 percent of all underground storage tanks (USTs) have experienced at least one leak and that remediation of the approximately 528,000 total leaks costs over $1 billion a year in state and federal funds.

Chris Fleisher, The American Economic Association, January 25, 2021 – “Danger Lurks Below”
Photo by Jason Corey on Unsplash

The EPA runs the UST Program with a lot of detailed information about the problem, and how operators should prevent leaks and remediate them.

Photo by Manki Kim on Unsplash

The global average per capita consumption of tea will weigh in at 0.9 kg in 2021. Also, the average price per kilogram in the tea segment is expected to amount to US$35.06 in 2021. In the United States, consumer demand for tea has grown 18.7% year over year.

Statista Consumer Market Outlook for Tea (retrieved 2021-01-30)

The latest transatlantic cable, Dunant, commissioned in 2020, contains 24 fibres and uses such tricks [like dense wave-division multiplexing] to carry 300 terabits per second—more than a million times what TAT-8 could cope with. It was paid for not by a phone company, but by Google, and the tech giant plans to lay another in just two years’ time.

The Economist Technology Quarterly, Jan 9, 2021 edition: “From the universe to the dataverse