Andrew Mannle's Climate Chronicles

Could Climate Change Be the End of the 'Third World'?

Could Climate Change Be the End of the 'Third World'?

The news that international leaders in Italy were not able to commit to strong, binding climate change agreements probably doesn't surprise anybody.

"It is no small task for 17 leaders to bridge their differences on an issue like climate change," President Obama said.

But tackling an issue of this urgency, complexity and enormity may have an upside.

Right now, leaders of so-called 'developed' and 'developing' countries are at a standoff with good reason: Developed countries have polluted more in the past, but developing countries are rapidly outpacing them. Countries like the United States have much higher emissions per capita, while poorer nations argue that they are simply trying to provide basic services for their people.

"Developed countries like my own have a historic responsibility to take the lead," Obama said.

But without the help of developing nations like China and India, our best efforts will not stop global warming. As the president put it, "The threat of climate change can't be contained by borders on a map."

Clearly, this impasse will not be resolved using the current paradigm of 'developed' and 'developing' nations. Leaders of the so-called 'First World' and 'Third World' are confronting the reality that we live on one world; that the atmosphere has no borders.

Top 10 Reasons Mother Nature is 'Too Big to Fail'

Top 10 Reasons Mother Nature is 'Too Big to Fail'

As the debate about how to revive our economy while sustaining our environment heats up, it's important to remember that the economic driver truly "too big to fail" is Mother Nature herself.

It's been calculated that nature's "Ecosystem Services" are worth over $33 trillion dollars a year – nearly double the size of the global economy. And while that figure is important for putting a value on Nature's contributions to the economy, it belies the fact that without nature we could not survive at all.

So the true value of natural services? Priceless.

In their seminal work "Sustaining Life: How Human Health Depends on BioDiversity," Harvard M.D.'s teamed up with Oxford University Press, the U.N. Environment Program, and famed biologist E.O. Wilson to compile a comprehensive picture of how diverse species and ecosystems provide "materials, conditions, and processes that sustain all life on this planet, including human life."

Here's a look at the Top 10 things Mother Nature does for us for free, year after year, that we couldn't even begin to do ourselves without her:

Why the Wall Street Meltdown is a Tragedy of the Commons

Why the Wall Street Meltdown is a Tragedy of the Commons

A lot of people are scratching their heads right now as we watch bank after bank melt down. Huge financial institutions with billions of dollars on their books, thousands of employees and decades of experience are crumbling before our eyes. The founder of AIG said essentially: "I would never have believed it could fail, never in a million years." I'm sure many Lehman Brothers employees were thinking the same as they hastily packed up their cubicles.

So how could this happen?