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New Global Futures Initiative asks how humankind can extend Earth’s habitability

The ASU initiative's new leader says we’ve entered the era of planetary management


A globe

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January 23, 2018

Editor's note: The Global Futures Initiative at ASU changed its name to the Global Futures Laboratory in July 2019.

More than a decade ago, ASU declared its intent to become the world leader in sustainability research and education, taking the first steps in 2004 with the launch of the Global Institute of Sustainability and, two years later, with the charter of the School of Sustainability, the first in academia.

Since then, courses, degrees, programs, institutes and collaborations designed to help humans take better care of our planet have spread across the university, and today there are few corners of the institution this thinking doesn’t reach.

Researchers in engineering are designing renewable-energy microgrids that provide power to remote areas. Scholars in the law school are designing more equitable and sustainable water-rights agreements. Experts in the business school are testing product characteristics that influence how much consumers waste.

Programs can be found in the School for the Future of Innovation in Society and Institute for the Future of Innovation in Society, the Center for Science and the Imagination, the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability, and more. Many of these programs cross college, institute or disciplinary boundaries, too, such as research programs looking at the future of food, water and energy systems.

Things are more urgent now.

“We did what we said we were going to do,” ASU President Michael M. Crow said. “We have dozens of centers and hundreds of faculty members involved in this. We have built a global laboratory. It’s distributed, but it’s here inside the university.

“Now we need to focus on the future of the planet. Not only fixing problems we have created but also using knowledge and innovation to secure its habitability. This is urgent, and this is how what we have built here can have the biggest impact on the world.”

This week, Crow announced the launch of the Global Futures Initiative at ASU. Its goal is to harness the innovative capacity of academia and develop options for sound management of our planet.

Peter Schlosser

To lead the effort, ASU has appointed Peter Schlosser of Columbia University to serve as vice president and vice provost of Global Futures at ASU. He joined ASU Jan. 1, 2018.

READ MORE: Q&A with Schlosser about the new inititative and his role

“Peter is one of the world’s experts in how the world works as a physical system,” Crow said. “As much as any human being alive, he understands the intricacies of the planet we live on.”

“ASU is making major contributions to helping prepare human society for the challenges it will face in the Anthropocene,” Schlosser said. “Global Futures is a platform from which to take a broad look at the trajectory of our planet and the role of global society in shaping it, to gather and synthesize knowledge from many frameworks and to fundamentally alter how we manage the planet in ways that achieve sustained habitability.”

In the near term, Global Futures will focus on achieving a balance between creating new ideas and knowledge and zeroing in on outcome-driven problem-solving, Schlosser said.

“I hope we can take the pieces ASU has already created and fuse them together more tightly, synthesizing what is already there while breaking new intellectual ground,” he said.

It also will build new and bigger collaborations; find untapped opportunities that lie between disciplines, schools and existing projects; and amplify ASU’s global impact.

Schlosser serves at least three roles, Crow said.

The first is “to be a big-ideas thinker and public intellectual on behalf of ASU,” Crow said. “His voice in this is enormous.”

The second, on the academic side: “We want him to be a ‘green thread’ through all of these programs, connecting them, providing for maximum intellectual creativity, and leading and finding the best faculty,” he said.

And third, to be the senior research officer in global habitability, “helping us to drive all of these research initiatives forward together and at the same time,” Crow said. “What we’re after is for Peter to be the architect of this knowledge enterprise, a world-class intellect devoting all his energy to Global Futures at ASU.”

As one of the first steps, Schlosser will work to establish an international network of partnerships and collaborations. He envisions ASU as the world headquarters of an international alliance of prominent scientists working together to address the most critical issues related to human society and the future states of our planet, including, for example, new energy systems, food security and land degradation, environment and public health, depletion of natural resources, water scarcity, and new economies (such as a carbon economy) needed for a rapidly changing world.

In his role, Schlosser reports to Crow, to Provost Mark Searle and to Sethuraman Panchanathan, executive vice president of ASU’s Knowledge Enterprise Development.

He also has been appointed the University Global Futures Professor, with joint appointments in the School of Sustainability, the School of Earth and Space Exploration in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and the School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering .

In joining ASU, Schlosser is leaving behind an endowed professorship at Columbia University, as well as his role as the deputy director of the renowned Earth Institute, headquartered there. (Crow designed and established the Earth Institute in 1991.)

Schlosser’s own research has focused on water systems, especially oceans, continental surface waters, and groundwater with emphasis on the system-wide challenges introduced by human activities. He is one of the world’s experts on water circulation patterns and the exchange of gases between oceans and Earth’s atmosphere and its relationship to climate.

He is a member of the German National Academy of Science and a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Geophysical Union, and the Explorers Club.

For Crow, Global Futures is the next step in the evolution of solution-focused research and education at ASU related to planet Earth.

“We academics made a mistake a long time ago in getting too political about this,” he said. “This is not just about climate change or the Paris accord. This is about what we’re doing as an institution to be more valuable, to produce more ideas, to produce more solutions, to think broadly about global outcomes and to consider opportunities.”

While there is no way to avoid the policy discussions associated with sustainability and climate, added Schlosser, academia’s most important contributions must be grounded in understanding the basic functions of the earth system, exploring how humankind impacts those functions, finding solutions to disruptions, and building alliances across virtually all disciplines and partisan divides to implement these solutions.

“We need to understand that there are limits of our planet of which we are a part,” he said. “We have pushed and exceeded some of those limits. We have the capacity to shape a sustainable future. But we cannot afford to be complacent any longer. We can’t wait until the picture is fully put together. We have to respond now.”

In doing so, he said, “we have to get input from the very start from the people it affects most, because we don’t often enough take the time to explore the future with them.”

Top photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now

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