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Lester R. Brown

Lester Russel Brown (born March 28, 1934) is an American environmental analyst, founder of the Worldwatch Institute, and founder and former president of the Earth Policy Institute, a nonprofit research organization based in Washington, D.C. BBC Radio commentator Peter Day referred to him as "one of the great pioneer environmentalists."

Lester R. Brown
Lester Brown in 2003.
Born
Lester Russel Brown

(1934-03-28) March 28, 1934 (age 89)
EducationRutgers University (B.S., 1955)
University of Maryland (M.S., 1959)
Harvard University (M.P.A., 1962)
Occupation(s)Global environmental analyst, author
Years active1963–2015
Known forAnalysis of global warming,
food shortages, water depletion and energy shortages
WebsiteEarth Policy Institute

Brown is the author or co-author of over 50 books on global environmental issues and his works have been translated into more than forty languages. His most recent book is The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy (2015), in which he explains that the global economy is now undergoing a transition from fossil and nuclear energy to clean power from solar, wind, and other renewable sources.[1] His previous book was Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity (2012).[2]

Brown emphasizes the geopolitical effects of fast-rising grain prices,[3] noting that "the biggest threat to global stability is the potential for food crises in poor countries," and one that could "bring down civilization."[4] In Foreign Policy magazine, he describes how the "new geopolitics of food" has, in 2011, already begun to contribute to revolutions and upheaval in various countries.[5]

The recipient of 26 honorary degrees and a MacArthur Fellowship, Brown has been described by the Washington Post as "one of the world's most influential thinkers." As early as 1978, in his book The Twenty-Ninth Day, he was already warning of "the various dangers arising out of our manhandling of nature...by overfishing the oceans, stripping the forests, turning land into desert."[6] In 1986, the Library of Congress requested his personal papers noting that his writings "have already strongly affected thinking about problems of world population and resources," while president Bill Clinton has suggested that "we should all heed his advice."[7] In 2003 he was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto.[8]

In the mid-1970s, Brown helped pioneer the concept of sustainable development, during a career that started with farming. Since then, he has been the recipient of many prizes and awards, including, the 1987 United Nations Environment Prize, the 1989 World Wide Fund for Nature Gold Medal, and the 1994 Blue Planet Prize for his "contributions to solving global environmental problems." In 1995, Marquis Who's Who selected Brown as one of its "50 Great Americans." He was recently awarded the Presidential Medal of Italy and was appointed an honorary professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He lives in Washington, D.C., and retired in June 2015.[9]

Early life edit

Brown was born and raised on a farm without running water or electricity in Bridgeton, New Jersey near the Delaware River. He learned to read early and was a voracious reader. He was fascinated by World War II and would borrow day-old papers from the next door farm to follow it. He especially enjoyed reading biographies including those of America's founding fathers and others such as Abraham Lincoln, George Washington Carver, and Marie Curie. From his earliest years, he worked on the farm, milking cows, pulling weeds, and cleaning the stable. An enterprising youth, he involved his younger brother, Carl, in various businesses, such as growing pheasants and chickens for sale. In 1951, they started a tomato growing business, which eventually grew to become one of New Jersey's largest, with sales of over 1,520,000 pounds (690,000 kg) a year. He later said, "farming is all I ever wanted to do with all my life. You have to know soils, weather, plant pathology, entomology, management, even politics. It's the ideal interdisciplinary profession."[10]

Education edit

Shortly after earning a degree in agricultural science from Rutgers University in 1955, through the International Farm Youth Exchange Program, he spent six months living in rural India where he became intimately familiar with food and population issues. "His experiences in Indian villages changed his life," wrote biographer David De Leon. "Although he went back to growing tomatoes when he returned to the United States, this no longer seemed like exciting work."[10]

Brown decided that to work on the global food issue, he would need to work for the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS).[9] He learned that before they would hire him, he needed to have a degree in agricultural economics. Brown took nine months to earn a master's degree in agricultural economics from the University of Maryland and in 1959 joined FAS as an international agricultural analyst in the Asia branch. A year or so later, he took a nine-month leave to earn a master of public administration from the Harvard Graduate School of Public Administration, which was later to become the John F. Kennedy School of Government.

In 1963, just four years later, he published Man, Land and Food, the first comprehensive projection of world food, population, and land resources to the end of the century. The study was a cover story in the January 6, 1963 issue of U.S. News & World Report where it came to the attention of Secretary of Agriculture, Orville Freeman. Freeman appreciated Brown's bold analysis and offered him a job on his staff, saying "you sketched the problems. Now you have to do something about them."[10] He was soon elevated to being the resident specialist on global issues. In this capacity, he advised the secretary of agriculture on his overseas agricultural policies. He also headed USDA's International Agricultural Development Service from 1966 to 1969. His primary job was to "increase food production in underdeveloped countries."[10]

In early 1969, he left government to help establish the Overseas Development Council. He also became an enthusiastic believer in the promise of a Green Revolution, with the hope of using better seeds and cultivation methods to help solve global problems of poverty and hunger. In his opinion, "this technology was the most crucial historical event since the steam engine."[10] In subsequent years, however, he realized that rapid population growth in undeveloped countries was overwhelming the gains in increased food production.[4]

Career as environmental activist edit

 
Lester Brown in 2009.

In 1974, with support of a $500,000 grant from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Brown founded the Worldwatch Institute, the first research institute devoted to the analysis of global environmental issues. While there he launched the Worldwatch Papers, the annual State of the World reports, World Watch magazine, a second annual entitled Vital Signs: The Trends That are Shaping Our Future, and the Environmental Alert book series. According to De Leon, "he gathered a staff of young idealists just out of college. They were expected to be 'professional generalists,' rather than narrow specialists with advanced degrees."[10]

The institute eventually became noted for being an independent and respected think tank focusing on environmental issues and also a storehouse for a large amount of environmental information. Their goal was to educate the public and government about environmental problems and to recommend actions. The institute has refused to become a lobbying organization, with Brown saying, "the world is filled with specialists who dig deep burrows into the earth and bring up these nuggets of insight, but there's no one up on top pulling it all together. That's our job."[10] As a result, he has been described as "one of the world's most influential thinkers" and was granted a $250,000 "genius award" by the MacArthur Foundation in 1986.

In 1991, in his acceptance speech for the Humanist of the Year award from the American Humanist Association, Brown spoke about the dual environmental challenges of population growth and global environmental decline which he attributes to unsustainable economic activity. Because he views the problems associated with nuclear power: cost, safety, and waste storage, as well as the risks of proliferation, he believes that solar is the only sustainable choice for humanity. "We have the opportunity as a generation to build an economic system that can last as long as the sun. None of our forebears had that opportunity. It's an exciting challenge; it's doable."[11]

In 2001, he left Worldwatch Institute to establish the Earth Policy Institute, devoted to providing a plan to save civilization. At the Institute, his years of working on global issues through an interdisciplinary lens enabled him to identify trends those working in specialized areas might not see. They also allowed him to consider global solutions to the many environmental concerns of today. Some of the more important works Brown wrote at the Institute include World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse (2011), Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth (2001), and the Plan B series. His most recent book was The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy (2015) co-authored with Janet Larsen, J. Matthew Roney, and Emily E. Adams.

On June 30, 2015, he officially retired and closed the Earth Policy Institute. The World Watch Institute was closed in about 2017. His legacies will live on through a Lester R. Brown Reading Room at Rutgers University (his alma mater). The room will house the collection of his books along with their translations, honorary degrees, and awards. His electronic collection of presentations, radio and television interviews, and documentaries in which he is featured will be accessioned into the Rutgers University library system. Rutgers is also hosting the Earth Policy Institute's website so that the information remains available.

The Library of Congress received his personal papers from his early years, through his career spanning the United States Department of Agriculture, the Overseas Development Council, Worldwatch Institute, and the Earth Policy Institute.

"…a small think tank with a knack of spotting new trends…" – Geoffrey Lean, Telegraph[12]

Environmentalist and author edit

Issuing warnings edit

After a talk at Catawba College in 2008, the college newspaper referred to him as an "environmental Paul Revere," [as] he warned his audience that "unless civilization changes its ways, its end is truly near... we're in a race between natural tipping points and political tipping points, - 'what we need most of all is for the market to tell the environmental truth.' " He added, "We don't need to go beyond our ice melts to know that we're in trouble. How much are we willing to spend to avoid a 23 foot rise in sea level?" He explained that "indirect costs are shaping our future," and by ignoring these, "we're doing exactly the same thing as Enron- leaving costs off the books. Consuming today with no concern for tomorrow is not a winning philosophy." He spoke of rapid population growth, deforestation, and "two new stresses – rising food and oil prices." "As oil prices go up, grain prices will follow," he said.[13]

Offering solutions edit

In 2001 Brown suggested a "tax shifting" structure which would reduce income taxes and offset them with taxes on environmentally destructive activities such as carbon emissions. It would lead to an "honest market", he said, by adding a tax on carbon to pay for the hidden costs of climate change. It would also account for the environmental costs of things such toxic waste, the overuse of raw materials, mercury emissions, the generation of garbage, the use of pesticides, and the use of throwaway products such as plastic bottles, all activities that would be discouraged by taxing.[14] He says that by keeping such environmental costs "off the books," and thereby hidden, society risks the same fate as a large company such as Enron, which failed immediately after auditors learned they had kept major costs off their books.[15]

Brown subsequently added that such a tax shift would amount to an "honest market," explaining, "The key to restructuring the economy is the creation of an honest market, one that tells the ecological truth."[16] In 2011 he estimated the cost of such a tax shift, including the effects of better technology, the use of renewables and "updating the concept of national security."[17]

In December 2008, Brown presented ways of creating new jobs by public investment in both the renewable energy industry and in energy efficiency technology. He included growth statistics along with the calculated number of jobs that would be created.[18]

Books (selection) edit

 
Full Planet, Empty Plates (2012).

Brown has authored or co-authored over 50 books. which have appeared in some 40 languages. Among his earlier books are Man, Land and Food, World Without Borders, and Building a Sustainable Society. His 1995 book Who Will Feed China? challenged the official view of China's food prospect, spawning many conferences and seminars.[19]

In May 2001, he founded the Earth Policy Institute to provide a vision and a road map for achieving an environmentally sustainable economy. In November 2001, he published Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth, which was hailed by E.O. Wilson as "an instant classic." In 2009 he published 'Plan B 4.0'[20] and in 2011 World on the Edge.[21] In 2012 he published Full Planet, Empty Plates.[22]

Who Will Feed China? edit

In this book, published in 1995, Brown highlights the pressure on world resources as more countries, especially China, become developed. He writes, "To feed its 1.2 billion people, China may soon have to import so much grain that this action could trigger unprecedented rises in world food prices."

In February 2014, he updated that forecast stating that China had since become a leading world grain importer, "set to buy a staggering 22 million tons" in the 2013-2014 trade year and their grain use climbing by 17 million tons per year.[23]

Outgrowing the Earth edit

This book, published in 2004, is a more recent description of "the ways in which human demands are outstripping the earth's natural capacities, and how the resulting environmental damage is undermining food production on a global scale. He documents that the decrease of crop production is due to global warming, water shortages, decreasing cropland in developing countries like China, and population growth that is still increasing world population by 76 million each year.

Plan B 4.0 edit

This book, published in 2009, continues the themes of his earlier books, and is written as a final warning call for the leaders of the world to begin "mobilizing to save civilization" and stresses even more that time is of the essence.

At California State University, Chico, Plan B has become "required reading for all incoming freshmen." The university says that it is being used in many courses in History, English, Philosophy, Communications, Political and Social Science.[24]

Breaking New Ground: A Personal History edit

In the fall of 2013, Brown published his autobiography. In Breaking New Ground, Brown details the seminal events of his life that led him to establish the first research institute devoted to an interdisciplinary analysis of global environmental issues. Of the book, David Orr said: "This is the life story of a true American hero . . . as a scientist and public intellectual dedicated to the cause of sustainability, Lester Brown is in a class by himself." David Suzuki said: "Lester Brown is one of humanity's great eco-warriors, constantly updating the state of the planet while ceaselessly seeking solutions and a path to sustainability. Breaking New Ground is an inspirational story of what one person is capable of achieving. Every aspiring activist will find much to learn from Lester Brown's life story."

The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy (2015) edit

 
The Great Transition (2015).

The book covers the rapid growth of a global energy revolution that uses renewable sources. Countries are replacing coal and nuclear power as their energy sources and moving toward renewable energies. While solar energy was originally developed for small-scale residential use, today major utility-scale solar projects[25] are being built globally. Single wind farm complexes[26] in some countries will produce as much electricity as several nuclear power plants. New transport systems in countries like China are also relying on electricity,[27] while more people use bicycles for local commuting.[28][29]

Awards and recognition edit

Lester Brown is the recipient of many prizes and awards, including 25 honorary degrees, and is an honorary professor of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.[30]

 
February 14, 1991: Lester Brown is receiving HC degree in Agricultural Sciences at the University of Pisa (Italy)
  • 1965 Recipient of Superior Service award, United States Department of Agriculture
  • 1965 Arthur S. Flemming award
  • 1981 A.H. Boerma award, U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization
  • 1982 UN Environmental Program Leadership medal
  • 1985 Lorax award of the Global Tomorrow Coalition
  • 1989 World Wildlife Fund for Nature - International
  • 1987 UN Environmental prize
  • 1991 Laurea Honoris Causa (HC degree) in Agricultural Sciences, University of Pisa, Italy
  • 1991 A. Bizzozero award, University of Parma
  • 1991 Humanist of the Year award, American Humanist Association
  • 1991 Pro Mundo Habitabili award, King Carl Gustaf XVI, Sweden
  • 1991 Delphi International Cooperation award
  • 1992 Cervia Ambiente prize, Italy
  • 1992 Robert Rodale Lecture award
  • 1993 Certificate of Special Recognition from the Association of American Geographers
  • 1994 Blue Planet prize, Asahi Glass Foundation
  • 1994 J. Sterling Morton Arbor Day award
  • 1995 Public Service award, Federation of American Scientists
  • 1995 Rachel Carson Environmental Achievement award
  • 2000 Bruno H. Schubert Foundation environment award
  • 2001 Natural Business Leadership award
  • 2002 Excellence Advantage award, International Fund for China's Environment
  • 2002 Italian Presidential medal
  • 2003 George and Greta Borgstrom prize, Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Forestry
  • 2005 Claire Matzger Lilienthal Distinguished Lecture award, California Academy of Science
  • 2008, Heifer All-Star (Heifer International Annual Award)
  • 2009, Charles A. and Anne Morrow Lindbergh Award
  • 2010, University of Maryland Alumni Hall of Fame
  • 2010, Hero Award, Alliance for Sustainable Colorado
  • 2012, Earth Hall of Fame Kyoto
  • 2012, Green Carpet Award for Distinguished Service, Harvard University
  • 2012, Planet and Humanity Award, International Geographical Union
  • 2013, Green Leadership Award, American Renewable Energy Institute
  • 2014, Distinguished Service Award, World Future Society
Honorable mention
Literary Awards
  • Christopher Award for By Bread Alone
  • Ecologia Firenze (Italian literary award) for The Twenty-Ninth Day
  • A.H. Boerma Award, FAO, for writings on the world food problem
  • Best Translated Book, award from the Ministry of Culture, Iran, for Full House
  • Best Nonfiction Book award from the Peka Institute, Iran, for Eco-Economy
  • National Library of China book award for Plan B (Chinese edition)

Bibliography edit

  • Man, Land and Food (1963)
  • Increasing World Food Output (1965)
  • Seeds of Change (1970)
  • Man and His Environment: Food (with Gail Finsterbusch) (1972)
  • World Without Borders (1972)
  • In the Human Interest (1974)
  • By Bread Alone (with Erik Eckholm, 1974)
  • The Twenty-Ninth Day (1978)
  • Running on Empty (with Colin Norman and Christopher Flavin, 1979)
  • Building a Sustainable Society (1981)
  • State of the World (with others, 1984–2001)
  • Vital Signs (with others, 1992–2001)
  • Eko Keizai Kakumei: Environmental Trends Reshaping The Global Economy (1998, in Japanese)
  • Saving the Planet: How to Shape an Environmentally Sustainable Global Economy (with Christopher Flavin and Sandra Postel, 1992)
  • Full House: Reassessing the Earth's Population Carrying Capacity (with Hal Kane, 1995)
  • Who Will Feed China?: Wake-Up Call for a Small Planet (1995)
  • Tough Choices: Facing the Challenge of Food Scarcity (1996)
  • Beyond Malthus: Nineteen Dimensions of the Population Challenge (with Gary Gardner and Brian Halweil) (1999)
  • Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth (2001) ISBN 0-393-32193-2
  • Earth Policy Reader (with Janet Larsen and Bernie Fischlowitz-Roberts, 2002) ISBN 0-393-32406-0
  • Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble (2003) ISBN 0-393-32523-7
  • Outgrowing the Earth: The Food Security Challenge in an Age of Falling Water Tables and Rising Temperatures (2004) ISBN 0-393-32725-6
  • Plan B 2.0: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble (2006) ISBN 978-0-393-32831-8
  • Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (2008) ISBN 978-0-393-33087-8
  • Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (2009) ISBN 978-0-393-33719-8
  • World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse (2011) ISBN 0-393-33949-1
  • Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity (2012) ISBN 978-0-393-08891-5 (cloth) 978-0-393-34415-8 (pbk)
  • Breaking New Ground: A Personal History (2013) ISBN 978-0-393-24006-1
  • The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy (with Emily Adams, Janet Larsen and Matthew Roney, 2015) ISBN 9780393350555

References edit

  1. ^ Brown, Lester. The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy, Earth Policy Institute, 2015
  2. ^ Brown, Lester. [1] Earth Policy Institute: Bookstore
  3. ^ Brown, Lester. "The Great Food Crisis of 2011" Earth Policy Institute
  4. ^ a b Brown, Lester R. "Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization?"[permanent dead link], Scientific American, May, 2009
  5. ^ Brown, Lester R. "The New Geopolitics of Food", Foreign Policy, May/June 2011
  6. ^ Harrington, Michael. New York Times book review, April 9, 1978
  7. ^ "Plan B: Mobilizing to Save Civilization", PBS Journey to Planet Earth series.
  8. ^ . Humanism and Its Aspirations. American Humanist Association. Archived from the original on October 5, 2012. Retrieved September 25, 2012.
  9. ^ a b Earth Policy Institute 2006-02-08 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b c d e f g De Leon, David. Leaders from the 1960s: a biographical sourcebook of American activism, Greenwood Publishing Group (1994)
  11. ^ Brown, Lester R. (Nov 1991). "The Environmental Crisis: A Humanist Call for Action". The Humanist. Vol. 51, no. 6. Washington, DC: American Humanist Association. pp. 26–30. ISSN 0018-7399.
  12. ^ . web.archive.org. 2009-09-27. Retrieved 2023-12-01.
  13. ^ Environmental Paul Revere, Talk at Catawba College, Nov. 12, 2008
  14. ^ Brown, Lester. Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth, Chapter 11. Tools for Restructuring the Economy: Tax Shifting, Earth Policy Institute (2001)
  15. ^ Interview with Lester Brown in 2014
  16. ^ Brown, Lester. Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble, Chapter 11. Plan B: Rising to the Challenge: Creating an Honest Market, Earth Policy Institute (2003)
  17. ^ Brown, Lester. World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse, Earth Policy Institute (2011), Preface to Part 3
  18. ^ Brown, Lester R. Creating New Jobs 2009-02-03 at the Wayback Machine, Earth Policy Institute, Dec. 8, 2008
  19. ^ "EPI | Blog". www.earth-policy.org. Retrieved 2022-04-12.
  20. ^ "Bookstore - Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization | EPI". www.earth-policy.org. Retrieved 2023-12-01.
  21. ^ "Bookstore - World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse | EPI". www.earth-policy.org. Retrieved 2023-12-01.
  22. ^ "Bookstore - Full Planet, Empty Plates: The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity | EPI". www.earth-policy.org. Retrieved 2023-12-01.
  23. ^ Brown, Lester. "Can the World Feed China?", Feb. 25, 2014
  24. ^ "Who's Using Plan B" 2009-07-08 at the Wayback Machine, Earth Policy Institute site
  25. ^ Photo of utility solar array
  26. ^ Photo of a wind farm
  27. ^ Photo of Chinese high-speed rail system
  28. ^ Photo of people commuting by bike
  29. ^ Brown, Lester R.; Larsen, Janet. The Great Transition: Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy, Earth Policy Institute (2015)
  30. ^ Who's Who in America, 2007 Marquis Who's Who
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-08-13. Retrieved 2017-03-08.
  32. ^ . foreignpolicy.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-31.

External links edit

  • at the Earth Policy Institute
  • Lester R. Brown at IMDb

lester, brown, football, player, same, name, lester, brown, canadian, football, lester, russel, brown, born, march, 1934, american, environmental, analyst, founder, worldwatch, institute, founder, former, president, earth, policy, institute, nonprofit, researc. For the football player of the same name see Lester Brown Canadian football Lester Russel Brown born March 28 1934 is an American environmental analyst founder of the Worldwatch Institute and founder and former president of the Earth Policy Institute a nonprofit research organization based in Washington D C BBC Radio commentator Peter Day referred to him as one of the great pioneer environmentalists Lester R BrownLester Brown in 2003 BornLester Russel Brown 1934 03 28 March 28 1934 age 89 Bridgeton New Jersey U S EducationRutgers University B S 1955 University of Maryland M S 1959 Harvard University M P A 1962 Occupation s Global environmental analyst authorYears active1963 2015Known forAnalysis of global warming food shortages water depletion and energy shortagesWebsiteEarth Policy InstituteBrown is the author or co author of over 50 books on global environmental issues and his works have been translated into more than forty languages His most recent book is The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy 2015 in which he explains that the global economy is now undergoing a transition from fossil and nuclear energy to clean power from solar wind and other renewable sources 1 His previous book was Full Planet Empty Plates The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity 2012 2 Brown emphasizes the geopolitical effects of fast rising grain prices 3 noting that the biggest threat to global stability is the potential for food crises in poor countries and one that could bring down civilization 4 In Foreign Policy magazine he describes how the new geopolitics of food has in 2011 already begun to contribute to revolutions and upheaval in various countries 5 The recipient of 26 honorary degrees and a MacArthur Fellowship Brown has been described by the Washington Post as one of the world s most influential thinkers As early as 1978 in his book The Twenty Ninth Day he was already warning of the various dangers arising out of our manhandling of nature by overfishing the oceans stripping the forests turning land into desert 6 In 1986 the Library of Congress requested his personal papers noting that his writings have already strongly affected thinking about problems of world population and resources while president Bill Clinton has suggested that we should all heed his advice 7 In 2003 he was one of the signers of the Humanist Manifesto 8 In the mid 1970s Brown helped pioneer the concept of sustainable development during a career that started with farming Since then he has been the recipient of many prizes and awards including the 1987 United Nations Environment Prize the 1989 World Wide Fund for Nature Gold Medal and the 1994 Blue Planet Prize for his contributions to solving global environmental problems In 1995 Marquis Who s Who selected Brown as one of its 50 Great Americans He was recently awarded the Presidential Medal of Italy and was appointed an honorary professor at the Chinese Academy of Sciences He lives in Washington D C and retired in June 2015 9 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Career as environmental activist 4 Environmentalist and author 4 1 Issuing warnings 4 2 Offering solutions 5 Books selection 5 1 Who Will Feed China 5 2 Outgrowing the Earth 5 3 Plan B 4 0 5 4 Breaking New Ground A Personal History 5 5 The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy 2015 6 Awards and recognition 7 Bibliography 8 References 9 External linksEarly life editBrown was born and raised on a farm without running water or electricity in Bridgeton New Jersey near the Delaware River He learned to read early and was a voracious reader He was fascinated by World War II and would borrow day old papers from the next door farm to follow it He especially enjoyed reading biographies including those of America s founding fathers and others such as Abraham Lincoln George Washington Carver and Marie Curie From his earliest years he worked on the farm milking cows pulling weeds and cleaning the stable An enterprising youth he involved his younger brother Carl in various businesses such as growing pheasants and chickens for sale In 1951 they started a tomato growing business which eventually grew to become one of New Jersey s largest with sales of over 1 520 000 pounds 690 000 kg a year He later said farming is all I ever wanted to do with all my life You have to know soils weather plant pathology entomology management even politics It s the ideal interdisciplinary profession 10 Education editShortly after earning a degree in agricultural science from Rutgers University in 1955 through the International Farm Youth Exchange Program he spent six months living in rural India where he became intimately familiar with food and population issues His experiences in Indian villages changed his life wrote biographer David De Leon Although he went back to growing tomatoes when he returned to the United States this no longer seemed like exciting work 10 Brown decided that to work on the global food issue he would need to work for the U S Department of Agriculture s USDA Foreign Agricultural Service FAS 9 He learned that before they would hire him he needed to have a degree in agricultural economics Brown took nine months to earn a master s degree in agricultural economics from the University of Maryland and in 1959 joined FAS as an international agricultural analyst in the Asia branch A year or so later he took a nine month leave to earn a master of public administration from the Harvard Graduate School of Public Administration which was later to become the John F Kennedy School of Government In 1963 just four years later he published Man Land and Food the first comprehensive projection of world food population and land resources to the end of the century The study was a cover story in the January 6 1963 issue of U S News amp World Report where it came to the attention of Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman Freeman appreciated Brown s bold analysis and offered him a job on his staff saying you sketched the problems Now you have to do something about them 10 He was soon elevated to being the resident specialist on global issues In this capacity he advised the secretary of agriculture on his overseas agricultural policies He also headed USDA s International Agricultural Development Service from 1966 to 1969 His primary job was to increase food production in underdeveloped countries 10 In early 1969 he left government to help establish the Overseas Development Council He also became an enthusiastic believer in the promise of a Green Revolution with the hope of using better seeds and cultivation methods to help solve global problems of poverty and hunger In his opinion this technology was the most crucial historical event since the steam engine 10 In subsequent years however he realized that rapid population growth in undeveloped countries was overwhelming the gains in increased food production 4 Career as environmental activist edit nbsp Lester Brown in 2009 In 1974 with support of a 500 000 grant from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Brown founded the Worldwatch Institute the first research institute devoted to the analysis of global environmental issues While there he launched the Worldwatch Papers the annual State of the World reports World Watch magazine a second annual entitled Vital Signs The Trends That are Shaping Our Future and the Environmental Alert book series According to De Leon he gathered a staff of young idealists just out of college They were expected to be professional generalists rather than narrow specialists with advanced degrees 10 The institute eventually became noted for being an independent and respected think tank focusing on environmental issues and also a storehouse for a large amount of environmental information Their goal was to educate the public and government about environmental problems and to recommend actions The institute has refused to become a lobbying organization with Brown saying the world is filled with specialists who dig deep burrows into the earth and bring up these nuggets of insight but there s no one up on top pulling it all together That s our job 10 As a result he has been described as one of the world s most influential thinkers and was granted a 250 000 genius award by the MacArthur Foundation in 1986 In 1991 in his acceptance speech for the Humanist of the Year award from the American Humanist Association Brown spoke about the dual environmental challenges of population growth and global environmental decline which he attributes to unsustainable economic activity Because he views the problems associated with nuclear power cost safety and waste storage as well as the risks of proliferation he believes that solar is the only sustainable choice for humanity We have the opportunity as a generation to build an economic system that can last as long as the sun None of our forebears had that opportunity It s an exciting challenge it s doable 11 In 2001 he left Worldwatch Institute to establish the Earth Policy Institute devoted to providing a plan to save civilization At the Institute his years of working on global issues through an interdisciplinary lens enabled him to identify trends those working in specialized areas might not see They also allowed him to consider global solutions to the many environmental concerns of today Some of the more important works Brown wrote at the Institute include World on the Edge How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse 2011 Eco Economy Building an Economy for the Earth 2001 and the Plan B series His most recent book was The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy 2015 co authored with Janet Larsen J Matthew Roney and Emily E Adams On June 30 2015 he officially retired and closed the Earth Policy Institute The World Watch Institute was closed in about 2017 His legacies will live on through a Lester R Brown Reading Room at Rutgers University his alma mater The room will house the collection of his books along with their translations honorary degrees and awards His electronic collection of presentations radio and television interviews and documentaries in which he is featured will be accessioned into the Rutgers University library system Rutgers is also hosting the Earth Policy Institute s website so that the information remains available The Library of Congress received his personal papers from his early years through his career spanning the United States Department of Agriculture the Overseas Development Council Worldwatch Institute and the Earth Policy Institute a small think tank with a knack of spotting new trends Geoffrey Lean Telegraph 12 Environmentalist and author editIssuing warnings edit After a talk at Catawba College in 2008 the college newspaper referred to him as an environmental Paul Revere as he warned his audience that unless civilization changes its ways its end is truly near we re in a race between natural tipping points and political tipping points what we need most of all is for the market to tell the environmental truth He added We don t need to go beyond our ice melts to know that we re in trouble How much are we willing to spend to avoid a 23 foot rise in sea level He explained that indirect costs are shaping our future and by ignoring these we re doing exactly the same thing as Enron leaving costs off the books Consuming today with no concern for tomorrow is not a winning philosophy He spoke of rapid population growth deforestation and two new stresses rising food and oil prices As oil prices go up grain prices will follow he said 13 Offering solutions edit In 2001 Brown suggested a tax shifting structure which would reduce income taxes and offset them with taxes on environmentally destructive activities such as carbon emissions It would lead to an honest market he said by adding a tax on carbon to pay for the hidden costs of climate change It would also account for the environmental costs of things such toxic waste the overuse of raw materials mercury emissions the generation of garbage the use of pesticides and the use of throwaway products such as plastic bottles all activities that would be discouraged by taxing 14 He says that by keeping such environmental costs off the books and thereby hidden society risks the same fate as a large company such as Enron which failed immediately after auditors learned they had kept major costs off their books 15 Brown subsequently added that such a tax shift would amount to an honest market explaining The key to restructuring the economy is the creation of an honest market one that tells the ecological truth 16 In 2011 he estimated the cost of such a tax shift including the effects of better technology the use of renewables and updating the concept of national security 17 In December 2008 Brown presented ways of creating new jobs by public investment in both the renewable energy industry and in energy efficiency technology He included growth statistics along with the calculated number of jobs that would be created 18 Books selection edit nbsp Full Planet Empty Plates 2012 Brown has authored or co authored over 50 books which have appeared in some 40 languages Among his earlier books are Man Land and Food World Without Borders and Building a Sustainable Society His 1995 book Who Will Feed China challenged the official view of China s food prospect spawning many conferences and seminars 19 In May 2001 he founded the Earth Policy Institute to provide a vision and a road map for achieving an environmentally sustainable economy In November 2001 he published Eco Economy Building an Economy for the Earth which was hailed by E O Wilson as an instant classic In 2009 he published Plan B 4 0 20 and in 2011 World on the Edge 21 In 2012 he published Full Planet Empty Plates 22 Who Will Feed China edit In this book published in 1995 Brown highlights the pressure on world resources as more countries especially China become developed He writes To feed its 1 2 billion people China may soon have to import so much grain that this action could trigger unprecedented rises in world food prices In February 2014 he updated that forecast stating that China had since become a leading world grain importer set to buy a staggering 22 million tons in the 2013 2014 trade year and their grain use climbing by 17 million tons per year 23 Outgrowing the Earth edit This book published in 2004 is a more recent description of the ways in which human demands are outstripping the earth s natural capacities and how the resulting environmental damage is undermining food production on a global scale He documents that the decrease of crop production is due to global warming water shortages decreasing cropland in developing countries like China and population growth that is still increasing world population by 76 million each year Plan B 4 0 edit This book published in 2009 continues the themes of his earlier books and is written as a final warning call for the leaders of the world to begin mobilizing to save civilization and stresses even more that time is of the essence At California State University Chico Plan B has become required reading for all incoming freshmen The university says that it is being used in many courses in History English Philosophy Communications Political and Social Science 24 Breaking New Ground A Personal History edit In the fall of 2013 Brown published his autobiography In Breaking New Ground Brown details the seminal events of his life that led him to establish the first research institute devoted to an interdisciplinary analysis of global environmental issues Of the book David Orr said This is the life story of a true American hero as a scientist and public intellectual dedicated to the cause of sustainability Lester Brown is in a class by himself David Suzuki said Lester Brown is one of humanity s great eco warriors constantly updating the state of the planet while ceaselessly seeking solutions and a path to sustainability Breaking New Ground is an inspirational story of what one person is capable of achieving Every aspiring activist will find much to learn from Lester Brown s life story The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy 2015 edit nbsp The Great Transition 2015 The book covers the rapid growth of a global energy revolution that uses renewable sources Countries are replacing coal and nuclear power as their energy sources and moving toward renewable energies While solar energy was originally developed for small scale residential use today major utility scale solar projects 25 are being built globally Single wind farm complexes 26 in some countries will produce as much electricity as several nuclear power plants New transport systems in countries like China are also relying on electricity 27 while more people use bicycles for local commuting 28 29 Awards and recognition editLester Brown is the recipient of many prizes and awards including 25 honorary degrees and is an honorary professor of the Chinese Academy of Sciences 30 nbsp February 14 1991 Lester Brown is receiving HC degree in Agricultural Sciences at the University of Pisa Italy 1965 Recipient of Superior Service award United States Department of Agriculture 1965 Arthur S Flemming award 1981 A H Boerma award U N Food and Agriculture Organization 1982 UN Environmental Program Leadership medal 1985 Lorax award of the Global Tomorrow Coalition 1989 World Wildlife Fund for Nature International 1987 UN Environmental prize 1991 Laurea Honoris Causa HC degree in Agricultural Sciences University of Pisa Italy 1991 A Bizzozero award University of Parma 1991 Humanist of the Year award American Humanist Association 1991 Pro Mundo Habitabili award King Carl Gustaf XVI Sweden 1991 Delphi International Cooperation award 1992 Cervia Ambiente prize Italy 1992 Robert Rodale Lecture award 1993 Certificate of Special Recognition from the Association of American Geographers 1994 Blue Planet prize Asahi Glass Foundation 1994 J Sterling Morton Arbor Day award 1995 Public Service award Federation of American Scientists 1995 Rachel Carson Environmental Achievement award 2000 Bruno H Schubert Foundation environment award 2001 Natural Business Leadership award 2002 Excellence Advantage award International Fund for China s Environment 2002 Italian Presidential medal 2003 George and Greta Borgstrom prize Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Forestry 2005 Claire Matzger Lilienthal Distinguished Lecture award California Academy of Science 2008 Heifer All Star Heifer International Annual Award 2009 Charles A and Anne Morrow Lindbergh Award 2010 University of Maryland Alumni Hall of Fame 2010 Hero Award Alliance for Sustainable Colorado 2012 Earth Hall of Fame Kyoto 2012 Green Carpet Award for Distinguished Service Harvard University 2012 Planet and Humanity Award International Geographical Union 2013 Green Leadership Award American Renewable Energy Institute 2014 Distinguished Service Award World Future SocietyHonorable mention2010 One of top 100 top global thinkers by Foreign Policy magazine 31 2011 One of top 100 top global thinkers by Foreign Policy magazine 32 Literary AwardsChristopher Award for By Bread Alone Ecologia Firenze Italian literary award for The Twenty Ninth Day A H Boerma Award FAO for writings on the world food problem Best Translated Book award from the Ministry of Culture Iran for Full House Best Nonfiction Book award from the Peka Institute Iran for Eco Economy National Library of China book award for Plan B Chinese edition Bibliography editMan Land and Food 1963 Increasing World Food Output 1965 Seeds of Change 1970 Man and His Environment Food with Gail Finsterbusch 1972 World Without Borders 1972 In the Human Interest 1974 By Bread Alone with Erik Eckholm 1974 The Twenty Ninth Day 1978 Running on Empty with Colin Norman and Christopher Flavin 1979 Building a Sustainable Society 1981 State of the World with others 1984 2001 Vital Signs with others 1992 2001 Eko Keizai Kakumei Environmental Trends Reshaping The Global Economy 1998 in Japanese Saving the Planet How to Shape an Environmentally Sustainable Global Economy with Christopher Flavin and Sandra Postel 1992 Full House Reassessing the Earth s Population Carrying Capacity with Hal Kane 1995 Who Will Feed China Wake Up Call for a Small Planet 1995 Tough Choices Facing the Challenge of Food Scarcity 1996 Beyond Malthus Nineteen Dimensions of the Population Challenge with Gary Gardner and Brian Halweil 1999 Eco Economy Building an Economy for the Earth 2001 ISBN 0 393 32193 2 Earth Policy Reader with Janet Larsen and Bernie Fischlowitz Roberts 2002 ISBN 0 393 32406 0 Plan B Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble 2003 ISBN 0 393 32523 7 Outgrowing the Earth The Food Security Challenge in an Age of Falling Water Tables and Rising Temperatures 2004 ISBN 0 393 32725 6 Plan B 2 0 Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble 2006 ISBN 978 0 393 32831 8 Plan B 3 0 Mobilizing to Save Civilization 2008 ISBN 978 0 393 33087 8 Plan B 4 0 Mobilizing to Save Civilization 2009 ISBN 978 0 393 33719 8 World on the Edge How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse 2011 ISBN 0 393 33949 1 Full Planet Empty Plates The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity 2012 ISBN 978 0 393 08891 5 cloth 978 0 393 34415 8 pbk Breaking New Ground A Personal History 2013 ISBN 978 0 393 24006 1 The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy with Emily Adams Janet Larsen and Matthew Roney 2015 ISBN 9780393350555References edit Brown Lester The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy Earth Policy Institute 2015 Brown Lester 1 Earth Policy Institute Bookstore Brown Lester The Great Food Crisis of 2011 Earth Policy Institute a b Brown Lester R Could Food Shortages Bring Down Civilization permanent dead link Scientific American May 2009 Brown Lester R The New Geopolitics of Food Foreign Policy May June 2011 Harrington Michael New York Times book review April 9 1978 Plan B Mobilizing to Save Civilization PBS Journey to Planet Earth series Notable Signers Humanism and Its Aspirations American Humanist Association Archived from the original on October 5 2012 Retrieved September 25 2012 a b Earth Policy Institute Archived 2006 02 08 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g De Leon David Leaders from the 1960s a biographical sourcebook of American activism Greenwood Publishing Group 1994 Brown Lester R Nov 1991 The Environmental Crisis A Humanist Call for Action The Humanist Vol 51 no 6 Washington DC American Humanist Association pp 26 30 ISSN 0018 7399 Geoffrey Lean Telegraph Blogs web archive org 2009 09 27 Retrieved 2023 12 01 Environmental Paul Revere Talk at Catawba College Nov 12 2008 Brown Lester Eco Economy Building an Economy for the Earth Chapter 11 Tools for Restructuring the Economy Tax Shifting Earth Policy Institute 2001 Interview with Lester Brown in 2014 Brown Lester Plan B Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble Chapter 11 Plan B Rising to the Challenge Creating an Honest Market Earth Policy Institute 2003 Brown Lester World on the Edge How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse Earth Policy Institute 2011 Preface to Part 3 Brown Lester R Creating New Jobs Archived 2009 02 03 at the Wayback Machine Earth Policy Institute Dec 8 2008 EPI Blog www earth policy org Retrieved 2022 04 12 Bookstore Plan B 4 0 Mobilizing to Save Civilization EPI www earth policy org Retrieved 2023 12 01 Bookstore World on the Edge How to Prevent Environmental and Economic Collapse EPI www earth policy org Retrieved 2023 12 01 Bookstore Full Planet Empty Plates The New Geopolitics of Food Scarcity EPI www earth policy org Retrieved 2023 12 01 Brown Lester Can the World Feed China Feb 25 2014 Who s Using Plan B Archived 2009 07 08 at the Wayback Machine Earth Policy Institute site Photo of utility solar array Photo of a wind farm Photo of Chinese high speed rail system Photo of people commuting by bike Brown Lester R Larsen Janet The Great Transition Shifting from Fossil Fuels to Solar and Wind Energy Earth Policy Institute 2015 Who s Who in America 2007 Marquis Who s Who The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers Archived from the original on 2014 08 13 Retrieved 2017 03 08 The FP Top 100 Global Thinkers foreignpolicy com Archived from the original on 2013 12 31 External links editBiography of Lester R Brown at the Earth Policy Institute Lester R Brown at IMDb Portals nbsp Biography nbsp United States nbsp Environment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lester R Brown amp oldid 1187812805, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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