earthovershootday

Earth Overshoot Day: the day humanity exhausts Earth’s annual natural resources 

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Can we change course? Can humans live in balance with nature?


July 24th marks Earth Overshoot Day—the date when humanity’s demand for ecological resources exceeds what Earth can regenerate in a year. From this point on, we’re drawing down nature’s capital—robbing future generations to maintain the present.

This symbolic threshold arrives earlier each year, highlighting our deepening ecological debt. In the 1970s, Overshoot Day fell in December. Today, it comes in late July. Wealthier nations overshoot at alarming rates: the U.S. consumes resources as if it had five Earths; Italy’s ecological footprint is 2.9 times what its ecosystems can replenish.

The path back: five levers for change


According to the  Global Footprint Network, solutions exist to move the date—and they hinge on systemic changes, not small tweaks. The organisation promotes five key strategies, encapsulated in the campaign #MoveTheDate:

  1. Energy transition: Replacing fossil fuels with renewables could shift Overshoot Day by 93 days.
  2. Circular economies: Reducing waste and redesigning production systems to close material loops. 
  3. Food system overhaul: Cutting global meat consumption by 50% could push the date back 17 days. 
  4. Green cities: Rethinking mobility, housing, and infrastructure to reduce urban footprints.
  5. Policy shifts: Implementing binding treaties to protect forests, oceans, and carbon sinks. 

The good news? If we manage to push back Overshoot Day by just five days per year, we could return to living within Earth’s means by 2050.

Rupert Read on reversing ecological overshoot


But is it still possible?
Rupert Read, environmental philosopher and former spokesperson for Extinction Rebellion, is sceptical of techno-optimistic solutions. He aligns with the “deep adaptation” movement, which argues that ecological collapse is now likely—and that instead of relying solely on mitigation, we must prepare for radical societal transformation.

From Read’s perspective:

  • “Too little, too late” – Even drastic emissions cuts may not suffice, as we may have already triggered tipping points like permafrost thaw and Amazon dieback.
  • Growth paradox – Infinite economic growth is incompatible with planetary boundaries.
  • False hope risk – Frameworks like #MoveTheDate may underestimate the slow pace of actual system change, especially given the inertia of CO₂ in the atmosphere.

In short, Read contends that overshoot isn’t just a policy failure—it’s the symptom of a deeper crisis: a civilisation fundamentally at odds with ecology.

Read’s alternative: Transformative adaptation


Read’s vision focuses on resilience, degrowth, and radical localisation. He argues that rather than saving an unsustainable system, we need to build a new one—one grounded in ecological humility.

Key pillars of this approach include:

  • Degrowth – Shifting from GDP obsession to prioritising human well-being and scaling back consumption to within planetary limits.
  • Co-liberation – Challenging the exploitative logics of capitalism and colonialism that view nature as disposable.
  • Radical localism – Empowering communities to grow food, restore ecosystems, and reclaim agency—starting now, without waiting for governments to act.

In an essay co-authored with Caroline Lucas, Read urges a ground-up approach to adaptation:

“Begin, in other words, not with an abstraction but with direct experience, and with quality of life. Climate action can become popular when people understand its benefits in the terms of their own communities, and their own lives. For the climate movement, this means shifting adaptation and resilience-building from the margins to the centre of our strategic message. This is about more local, nature-friendly food-growing that people can have a stake in: for instance, through planting fruiting tree and bush varieties that are able to cope with higher summer temperatures.”

They call for climate popularism—a politics that is local, collaborative, and hopeful:

“Despite stereotypes about voters who can only be won over by a politics of fury, research shows that an ‘exhausted majority’ is tiring of endless aggression and division. They seek something they can positively believe in, a programme that is local, collaborative and respectful. A depolarising wave of action that mobilises communities’ instinctive protective instincts could really be… popular. And that is climate popularism.”

The verdict: Possible, but not probable


Technically, reversing ecological overshoot is still possible—if humanity moves at wartime speed. But politically, Read believes it is improbable without unprecedented global mobilisation and a reimagining of what progress means.

Earth Overshoot Day: The bottom line


Earth Overshoot Day is a warning. Yes, we could move the date back five days a year and restore ecological balance by 2050. But Read’s work reminds us: this will take more than innovation. It demands a cultural, political, and moral reckoning.

The choice before us is not simply between green tech and collapse. It’s between:

  • Clinging to a broken system, or
  • Building one that recognises humanity as part of, not separate from, the natural world.

In the end, the future belongs to those who stop pretending.


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Earth Overshoot Day 2024 & Fashion

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Considerations for shopping, overconsumption and the imminent buying season


August 1st marked Earth Overshoot Day 2024, meaning that in just seven months, we have consumed all the resources the planet can regenerate in a year. What does this mean for the fashion industry and our lifestyle?

The fashion industry is characterised by overproduction and excessive shopping. While brands aggressively promote overconsumption, consumers are often caught up in the desire to buy more, driven by frivolous thoughts. Only a few people consider deeper, more sustainable practices. As we enter the eighth month of the year, we have already used up the natural resources the Earth can regenerate annually. This means that from now until December 31st, we will be depleting resources that the Earth cannot naturally replenish.

Overshoot Day: Understanding calculation and global impact


Overshoot Day is calculated by determining the number of days Earth’s resources can sustain humanity’s ecological footprint. In simpler terms, we take the planet’s biocapacity – the amount of ecological resources the Earth can generate in a year – and divide it by our annual ecological footprint – the amount of natural resources humans consume in a year. This result is then multiplied by the 365 days of the year.

The ecological footprint varies by country because each nation has different amounts of resources and uses them in various ways, such as land for agriculture, water reserves, electricity, and marine areas. Therefore, each country has its own Overshoot Day.

This year, the first country to exceed its ecological capacity was Qatar (February 11), followed by Luxembourg, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States. Italy wasn’t far behind, reaching its Overshoot Day on May 19. The last countries to exceed their ecological capacity this year will be Indonesia and Ecuador on November 24, 2024.

Conclusion: Earth Overshoot Day & Fashion


Given that in just seven months we have already consumed the natural resources the Earth can generate in a year, it begs the question: are sustainable brands planning to stop their production? On what basis can we begin the buying season for fashion stores? And how can people continue to consume, travel, and live excessively while ignoring this fundamental fact?

What the heck are we doing? Perhaps, a true understanding of it should make us stop everything and pause. It should compel us to reconsider not only the fashion industry but our lifestyle as a whole.

But you can sleep well; no one will move a finger.

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