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Biosphere collapse: Causes and solutions

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The World Has Changed. Our Plans Must, Too.
Humanity has pushed Earth's life-support system past the point of no return. The fantasy of restoring the world our grandparents knew is over. We now face a new and urgent How can a declining civilization preserve what remains of the biosphere?
Biosphere Causes and Solutions provides a clear-eyed assessment of our planetary crisis. It argues that we must accept irreversible losses and shift our focus from wishful thinking to a radical transformation of society itself. With six of nine planetary boundaries already transgressed, we are witnessing an extinction event that erases millions of years of evolutionary history in mere decades. Self-reinforcing feedback loops and cascading tipping points now accelerate the decline, locking in centuries of warming and ecosystem loss.
This book cuts through the complexity, organizing the necessary transformations into a clear hierarchy of Level 1: Limiting Direct Resource Extraction. The most straightforward technical fixes for problems like overfishing and hunting.Level 2: Transforming Production Systems. A complete overhaul of the industrial agriculture and energy sectors that form the bedrock of our economy.Level 3: Reconfiguring Systemic Drivers. Addressing the multi-institutional challenges of urbanization, pollution, and deforestation.Level 4: Shifting Foundational Paradigms. The ultimate reimagining our core beliefs about economic growth, consumption, and humanity’s place in nature.The book's conclusion is both pragmatic and powerful. History shows that societies rarely choose to change until a crisis forces their hand. Therefore, the most critical task is to develop detailed, actionable plans before the next disaster strikes. When heat waves, floods, or famines create windows for previously impossible actions, communities and nations must have well-designed strategies for water management, food security, and governance ready to implement.
For policymakers, scientists, activists, and every citizen concerned about our planet's future, Biosphere Collapse offers an unflinching diagnosis and a realistic path forward. This is not a book of despair, but one of strategic preparation. It is an essential guide for navigating the turbulent decades ahead and preserving a future for life on Earth.

324 pages, Paperback

Published October 1, 2025

About the author

Garry Rogers

29 books101 followers
Dr. Garry Rogers writes about an Earth on which the animals are smarter than humans. He never wrote anything about undercover police work. Besides fiction, he writes nonfiction articles and books about wildlife and nature conservation. Before turning to full-time writing, he served on the faculties of UCLA and Columbia University in New York, and he served as CEO of an academic computing corporation.

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5,042 reviews391 followers
November 24, 2025
In a 2016 piece from Conservation and the Catholic Imagination, Marybeth Lorbiecki cites Aldo Leopold and Thomas Berry, essentially making a case for humanity to move past the Anthropocene stage by becoming participants and partners on this planet instead of “dominators.” This is a view I have long shared with people as diverse as Terrence McKenna, Riane Eisler, and a host of other evolutionary biologists, philosophers, scientists, and writers. Now, Garry Rogers and Coldwater Press deliver us another timely reminder on the state of the planet, which is free of any filler or nonsense, in Biosphere Collapse: Causes and Solutions.

The first line of the book’s summary states its thesis as clearly as it can be stated: “Our planet’s life-support system, the biosphere, is in a state of severe and irreversible decline.”

Now, please don’t walk away from this book or this review, because it’s not all doom and gloom, and as Rogers shows us, there is a path forward. We are simply at the point where no more time can be wasted. Rogers suggests four “transformations” right at the beginning, and for him, these are the deal breakers, the most important things to confront:

Level 1: Limiting Direct Extraction
Level 2: Transforming Production
Level 3: Changing Systemic Drivers
Level 4: Shifting Core Beliefs

Thus, certain initiatives will be key, such as curbing our hunting and fishing, restricting entire industry sectors – the energy industry especially – and tackling problems of urbanization and waste. But his fourth point is the most essential: If we are to survive, we need to look at our value systems and our relationship with nature and the planet.

What comes next is a thorough and exhaustive review of the literature and a plan for moving forward. Part III begins with a look at theories centered on the Anthropocene problem, and unfortunately, these theories tend to lay the blame for all the planet’s current problems strictly on human activity. But while Rogers acknowledges the importance of Anthropocene-based theories when it comes to explaining a potential planetary catastrophe, he reminds us that to solve the problem, we have to expand our frameworks and the working hypotheses, especially those that tend to try to explain everything in terms of human behavior.

This, Rogers tells us, is not a complete or effective approach, not if we truly want to save the planet. Rogers suggests more of what he calls “Ecocentrism.” I’ll quote Roger’s own definition since it is so pristine in its simplicity and directness:

Earth’s biosphere is a complex, interconnected system in which all species play a role, making their existence valuable beyond their utility to humans.

We need to stop considering ourselves more important than anything else in the universe, and accept that we, like everything else, are just one ingredient in a bigger ecological and even cosmic network. A healthy biosphere and a respect for all species on this planet are essential if we are to move forward.

There’s a great section called “Spectrum of Interventions” that spells out everything we need to do. The author follows this up with plans for integrating these ideas and transforming the world we live in now.

As Rogers has indicated, some of the damage is irreparable. Thus, it’s easy to look at the book and say, “This is daunting, there’s so much to do!” There is, and if you have never picked up a book like Garry Rogers’ Biosphere Collapse, or if you have only gleaned information about the planet and the climate from mainstream news sources and sound bites, then this is some essential reading. We cannot have too many reminders when it comes to this pressing issue.

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