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Study finds New Zealand is best placed to survive a global collapse

New research has examined the factors that could lead to the collapse of global civilisation, with New Zealand identified as the country most resilient to future threats.

The study, carried out by Anglia Ruskin University in the UK, focuses on ‘de-complexification’– a widespread reversal of the trends of recent civilisation, potentially seeing the collapse of supply chains, international agreements and global financial structures.

Published in the journal Sustainability, the open-access study explains how a combination of ecological destruction, limited resources and population growth could trigger a reduction in the overall complexity of civilisation.

Researchers Nick King and Professor Aled Jones of the university’s Global Sustainability Institute, suggest that climate change may serve as a ‘risk multiplier’, exacerbating existing trends.

Global collapse could be slow or very rapid

This could happen during a ‘long descent’, over years or decades. Or very rapidly, in the space of less than a year, with no warning of the coming disruption. 

The academics suggest that a hybrid of these might also occur, with a gradual initiation which then gains momentum, leading to an abrupt collapse. The effects could spread quickly due to the increasing hyper-connectivity and interdependency of the globalised economy.

Anglia Ruskin University’s study identified five countries with the most favourable starting conditions to survive a global collapse by examining self-sufficiency (energy and manufacturing infrastructure), carrying capacity (land available for arable farming and overall population) and isolation (distance from other large population centres which may be subject to displacement events).

It found that New Zealand – along with Iceland, the United Kingdom, Australia (specifically Tasmania) and Ireland – were the nations currently most suited to maintaining higher levels of societal, technological, and organisational complexity within their own borders if a global collapse were to happen.

All five are islands or island continents, with strong oceanic climatic influence. They currently have low temperature and precipitation variability and therefore have the greatest likelihood of relatively stable conditions continuing, despite the effects of climate change.

NZ boosted by available energy and arable land

New Zealand, Iceland, the UK, Australia/Tasmania and Ireland were then qualitatively assessed for their individual, local-scale energy and agricultural characteristics.

This identified New Zealand as having the greatest potential to survive relatively unscathed – thanks to its ability to produce geothermal and hydroelectric energy, its abundant agricultural land, and its low population.

Iceland, Australia/Tasmania and Ireland also have favourable characteristics, while the UK presents a more complex picture due to its complicated energy mix and high population density.

Although the UK has generally fertile soils and varied agricultural output, it has low per capita availability of agricultural land, raising questions about future self-sufficiency.

Said Professor Jones: “As well as demonstrating which countries we believe are best suited to managing such a collapse – which undoubtedly would be a profound, life-altering experience – our study aims to highlight actions to address the interlinked factors of climate change, agricultural capacity, domestic energy, manufacturing capacity, and the over-reliance on complexity, are necessary to improve the resilience of nations that do not have the most favourable starting conditions.”

Mike Simpson

Mike Simpson has been in the media industry for 25-plus years. He writes on finance, the economy, general business, marketing, travel, lifestyle and motoring.