Backcasting to the Future

The impact of 'backcasting' is palpable and transformative. The biggest 'ah-ha' moment from immersing oneself in a future world is a striking awareness of the interdependencies of all systems.
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The year was 2025. The place was the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos where 200 Young Global Leaders convened a 'Planetary Congress' with the goal of 'backcasting' to a more sustainable, equitable world.

Using a bit of theatre, as 'Keeper' of this congress I guided our backcasting through the demographic, social and technological game-changers since 2013. The spinal cord connecting it all was our exploding population with 8 billion people crawling over each other, 70 percent living in megacities and a 'Detroit-ification' of once-thriving heartlands -- some regions straining under aging populations, others scrambling to create jobs for their youth. In our future, rising individual empowerment via education and technology brought 1 billion new consumers -- but inequality and the Water Wars led to instability, threatening economic order. While politicians dithered impotently, hegemonic power had shifted to non-state actors, amorphous networks and corporations big enough to act with sovereign power.

'Guardians' of the world's systems drew on their real-world expertise to lead heated debates on governance and trade, business and finance, jobs, urbanization, media, health, the environment and food-water-energy nexus. Based on current data trends, the pictures painted of our 2025 world were, not surprisingly, often bleak. But there was hope: armed with new information and revelations, the congress members could go back to 2013 and alter their future.

As we experienced in Davos, the impact of 'backcasting' is palpable and transformative. The biggest 'ah-ha' moment from immersing oneself in a future world is a striking awareness of the interdependencies of all systems. Gains in food access and nutrition, for example, are impossible without linking and syncing with water, energy and the environment; losses in one area incur correlated losses in others.

Backcasting makes another reality crystal clear. In our complex world of 2013 -- as our host planet is ailing, many economies stagnating and social inequalities growing -- we critically need collaboration and cooperation. Drawing on Buckminster Fuller's analogy of Earth as a spaceship, without active stewardship, we perish. It is time we fully embrace the mentality that we are all in this together -- and that our finite resources should be used wisely.

The RIO+20 Sustainable Development Goals give humanity a compelling charter: inclusive social development, inclusive economic development, environmental sustainability, peace and security. But realizing these noble goals requires politicians exiting their echo chambers, business people coming out of corporate suites, activists off protest lines and academics out of ivory towers. It requires mutual understanding and implementing shared visions across industries and geographies -- and across generations, cultures and faiths.

While our world clearly has a long way to go in this respect, I am heartened by global strides towards an emerging ethos of interconnectivity and collaboration. During the Forum's Annual Meeting we saw this mindset manifested in debates about sustainability, shared value and a shifting from linear (take-consume-throw away) to circular (design-to-reuse) economies.

The backcasting challenge for the Young Global Leaders was to design a world that works for everyone -- where even our most vulnerable can live with dignity and fulfillment. Creating that world is the challenge for us all.

Given our rapid-fire pace and short-termism -- and considering all the complexities and interconnectivities -- it is often difficult to start from 'here' and think about 'there.' It is often easier and more powerful to start from 'there' and design backwards -- for teams in companies and countries to backcast to a more sustainable and equitable future.

That is the power of backcasting: it shows us how to get it right going forward from today to prevent hindsight regrets in our future.

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