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The world’s highest-consuming 10% of people are responsible for environmental damage worth $1.7 trillion to $5.7 trillion every year — a sum that at its upper end dwarfs what the international community has pledged to spend on climate action and biodiversity conservation combined, according to a study published Thursday in Nature Communications Sustainability.eurekalert
Researchers at Leiden University in the Netherlands and the University of Oxford calculated the monetary cost of planetary boundary transgressions attributable to the wealthiest consumers. The two largest contributors to the damage bill are biodiversity loss, accounting for 47–56% of the total, and climate change, which makes up 36–45%.nature
Even at the study’s most conservative estimate of $1.7 trillion, the annual toll exceeds the combined funding needed to meet the 2035 climate finance target agreed at COP30 — $993 billion — and the gap for the 2030 biodiversity financing goal of $657 billion. The findings arrive amid a broader reckoning over nature-related finance: a United Nations report earlier this year found that for every dollar invested in protecting nature, $30 flows into nature-negative activities.sciencemediacentre
On a per-person basis, the average member of the global top 10% causes $2,300 to $7,500 in environmental damage annually. In the United States, where per-person impacts are highest, the figure rises to $19,000 to $63,000 — equivalent to 6–20% of their income or 0.8–3% of their wealth.phys
The study quantifies damages across multiple planetary boundaries, not just carbon emissions, offering what the authors describe as a more comprehensive accounting of how consumption inequality translates into environmental harm.gizmodo
The research adds empirical weight to arguments that addressing climate change and ecological breakdown requires confronting consumption patterns among the wealthy, not just boosting green investment. With seven of nine planetary boundaries now breached according to the 2025 Planetary Health Check, the study suggests that the scale of damage inflicted by top consumers is commensurate with the scale of funding needed to reverse course.stockholmresilience