{"id":206817,"date":"2022-03-14T12:00:50","date_gmt":"2022-03-14T12:00:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/?p=206817"},"modified":"2025-01-10T15:05:42","modified_gmt":"2025-01-10T15:05:42","slug":"nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/2022\/03\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/","title":{"rendered":"Nature as a Mode of Accumulation: Capitalism and the Financialization of the Earth"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote><p><em>John Bellamy Foster on the financial expropriation of the earth and the culmination of a theoretical shift in the dominant economic paradigm aimed at the unlimited accumulation of total capital, now including \u201cnatural capital.\u201d<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<div id=\"attachment_206818\" style=\"width: 210px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Earth-Milky-Way-Moon-300x300-1.jpg\" ><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-206818\" class=\"wp-image-206818\" src=\"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Earth-Milky-Way-Moon-300x300-1-300x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"200\" height=\"200\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Earth-Milky-Way-Moon-300x300-1.jpg 300w, https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/Earth-Milky-Way-Moon-300x300-1-150x150.jpg 150w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 200px) 100vw, 200px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-206818\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">&#8220;The Earth with the Milky Way and Moon,&#8221; a charcoal drawing by W\u0142adys\u0142aw T. Benda depicting the earth with the Milky Way and moon, watched by a veiled and robed figure, circa 1918.<br \/>Library of Congress, https:\/\/www.loc.gov.<\/p><\/div>\n<p><em>1 Mar 2022 &#8211; <\/em>The expropriation of the commons, its simplification, division, violent seizure, and transformation into private property constituted the fundamental precondition for the historical origin of industrial capitalism. What Karl Marx referred to as the <i>original expropriation<\/i> of the commons in England and in much of the world (often involving the expropriation of the laborers themselves in various forms of slavery and forced labor) generated the concentrations in wealth and power that propelled the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Industrial Revolution.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en1\" id=\"en1backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>1<\/sup><\/a> In the process, the entire human relation to nature was alienated and upended. As Karl Polanyi wrote in <i>The Great Transformation<\/i>, \u201cWhat we call land is an element of nature inextricably interwoven with man\u2019s institutions. To isolate it and form a market for it was perhaps the weirdest of all the undertakings of our ancestors.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en2\" id=\"en2backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>2<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>It is hardly surprising in this context that the first references to \u201cnatural capital\u201d and to the \u201cearth\u2019s capital stock\u201d arose in this same period in the work of radical and socialist political economists, who sought to defend nature and the commons against the intrusions of the market. Here, the notion of \u201cnatural capital\u201d was viewed in terms of the stock of physical properties and natural-material use values constituting <i>real wealth<\/i> and was seen as opposed to the growing \u201csense of capitalism\u201d as a system of mere exchange value or cash nexus.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en3\" id=\"en3backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>3<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>This nineteenth-century notion of \u201cnatural capital,\u201d conceived in physical, use-value terms, was to be revived in the 1970s and \u201980s as part of an emerging ecological critique. In more recent decades, however, mainstream neoclassical economics (sometimes with the help of ecological economists), together with corporate finance, have completely separated the concept of natural capital from its original use-value-based critique, the memory of which has long receded, conceiving natural capital instead entirely in exchange-value terms, as just another form of financialized capital. This is then used to reinforce the view that the solution to the current ecological crisis of the planet is to make a market out of it.<\/p>\n<p>A turning point in the financial expropriation of the earth occurred from September to November 2021, overlapping with the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference negotiations in Glasgow. Three major interrelated developments occurred at this time: (1) the creation of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero embracing most of global capitalist finance; (2) approval of key elements of Article 6 of the Paris Agreement, creating the unified financial rules for global carbon trading markets; and (3) the announcement that the New York Stock Exchange together with the Intrinsic Exchange Group (IEG)\u2014whose investors include the Inter-American Development Bank and the Rockefeller Foundation\u2014was launching a new class of securities associated with natural asset companies (NACs). As the IEG told its investors, while the asset value of the world economy is $512 trillion, the asset value of the earth\u2019s natural capital is estimated at $4 quadrillion ($4,000 trillion), all potentially for the taking.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en4\" id=\"en4backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>4<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Together these developments represent a sea change in the capitalization of nature, such that all natural processes that involve ecosystem services to the economy are now increasingly seen to be subject to exchange on the market for profit\u2014all in the name of conservation and climate change. This represents the culmination of a theoretical shift in the dominant economic paradigm aimed at the unlimited accumulation of total capital, now seen as including \u201cnatural capital.\u201d The result is to reinforce the Great Expropriation occurring in this century aimed at what Charles Darwin called the earth\u2019s \u201cweb of complex relations.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en5\" id=\"en5backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>5<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In order to develop a critical analysis of the current capitalist expropriation of world ecology, it is necessary to explore the concept of natural capital in the work of Marx and other early radical critics within classical political economy. It will then be possible to contrast this to current approaches in neoclassical economics, which views natural capital in purely exchange-value terms, offering this as a solution to the environmental problem. If, in Marx\u2019s analysis, the human economy existed within what he called \u201cthe universal metabolism of nature,\u201d in today\u2019s dominant neoclassical economics, according to Dieter Helm, Chairman of the UK Natural Capital Committee, \u201cthe environment is part of the economy and needs to be properly integrated into it so that growth opportunities will not be missed. Integrating the environment into the economy is hampered by the almost complete absence of proper accounting for natural assets.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en6\" id=\"en6backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>6<\/sup><\/a> Here, the whole of the Earth System is conceived as a largely unincorporated \u201cpart\u201d of the capitalist economy. In Helm\u2019s conception, the capitalist economy faces no outer boundaries but is capable of subsuming all of nature, which then simply becomes part of the overall capitalist system.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"mr-heading\">Classical Political Economy and Natural Capital as Use Value<\/h2>\n<p>Most accounts of the origin of the term <i>natural capital<\/i> trace it to economist E. F. Schumacher\u2019s book <i>Small Is Beautiful<\/i> in 1973.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en7\" id=\"en7backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>7<\/sup><\/a> However, the notion of natural capital and the related concept of the earth\u2019s capital stock were, in fact, widely used in nineteenth-century classical political economy, particularly among radical and socialist critics, appearing in the works of thinkers as various as Victor P. Considerant, Marx, Frederick Engels, Ebenezer Jones, George Waring, Henry Carey, and Justus von Liebig.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en8\" id=\"en8backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>8<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Considerant was a utopian socialist, Charles Fourier\u2019s leading disciple, who did much to establish the Fourierist tradition. In his <i>Theory of the Right to Property and the Right to Work<\/i> (1840), Considerant insisted that there were two forms of capital: (1) land, which in classical political economy stood for all forms of nature, and which he referred to as <i>natural capital<\/i>, and (2) <i>created capital<\/i>, produced by human labor (utilizing natural capital).<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en9\" id=\"en9backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>9<\/sup><\/a> Property rights to nature and natural resources according to Considerant are mere rights to <i>usufruct<\/i> or to the temporary use of that which belongs to the chain of human generations. Thus, natural capital was to be redistributed to each generation on an equal basis. However, under bourgeois civilization, natural capital had been usurped by a minority of private landholders, who had established land monopolies violating the principles of usufruct applying to all of humanity.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en10\" id=\"en10backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>10<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Later in the same decade, the British poet and radical political economist Ebenezer Jones in <i>The Land Monopoly<\/i> provided a similar argument to that of Considerant. For Jones, the principal evil affecting the welfare of the population of England and Ireland was the land monopoly exercised by landlords, who appropriated \u201cnatural capital, God\u2019s gift to all men.\u201d In the next century (the twentieth), Jones indicated, the inhabitants of the land may have difficulty understanding \u201chow the land they have come to live on [and its natural capital] could have been thus sold, not only (to use an expressive phrase) over their heads, but actually over their cradles, or even before they were born.\u201d In these terms, natural capital was treated as the annual \u201cproduce of the land\u201d (nature), or, in today\u2019s terms, ecosystem services. Jones provided estimates of what the land was capable of generating in terms of the number of people it could support.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en11\" id=\"en11backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>11<\/sup><\/a> He punctuated his argument on the land monopoly by pointing to the English colonial exportation of the proceeds of the land from Ireland during the Great Famine of only a few years before, amounting to sufficient food to have fed half the Irish people.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en12\" id=\"en12backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>12<\/sup><\/a> With great acuity, he queried: \u201cSuppose a body of men should consider the air of London to be in need of cultivation, and should unsolicitedly establish round the metropolis a circle of aerial purification\u2014what would be conceived of their sanity, if they should in consequence consider themselves air-lords, with the air of London for their private property, for them to do what they like with, even to the exclusion of people from the use of it\u2026?\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en13\" id=\"en13backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>13<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Marx studied Considerant\u2019s political-economic work in October 1842.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en14\" id=\"en14backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>14<\/sup><\/a> In <i>The German Ideology<\/i> of 1845, Marx and Engels employed the term <i>natural capital<\/i> to refer to capital as it emerged in the towns of the Middle Ages, and then in the Mercantilist putting out system, tied to estates, and to natural resources, such as the cotton and wool fibers used, for example, in textile production. The growth of textile production, they wrote, required the \u201cmobilization of natural capital through accelerated circulation.\u201d They contrasted \u201cnatural capital,\u201d rooted in the land, estates, and concrete use values to \u201cmovable capital\u201d associated with the \u201cbeginning of money trade, banks, national debts, paper money, speculation in stock and shares, stockjobbing in all articles and the development of finance in general,\u201d resulting in capital losing \u201ca great part of the natural character that still clung to it.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en15\" id=\"en15backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>15<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The natural capital concept, as used by Marx and Engels in <i>The German Ideology<\/i>, was thus tied to the natural-material use-value structure of the economy and to landed capital and estates, as opposed to the greater mobility and fungibility of capital as pure exchange value or finance, which evolved under mercantilism and became dominant in industrial capitalism. If capital could originally be seen primarily in physical terms, it increasingly became measured in exchange-value forms. Marx and Engels\u2019s overall emphasis here corresponded to the classical political-economic conception that real wealth consisted of natural-material use values while private riches were based on exchange value, that is, purely monetary claims to wealth. Yet, since reference to natural capital seemed to naturalize capital, Marx was to drop all direct reference to the term in his subsequent work.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en16\" id=\"en16backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>16<\/sup><\/a> Nevertheless, the basic distinction was reflected in his contrast between the \u201cnatural form\u201d of the commodity, related to natural-material use values, and the \u201cvalue form\u201d associated with exchange value, as well as his distinction, as we shall see, between <i>earth matter<\/i> and <i>earth capital<\/i>.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en17\" id=\"en17backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>17<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>For classical political economists in general, including such figures as Adam Smith, Thomas Malthus, David Ricardo, and John Stuart Mill, nature, as distinct from labor, created no value, and was treated as a \u201cfree gift\u201d to capital\u2014long before Marx pointed to the ecological contradictions that this entailed for the capitalist economy.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en18\" id=\"en18backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>18<\/sup><\/a> As the Ricardian John Ramsay McCulloch put it, \u201cin its natural state, matter is <i>always destitute of [exchange] value<\/i>.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en19\" id=\"en19backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>19<\/sup><\/a> Or, as Marx wrote, \u201cvalue is labour, so surplus-value cannot be earth.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en20\" id=\"en20backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>20<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Nevertheless, the notion of natural-material use values, if no longer referred to as natural capital, remained integral to Marx\u2019s conception of the capitalist economy and its ecological basis, including conceptions of the expropriation of nature and of natural processes turned into capital. The decisive shift in his analysis, in this respect, was already evident in <i>The Poverty of Philosophy<\/i> in 1846. Here in his critique of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon\u2019s <i>System of Economic Contradictions: Or the Philosophy of Misery<\/i>, written earlier in the same year, Marx, as he later recounted in volume three of <i>Capital<\/i>, introduced \u201cthe distinction between <i>terre-mati\u00e8re<\/i> and <i>terre-capital<\/i>,\u201d or between <i>earth matter<\/i> and <i>earth capital<\/i>:<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en21\" id=\"en21backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>21<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"quote\"><p>Land, so long as it is not exploited as a means of production, is not capital. Land as capital [<i>terre-capital<\/i>] can be increased just as much as all the other instruments of production. Nothing is added to its matter, to use M. Proudhon\u2019s language, but the lands which serve as the instruments of production are multiplied. The very fact of applying further outlays of capital to land already transformed into means of production increases land as capital without adding anything to land as matter [<i>terre-mati\u00e8re<\/i>], that is, to the extent of the land. M. Proudhon\u2019s land as matter is the earth in its limitation. As for the eternity he attributes to land, we grant readily it has this virtue as matter. Land as capital is no more eternal than any other capital.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en22\" id=\"en22backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>22<\/sup><\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In this passage, Marx draws a distinction between land, viewed on the one hand as eternal earth matter (<i>terre-mati\u00e8re<\/i>, or mere matter), and, on the other, as historically generated earth capital (<i>terre-capital<\/i>). He is already pointing to the contradiction between capitalism and its natural conditions of production, a historical and materialist view that will govern his developing ecological critique, leading eventually to his metabolic rift concept. Although natural capital, now called <i>earth capital<\/i>, exists, it is seen as an alienated product of capitalism and by no means eternal. In <i>Capital<\/i>, Marx writes: \u201cCapital may be fixed in the earth, incorporated into it, both in a more transient way, as is the case with improvements of a chemical kind, application of fertilizer, etc., and more permanently, as with drainage ditches, the provision of irrigation, leveling of land, farm buildings, etc.\u201d This is connected to \u201cground-rent\u2026paid for agricultural land, building land, mines, fisheries, forests, etc.\u2026 Ground rent is\u2026the form in which landed property is economically realized, valorized.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en23\" id=\"en23backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>23<\/sup><\/a> By incorporating capital into the earth, Marx explained, capitalists \u201ctransform the earth from mere matter into earth-capital.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en24\" id=\"en24backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>24<\/sup><\/a> In this conception, the earth as matter (<i>terre-mati\u00e8re<\/i>) remained the basis of all life and production, while the valorization of portions of the earth as earth capital represented a fundamental contradiction between the eternal laws of nature and the law of value of capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>In some cases, Marx noted, the monopolization of a \u201cforce of Nature\u201d could be enormously profitable, as in the case of ownership of a waterfall, providing waterpower to industry. Here, \u201ca monopolisable force of Nature, which, like the waterfall, is only at the command of those who have at their disposal particular portions of the earth and its appurtenances,\u201d generates surplus profit potential. This then allows those who own the waterfall or other forces of Nature to impose rents on their use. The rent is not a product of the waterfall itself\u2014that is, does not derive from its \u201cnatural value\u201d\u2014nor does it derive directly from labor, but rather emanates from the owner\u2019s <i>private monopoly<\/i> of a limited natural force (with the rent ultimately coming out of total surplus value).<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en25\" id=\"en25backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>25<\/sup><\/a> Marx argued that it was only the title to a particular natural resource that allowed monopoly rent to be applied, despite the fact that owners believed they were entitled to rent simply by purchasing the land or natural resource, particularly as the price of the land contained this capitalized tribute. But it was not the purchase or transfer of title that created the rent, but rather the title itself, which was a product of social relations that created the monopoly position and the power to enact rent\u2014whether it was the title to a waterfall, a coal deposit, or other natural resources, the common inheritance of all humanity. Such rents, he argued, were being imposed \u201cin ever greater measure\u201d as capitalism developed.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en26\" id=\"en26backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>26<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>It is worth noting that the works of classical political economics in general, and Marx\u2019s analysis of production in particular, were permeated with the treatment of environmental services, or what in ecosocialist theory are known as the <i>eco-regulatory<\/i> aspects, which supersede human labor. Such a view was inherent in Marx\u2019s conception of the \u201cuniversal metabolism of nature\u201d as underwriting the \u201csocial metabolism\u201d of the labor and production process. Thus, we find innumerable discussions in his work of the soil metabolism and of other \u201cphysical, chemical, and physiological processes\u201d and \u201corganic laws\u201d associated with natural reproduction, operating on different time scales from human production. \u201cThe economic process of reproduction, whatever may be its specific social character,\u201d he writes, \u201cis in this area (agriculture) always intertwined\u2026with a process of natural reproduction.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en27\" id=\"en27backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>27<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In 1855, a 22-year-old George Waring, already recognized as an eminent agriculturalist in the United States, later to be seen as one of the great ecological figures in U.S. history for his contributions in fighting urban waste and disease, presented an extensive address, entitled \u201cAgricultural Features of the Census of the United States for 1850,\u201d to a meeting of the Geographical Society in New York, subsequently published in the <i>Bulletin of the American Geographical Society<\/i> in 1857. Waring, who like other progressive agriculturalists had been influenced by the German chemist Justus von Liebig\u2019s <i>Organic Chemistry in its Application to Agriculture and Physiology<\/i> (1840, better known as <i>Agricultural Chemistry<\/i>), used census figures for agriculture to estimate the loss of fertilizer agents within the U.S. economy. This was at a time when the capital invested in agriculture in the U.S. economy was seven times the amount invested in manufacturing, mining, the mechanic arts, and fisheries. In depicting the enormous losses of nutrients to the soil, he wrote:<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"quote\"><p>What with our earth-butchery and prodigality, we are losing the intrinsic essence of our vitality.\u2026 The question of economy should be, not how much do we annually produce, but how much of our annual production is saved to the soil. Labor employed in robbing the earth of its capital stock of fertilizing matter, is worse than labor thrown away. In the latter case it is a loss to the present generation; in the former it becomes an inheritance of poverty for our successors. Man is but a tenant of the soil, and he is guilty of a crime when he reduces its value for other tenants who are to come after him.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en28\" id=\"en28backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>28<\/sup><\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Waring\u2019s statement was taken up by Henry Carey, the foremost U.S. economist of the day, who had previously sent Marx <i>The Slave Trade, Domestic and Foreign<\/i>, a work that at one point characterized \u201cman as a mere borrower from the earth.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en29\" id=\"en29backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>29<\/sup><\/a> Carey quoted extensively from Waring on \u201cthe robbing of the earth of its capital stock\u201d in both his <i>Letters to the President: On the Foreign and Domestic Policy of the Union<\/i> (1858) and <i>Principles of Social Science<\/i> (1858). This was, in turn, to influence Liebig, who drew on Waring via Carey in his own <i>Letters on Modern Agriculture<\/i> (1859), which marked the beginning of his major attack on industrialized capitalist agriculture as a \u201crobbery system.\u201d Liebig\u2019s critique in this respect was to culminate in the famous introduction to the 1862 edition of his <i>Agricultural Chemistry<\/i> that inspired Marx\u2019s theory of metabolic rift. Significantly, in the same paragraph in which Marx made the crucial distinction between land as earth matter and as earth capital in volume 3 of <i>Capital<\/i>, he also referred to the classic criticisms of the degradation of the soil by James Anderson and Carey, pointing to the ecological contradictions of capital.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en30\" id=\"en30backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>30<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In classical political economy, the logic of which in this respect was brought out most fully by Marx, nature and labor (itself a natural force) were the sources of <i>real wealth<\/i> as use values, while exploited labor power under capitalist production was the source of (commodity) value.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en31\" id=\"en31backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>31<\/sup><\/a> It was the conflict that this set up between natural-material use values, treated as free gifts to be expropriated by capital, and the system of exchange value, that generated the fundamental ecological contradiction of capitalist production, associated with the robbing of nature.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en32\" id=\"en32backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>32<\/sup><\/a> As James Maitland, the eighth Earl of Lauderdale, declared in <i>An Inquiry into the Nature and Origin of Public Wealth and into the Means and Causes of Its Increase<\/i> (1804), the system of commodity production destroyed <i>public wealth<\/i> (natural-material use values), generating scarcity and monopoly, thereby enhancing <i>private riches<\/i> (exchange value), with negative consequences for human society as a whole.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en33\" id=\"en33backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>33<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"mr-heading\">Neoclassical Environmental Economics and the Valorization of Natural Capital<\/h2>\n<p>In sharp contrast to classical political economy, neoclassical economics beginning in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries has sought to exclude nature and use value altogether from its analysis, reducing everything to exchange value and denying the distinctiveness of the natural world (as well as of human labor). It has defined capital in nonsocial, transhistorical terms, as any asset of any kind producing a stream of income over time\u2014a definition that leads to an endless series of contradictions, derived from the fact that it sees capital as a kind of \u201csocial black box.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en34\" id=\"en34backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>34<\/sup><\/a> Nature and land were thus lumped together with other forms of \u201ccapital\u201d and were, in effect, eliminated from the analysis, with the neoclassical production function reduced to two abstract factors of production: capital and labor. Inherent in this view was the postulate that natural resources were entirely reproducible or substitutable by human-made capital. A \u201cweak-sustainability\u201d postulate, representing the dominant neoclassical view, contends that all natural resources can be economically substituted by human-made or renewable resources\u2014that is, there are no irreplaceable natural resources or processes that have to be maintained. This is counterposed by a \u201cstrong-sustainability\u201d postulate, associated with ecological economics, arguing that certain \u201ccritical natural capitals\u201d are irreplaceable and cannot be replaced by human-manufactured capital.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en35\" id=\"en35backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>35<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The dominant weak-sustainability conception is well captured by economic growth theorist Robert Solow\u2019s claim: \u201cIf it is very easy to substitute other factors for natural resources, then there is in principle no \u2018problem.\u2019 The world can, in effect, get along without natural resources, so exhaustion is just an event, not a catastrophe.\u2026 At some finite cost, production can be freed of dependence on exhaustible resources altogether.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en36\" id=\"en36backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>36<\/sup><\/a> Based on such assumptions, the liquidation of natural assets with the development of capitalism is not \u201can obstacle to further progress,\u201d since such natural resources and processes are simply substituted for by the human economy with a zero net loss of capital overall.<\/p>\n<p>The concept of natural capital was reintroduced into the economic discussion in the 1970s and \u201980s, beginning with Schumacher\u2019s <i>Small Is Beautiful<\/i>, to highlight the \u201cliquidation\u201d of \u201cnatural capital\u201d stock as a failure of the first order of the modern economic system, representing the view of ecological economics.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en37\" id=\"en37backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>37<\/sup><\/a> Thus, the use of the concept up through the 1980s was directed mainly at the idea of maintaining a constant biophysical stock of natural capital. It was at this point that the notion of weak sustainability was formally introduced by some of the same figures, such as British economist David W. Pearce, who had first insisted on maintaining a constant stock of natural capital, but then argued, in line with neoclassical economics generally, that such natural capital could be easily replaced in the human economy and thus that no strict natural constraints on the economy existed. According to the weak-sustainability postulate, the notion of natural capital became largely indistinguishable from the neoclassical category of capital in general, insofar as it could be viewed as constituting productive assets providing an income stream.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en38\" id=\"en38backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>38<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In response to the neoclassical weak-sustainability argument, ecological economists\u2014initially inspired by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen\u2019s <i>The Entropy Law and the Economic Process<\/i> (1971), which emphasized the importance of the second law of thermodynamics in any realistic economics\u2014embraced the notion of natural capital as a key concept, while wedding it to the notion of \u201ccritical natural capital\u201d in conformity with the strong-sustainability postulate.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en39\" id=\"en39backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>39<\/sup><\/a> Critical to the notion of strong sustainability were the three principles of sustainability introduced by Herman Daly: (1): \u201cFor a <i>renewable<\/i> source\u2014soil, water, forest, fish\u2014the sustainable rate of use can be no greater than the rate of regeneration.\u201d (2) \u201cFor a <i>nonrenewable resource<\/i>\u2014fossil fuel, high grade mineral ore, fossil groundwater\u2014the sustainable rate of use can be no greater than the rate at which a renewable resource, used sustainably, can substitute for it.\u201d (3) \u201cFor a <i>pollutant<\/i>, the sustainable rate of use can be no greater than the rate at which the pollutant can be recycled, absorbed, and rendered harmless by the environment.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en40\" id=\"en40backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>40<\/sup><\/a> This approach established limits to growth and determined sustainability in biophysical\/use-value terms, rather than in terms of exchange value. The whole issue of natural capital, from the standpoint of the strong-sustainability postulate, thus became one of maintaining a <i>net zero decrease<\/i> in natural capital, viewed in biophysical terms, in which reductions in the stock of nonrenewable forms of natural capital, like fossil fuels, were offset by corresponding increases in renewable natural capital, such as the harnessing of solar energy and biomass.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en41\" id=\"en41backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>41<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Ironically, it was economists associated with the International Society of Ecological Economics and the journal <i>Ecological Economics<\/i> who were to do the most to expand the notion of natural capital as a monetized economic category. Although ecological economists defended the notion of strong sustainability and some, such as Daly, continued to insist on treating natural capital simply in use-value terms, the majority yielded to the temptation of putting a price on the world\u2019s ecosystem services\u2014if only for pedagogical purposes, with the intent of establishing their importance from the standpoint of the economy. From there, it was a slippery slope toward the actual financialization of the world ecology. Moreover, the conception of what constituted critical natural capital was often watered down, while the principles of sustainability came to include the substitutability of human-made products for nature. Hence, the distinction between the weak- and strong-sustainability approaches tended to fade.<\/p>\n<p>In this general slippage within ecological economics, in which much of the tradition was brought back into the dominant neoclassical fold, natural capitals\/ecosystem services were increasingly reduced to a strictly economic or imputed \u201ccommodity\u201d value basis, to the point that there emerged what Marxian ecological economist Paul Burkett called an \u201cartificial ecumenicism\u201d between ecological economics and the hegemonic neoclassical economic tradition.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en42\" id=\"en42backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>42<\/sup><\/a> Outside the relative few who stuck to the thermodynamic-based analysis of Georgescu-Roegen, or who were associated with the Marxist tradition, ecological economists found it difficult to resist the almost total dominance of the neoclassical tradition and the closely aligned corporate world.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en43\" id=\"en43backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>43<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Once the natural capital concept was generally affixed to neoclassical economics\u2014on the basis of the recognition in some way of weak\/strong sustainability, with critical natural capital representing an exception and subject to change under the force of technology\u2014it was quite possible to water down the environmental analysis altogether, to the point that the potential threat such ideas posed to capitalist accumulation could be downplayed. In practice, this meant reducing the conception of strong sustainability to the extent that it simply constituted a footnote to weak sustainability. Here, the treatment of natural capital was no longer seen as an actual limit on the expansion of the system. Thus, as the World Bank stated in its 2003 <i>World Development Report<\/i>:<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"quote\"><p>Limits-to-growth type arguments focus on strong sustainability, while arguments in favour of indefinite growth focus on weak sustainability. So far the former arguments have not been very convincing because the substitutability among assets has been high for most inputs used in production at a small scale. There is now, however, a growing recognition that different thresholds apply at different scales\u2014local to global. Technology can be expected to continue to increase the potential substitutability among assets over time, but for many essential environmental services\u2014especially global life support systems\u2014there are no alternatives now, and potential technological solutions cannot be taken for granted.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en44\" id=\"en44backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>44<\/sup><\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The World Bank statement subtly suggested that substitutability was high for all natural-resource inputs, except in the case of production at higher thresholds, particularly where this affected \u201cglobal life support systems\u201d (downplaying that this was precisely the issue in a globalizing economy within a limited planetary environment), while technological solutions to such scale effects, if not available <i>now<\/i>, were seen as <i>potentially<\/i> available in the future. The relation of the economy to natural resources should thus be one of promoting the \u201cmix of assets that supports improvements in human well-being,\u201d which was expected to change over time, thereby posing no clear limits to \u201cindefinite growth.\u201d The notion of critical natural capital, that is, a strong-sustainability argument, was thus carefully discounted. Entirely ignored was any consideration of the specific socioeconomic conditions governing capitalist production and the contradictions these inherently pose for the Earth System metabolism.<\/p>\n<p>In 1992, the International Society of Ecological Economics held a conference in Stockholm dedicated to the full operationalization of natural capital as a concept of ecological economics. In 2003, <i>Ecological Economics<\/i> published an introduction to a special issue that stated: \u201cNatural capital is a key concept in ecological economics.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en45\" id=\"en45backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>45<\/sup><\/a> This shift coincided with a struggle within the journal itself, in which Robert Costanza, the chief editor and leading proponent of the hybrid neoclassical\/ecological economic notion of natural capital, managed to remove leading systems ecologist Howard Odum and a number of other natural scientists associated with the journal from the editorial board. In opposition to the natural-capital concept with its attempted valuing of nature on capitalist terms, Odum had promoted a way of accounting for the embodied energy inputs in the natural economy using the notion of <i>emergy<\/i> (spelled with an <i>m<\/i>), directly related to the use-value category of classical economics. This was aimed at challenging attempts to play down the opposition between the capitalist economy and natural systems and providing a comprehensive theory of ecological imperialism. Following Odum\u2019s ouster from the journal, the concept of emergy was effectively banned from the publication.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en46\" id=\"en46backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>46<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>These shifts in ecological economics opened the way to measuring the \u201cnatural income\u201d or \u201cwelfare\u201d flows to the human economy from natural capital stock in the form of ecosystem goods and services (shortened for convenience simply to services), thus providing putative market values for nature\u2019s contribution to economic growth.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en47\" id=\"en47backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>47<\/sup><\/a> Natural capital was, in effect, redefined in market terms as the natural resource stock that provided ecosystem services to the human economy. Ecosystem services did not refer to ecosystem processes as a whole, but only to those services that could be seen as subsidizing the human economy, and thus could be separated in this way from the rest of nature.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en48\" id=\"en48backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>48<\/sup><\/a> The implicit goal was accounting for and eventually, to some extent, \u201cinternalizing\u201d discernible free gifts to the capitalist market economy on the basis of imputed consumer preferences. Nature, where such benefits to the capitalist economy were absent, in effect remained devoid of imputed economic value and external to this wider natural-capital conception, as if it could be sliced and diced in economic asset terms. In this respect, ecosystem services as a <i>natural-income<\/i> category displaced the category of natural capital itself.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en49\" id=\"en49backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>49<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Costanza, who did the most to expand the notion of ecosystem services, proceeded to lead a study entitled \u201cThe Value of the World\u2019s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital,\u201d published in <i>Nature<\/i> in 1997, that provided estimates of seventeen ecosystem services across sixteen biomes based on a \u201csimple benefit transfer [or value transfer] method.\u201d The study assumed a constant per unit dollar value per hectare of a given ecosystem type, which was then multiplied by the total area of each type to obtain aggregate values.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en50\" id=\"en50backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>50<\/sup><\/a> Values were obtained by relating benefits in the human economy to analogous benefits provided by ecosystem services. This constituted, in effect, a system of \u201cshadow prices\u201d based on an economist\u2019s best estimate of what price a function or thing would obtain in the capitalist market economy, rooted in what were assumed to be individual preferences.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en51\" id=\"en51backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>51<\/sup><\/a> Carrying out such an analysis requires, as does capitalist expropriation as a whole, what has been called \u201cthe division of nature,\u201d that is, its simplification into putatively commodifiable elements.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en52\" id=\"en52backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>52<\/sup><\/a> Natural, heterogeneous, and qualitatively distinct processes are \u201cdisaggregated into discrete and homogeneous value units,\u201d reducing widely incommensurable entities and processes\u2014Darwin\u2019s \u201ccomplex web of relations\u201d\u2014to monetary terms, allowing them to be aggregated to stand for global ecosystem services as a whole, while valued\/priced in terms of capitalist commodity relations.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en53\" id=\"en53backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>53<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The 1997 Costanza study was widely acclaimed among environmentalists, if only because it gave what seemed to be hard numbers to the notion that the world economy was dependent on the world ecology\u2014now itself reduced in terms of ecosystem services to dollars. In that study, Costanza and his coauthors depicted the value of annual world ecosystem services in 1995 as $33 trillion in current dollars, slightly less than double the $18 trillion world GDP.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en54\" id=\"en54backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>54<\/sup><\/a> The notion of natural capital valuation was further advanced in the Millennium Economic Assessment in 2005, which took as its main message the dangers of the \u201crunning down of natural capital assets\u201d and neglect of environmental services across the globe. The United Nations was to launch a System of Environmental-Economic Accounting, utilizing the natural capital\/ecosystems services approach.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en55\" id=\"en55backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>55<\/sup><\/a> In 2014, in an updated analysis entitled \u201cChanges in the Value of Global Ecosystem Values,\u201d Costanza and his colleagues estimated that world ecosystem services in 2011 were equal to $145 trillion annually (in 2007 dollars), compared to a world GDP of approximately $73.6 trillion.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en56\" id=\"en56backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>56<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Yet, while current attempts to place values on nature can serve useful pedagogical roles and help enhance strategic planning, they are increasingly being integrated with goals of capital accumulation. As Friends of the Earth noted in <i>The Financialization of Nature<\/i>, \u201cpromoting ecosystem markets involves the same methodologies and institutions for pricing and trading which were developed for economic evaluation.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en57\" id=\"en57backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>57<\/sup><\/a> Thus, over the last three decades, \u201cthe history of ecosystems services research\u201d has been accompanied by \u201ca parallel history of ecosystem function commodification,\u201d operating through universities, governments, and businesses, using the same language and methods of ecosystems services accounting, but further extending the analysis to the creation of actual natural-capital markets. This occurs through three steps: (1) designating an ecological process as an ecosystem service to the human economy, (2) imputing to it a single \u201cexchange value,\u201d and (3) establishing ownership and managerial rights so as to link users and providers of the service in a market exchange, permitting financial investment and accumulation.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en58\" id=\"en58backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>58<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>For the IEG (now teamed up with the New York Stock Exchange, a minority investor in the former), the significance of the 2014 Costanza-led study of global ecosystem values is that it shows that ecosystem services have a value far exceeding that of world GDP\u2014one that, in the context of environmental concerns, can be opened to accumulation and financial exploitation via ecosystem function commodification.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en59\" id=\"en59backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>59<\/sup><\/a> \u201cNature\u2019s economy is larger than our current industrial economy and we can tap this store of wealth\u201d based \u201con natural assets and the mechanism to convert them into financial assets,\u201d thereby transforming the economy into \u201cone that is more equitable, resilient and sustainable.\u201d In this perspective, \u201cintrinsic value\u201d is used as the umbrella term for potential economic values of the natural environment that have \u201cnot yet been identified or quantified,\u201d representing vast new openings for financial investment and wealth as the boundaries between the capitalist economy and unpriced nature erode.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en60\" id=\"en60backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>60<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"mr-heading\">Accumulation of Natural Capital and the Financialization of Nature<\/h2>\n<p>The last decade has seen an explosion of natural capital initiatives aimed at the accumulation and financialization of nature as a means of addressing environmental constraints. In 2011, the UK Environment Bank, a private institution devoted to the financialization of nature, received \u00a3175,000 from the Shell Foundation to aid it in the development of markets for ecosystem services.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en61\" id=\"en61backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>61<\/sup><\/a> Since 2012, the Natural Capital Committee of the UK government and the UK Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs have been promoting a natural capital \u201caggregate rule\u201d based on the notion of net-zero losses in natural capital in economic value terms. This has involved the development of mechanisms for treating various elements of nature as commensurate not only with each other, but also with commodity markets. A methodology for managing natural capital has been introduced in which the destruction of biodiversity or the climate would be balanced by offsets that increase (or protect) natural assets by an equal value amount elsewhere. This has required the reduction of nature\/natural capital to monetary units that can then be integrated into consolidated national accounts, incorporating changes in UK natural capital, valued in 2015 at \u00a31.6 trillion. This process has been facilitated internationally by the formation of a host of entities dedicated to natural capital accounting, including the World Forum for Natural Capital, the Natural Capital Declaration, and the Natural Capital Financing Facility of the European Investment Bank and European Commission.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en62\" id=\"en62backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>62<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Although carbon trading markets were behind much of this, of near-equal importance have been initiatives associated with biodiversity and conservation. In September 2016, the World Conservation Congress of the International Union for Conservation of Nature introduced its \u201cnatural capital charter\u201d (Motion 63) as a framework for treating all biodiversity as natural capital values. This was preceded by the global Natural Capital Protocol of multinational corporate business initiated in July 2016 by the Natural Capital Coalition (now renamed the Capitals Coalition).<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en63\" id=\"en63backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>63<\/sup><\/a> <i>The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity<\/i>, published in 2010 and 2011, initiated under the auspices of the Natural Capital Coalition with the support of the United Nation Environment Programme and the European Commission, was to be a heavy promoter of the valuation of natural capital.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en64\" id=\"en64backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>64<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>A watershed initiative with respect to the accumulation of nature was launched by the Swiss-based global investment bank Credit Suisse, which in 2016 introduced a report on <i>Conservation Finance: Moving Beyond Donor Funding to an Investor-Driven Approach<\/i>, followed by a report that same year on <i>Levering Ecosystems: A Business-Focused Perspective on How Debt Supports Investment in Ecosystems Services<\/i>. The Credit Suisse scheme is to move beyond donor capital in conservation to construct a \u201cconservation finance space.\u201d The key here is to reorganize conservation finance to create in each case a definite \u201cfinancial vehicle\u201d or company, controlling the natural capital\/ecosystem services, which would generate major financial returns to investors. The goal is to turn ecosystem services into \u201can asset treasured by the mainstream investment market.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en65\" id=\"en65backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>65<\/sup><\/a> This was the basis for the NACs listing on the New York Stock Exchange, which used the same methodology of creating a \u201cfinancial vehicle\u201d or \u201cnatural assets company\u201d as an intermediary in the conversion of a \u201cnatural asset\u201d into \u201cfinancial capital\u201d consecrated by the launch of an Initial Public Offering of the natural asset company.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en66\" id=\"en66backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>66<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Various means would be developed in this respect for the Payments for Ecosystem Services and trading of natural capital, involving nonfinancial corporations, banks, governments, and NGOs. Government-owned natural capital assets, often expropriated from Indigenous populations and subsistence farmers, could be sold in the form of debt for nature swaps or leveraged via international financial capital. More important, however, is the role envisioned by the IEG in which NACs managing ecosystems services would operate essentially like businesses that have acquired \u201cmining rights,\u201d thus allowing them to exploit the resources and accumulate monetized assets\u2014in this case though in the name of sustaining nature.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en67\" id=\"en67backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>67<\/sup><\/a> Although a given state would normally continue to have sovereign ownership of the land, the financial vehicle managing and disposing of the ecosystem services would profit directly off the income streams associated with these \u201ctradable\u201d assets. According to the Credit Suisse <i>Conservation Finance<\/i> report, in order for firms to profit through investment in natural capital, it will be necessary to combine \u201c<i>heterogeneous<\/i>\u201d natural assets, \u201c<i>bundling<\/i> them into a single product with a tailored risk and return sharing vehicle.\u201d In this way, it is possible to \u201cprovide a market-rate return and leverage multiple sources of finance to reduce risk,\u201d thereby maximizing value for investors.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en68\" id=\"en68backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>68<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Carbon trading, which is now being fully globalized through Article 6 of the 2021 UN Climate Change Conference, is designed to promote a world market in offsets, allowing a firm to avoid actual carbon emission reductions by financing (and frequently capitalizing) an offset, usually in the Global South, involving carbon sequestration. The $100 billion that the developed capitalist countries have promised to direct at the Global South for climate finance is seen as subject to debt leverage by multinational monopoly-finance capital. This lies behind the 2021 Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero initiative of global finance, which has declared at the outset that carbon-mitigation financing to developing countries will be dependent on whether they fully open up their economies to global capital. Credit Suisse sees \u201cecological footprints\u201d as moving \u201ccloser to being recognized as assets and liabilities by companies allowing debt to fund natural capital investment and the creation of new profitable markets with \u201cnet-positive financial outcomes\u201d in the Global South.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en69\" id=\"en69backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>69<\/sup><\/a> In general, the accumulation and financialization of nature involves the creation of titles to environmental services of various kinds, previously within the commons as the inheritance of the world\u2019s people, after which these titles can be traded and leveraged.<\/p>\n<p>In the case of valorized natural capital, monopoly rights to environmental services can be established with the cooperation of governments, through the creation of NACs, which then will be free to accumulate based on the \u201cmanagement\u201d of this service, including trading in all sorts of offsets. As the New York Stock Exchange indicated, NACs would \u201chold the [economic] rights to ecosystem services produced on a given chunk of land.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en70\" id=\"en70backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>70<\/sup><\/a> The logic, as far as capital and finance is concerned, is not that far removed from how extractive industries themselves developed, but, in this case, it is putatively about sustaining natural assets by maintaining net-zero losses. In analogy with <i>standing timber<\/i> as a concept in forestry, these assets are now referred to as <i>standing natural capitals<\/i>.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en71\" id=\"en71backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>71<\/sup><\/a> Profiting off the extraction of environmental services is conflated with the notion of sustainable forestry, marketing the service while maintaining the overall asset. It, however, runs into the same contradictions.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en72\" id=\"en72backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>72<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Governments, intergovernmental organizations, financial institutions, nonfinancial corporations, and nongovernmental organizations, in introducing the notion of natural capital in their various reports, often begin by referring to it in broad material use-value terms as consisting of nature\u2019s resource stock\u2014a view of natural capital that goes back to the nineteenth century. Yet, the fine print soon makes it clear that natural capital is primarily viewed today in exchange-value, not use-value, terms. One such market is the global voluntary carbon market, which is projected to reach $180 billion by the end of this decade. Only \u201ca tiny fraction\u201d of these carbon offsets, according to <i>Bloomberg<\/i> in January 2022, actually remove carbon from the air, while 90 percent of firms employing certified carbon offsets were found in a survey to have inflated their claims on carbon savings. In line with this, the term <i>carbon neutral<\/i> is now being used as a marketing tool with no basis in net-zero carbon accounting, in much the same way as the term <i>natural<\/i>, lacking any clear designation, is adopted in place of <i>organic<\/i> in marketing to fool the unwary consumer.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en73\" id=\"en73backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>73<\/sup><\/a> In this context, the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) market has become the leading vehicle for voluntary carbon offsets. Such projects, however, have been associated with the expropriation of Indigenous lands and the removal of Indigenous peoples.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en74\" id=\"en74backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>74<\/sup><\/a> It is significant in this respect that the Terra Bella Fund of Terra Global Capital, which is a private investment fund specializing in environmental assets, is specifically directed at \u201cvoluntary markets where regulations are uncertain or non-existent\u201d in emerging and developing economies and is focused on buying up \u201cunder-valued derivative instruments on environmental assets.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en75\" id=\"en75backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>75<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>According to Kanyinke Sena, director of the Indigenous Peoples of Africa Coordinating Committee, Indigenous people constitute less than 5 percent of the world\u2019s population but protect 80 percent of the world\u2019s biodiversity.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en76\" id=\"en76backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>76<\/sup><\/a> The world\u2019s peasantry also plays a vital ecosystem role, employing traditional practices. Ironically, in the name of ecology and combating the capitalist destruction of the earth as a safe home for humanity and innumerable other species, we are seeing an enormous expansion of the domain of what Marx called earth capital. This is occurring by means of the expropriation of Indigenous and peasant populations, along with the expropriation of the human natural inheritance altogether, including that of future generations. This constitutes the great tragedy of the commodification of the commons, a new Great Expropriation, pointing to the destruction of the earth, involving vast land (and ocean) grabs, particularly in the Global South.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en77\" id=\"en77backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>77<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>The famous Lauderdale Paradox, the destruction of <i>public wealth<\/i> (principally the commons) in order to generate <i>private riches<\/i>, introduced by the Earl of Lauderdale at the beginning of the nineteenth century, has a direct application in our time. The expropriation and degradation of the ecological commons is generating the conditions of scarcity crucial to the creation of exchange value, private property monopolies, and monopoly rents. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that multinational capital is playing both sides of this game of the destruction and accumulation of nature. According to Portfolio Earth, the world\u2019s fifty largest banks provided $2.6 trillion in 2019 to companies linked to deforestation and biodiversity destruction, especially in Southeast Asia and the Amazon. The top three offenders are Bank of America, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en78\" id=\"en78backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>78<\/sup><\/a> <i>The Financial Times<\/i> carried a report in October 2021 indicating that global banks and asset managers had extended $119 billion since 2016 to agribusiness companies involved in deforestation.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en79\" id=\"en79backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>79<\/sup><\/a> Over 70 percent of global carbon emissions can be traced to just one hundred corporations (military emissions excluded).<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en80\" id=\"en80backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>80<\/sup><\/a> The same capitalist firms that are destroying the Earth System as a home for humanity are now supporting the financialization of the world\u2019s natural capital\/ecosystem services, aimed at profiting off attempts to safeguard the earth from their own continuing destruction of it. In this conception, profits can be made on both sides of the ledger, by contributing to the creative destruction of nature as part of the accumulation of capital and by profitably investing so as to ensure a zero net loss in total human and natural assets. It would be an understatement to refer to this as a planetary-level protection racket raised to the level of the capitalist economic system as a whole.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en81\" id=\"en81backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>81<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"mr-heading\">Against the Accumulation of Nature<\/h2>\n<p>The concept of natural capital, including the earth as a capital stock, was introduced in nineteenth-century political economy and environmental discussions, primarily within the socialist and radical traditions, as a way of emphasizing that real wealth consisted of natural-material use values as opposed to the commodified exchange values of the capitalist economy. Those figures within classical political economy who initially focused on the conservation and common human ownership of material use values as constituting real wealth, opposed land monopolies and the confiscation, commodification, and destruction of nature in the interest of capital accumulation. Such arguments with regard to natural capital could already be seen in the writings of Considerant, Jones, Marx, Waring, Carey, and Liebig, among others.<\/p>\n<p>When Schumacher revived the concept of natural capital in 1973 in <i>Small Is Beautiful<\/i>, he was operating, as he was well aware, in this same basic tradition, seeing natural capital as constituting use values or natural resources that could not be quantified, but represented a stock of real wealth that was being liquified by capitalist production. As he wrote there: \u201cTo measure the immeasurable is absurd and constitutes [on the part of the economist] but an elaborate method of moving from preconceived notions to foregone conclusions: all that one has to do to obtain the desired results is to impute suitable values to the immeasurable costs and benefits\u201d of nature. The only real result of such an endeavor was to perpetuate the myth that \u201ceverything has a price, or, in other words, that money is the highest of all values.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en82\" id=\"en82backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>82<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>As we have noted, Marx and Engels in <i>The German Ideology<\/i> initially used the concept of natural capital to refer to the \u201cnatural form\u201d of the commodity tied to use value and its concrete, physical form. In its initial development, coming out of the Middle Ages, they argued, capital was tied to physical space, in the sense of land\/space, involving definite material inputs, and in this sense could be regarded as a form of \u201cnatural capital.\u201d This was contrasted to the subsequent development of \u201cmobile capital\u201d based on an exchange value and the circulation of financial claims to wealth. However, the term <i>natural capital<\/i> itself was dropped by Marx by the time he wrote <i>The Poverty of Philosophy<\/i> only a year later, given his critique of the naturalization of capitalism. In its place, he introduced a more ecological distinction between the earth or land as a natural-material entity\u2014<i>earth matter<\/i>\u2014and the category of <i>earth capital<\/i>, the latter representing nature (for example, the soil or a waterfall) turned into capital.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en83\" id=\"en83backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>83<\/sup><\/a> The accumulation of earth capital, though indispensable to capital accumulation, led in Marx\u2019s view to the disruption of the universal metabolism of nature in favor of capitalism\u2019s alienated social metabolism, thus developing an \u201cirreparable rift\u201d in the metabolism of nature and society (or the metabolic rift).<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en84\" id=\"en84backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>84<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Here, Marx\u2019s analysis was much influenced by the work of Waring, Carey, and Liebig, who wrote of the <i>robbing<\/i> of the earth\u2019s capital stock, a notion that Marx was to make central to his notion of metabolic rift. In Marx\u2019s own terms, what was being \u201crobbed\u201d through the accumulation of \u201cearth capital\u201d was the material metabolism and reproductive basis of the earth as matter (material nature) itself. Capitalism was to be conceived as a form of creative destruction in which the destructiveness of the system would overwhelm its creative side. As he observed, \u201ccapital\u2026is in practice moved as much and as little by the sight of the coming degradation and final depopulation of the human race, as by the probable fall of the earth into the sun.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en85\" id=\"en85backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>85<\/sup><\/a> A rational, sustainable relation to the earth was impossible under the regime of capital, since it saw the earth either as a mere free gift to capital accumulation or as transformed into <i>earth capital<\/i>. In either case, the ecological system was robbed. There was nothing eternal about <i>terre-capital<\/i>, which existed on the basis of the capitalization of nature; only <i>terre-mati\u00e8re<\/i>, constituting the realm of natural-material existence, the universal metabolism of nature, was eternal.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cNatural capital,\u201d Daly insists, should be seen in use-value terms, \u201cbased on the relations of physical stocks and flows, not prices and monetary valuation.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en86\" id=\"en86backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>86<\/sup><\/a> Yet, the notion of natural capital has to be seen as a dangerous one altogether in a capitalist society. Rather than embodying a distinction, as in Marx\u2019s analysis, between the earth matter and earth capital, it is easily incorporated into an all-inclusive, ahistorical notion of capital, which is treated as homogeneous and to be measured in terms of the single yardstick of exchange value. In this respect, it is crucial to remember that capitalism is a system of accumulation geared to exponential expansion, hence leading to the drawing down of natural resources. It represents the very opposite of conservation. It therefore cannot accept material limits or boundaries, which are viewed simply as barriers to be surmounted.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en87\" id=\"en87backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>87<\/sup><\/a> Faced with environmental constraints, the dominant economic approach is, therefore, to incorporate ecosystem services into the economy by placing capital values on it and selectively integrating it with capital accumulation itself\u2014a process made easier by the fact that capital makes nature scarcer and more marketable by destroying it. Valuing nature simply by its ecosystem services to a capitalist economy is inevitably destructive of nature itself, with the concept of ecosystem services inviting the extreme division of nature in capitalist terms, since it has as its initial basis the \u201ccutting\u201d of nature into discrete pieces to be valorized.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en88\" id=\"en88backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>88<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In the context of the overall financialization of the world economy, vast amounts of surplus \u201cfree cash,\u201d the growth of financial bubbles, and the promotion of debt peonage in the Global South, the financialization of nature is likely to intensify the volatility of the capitalist economy itself.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en89\" id=\"en89backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>89<\/sup><\/a> Nevertheless, it is the environmental bubble generated by the financialization of nature that is most dangerous.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en90\" id=\"en90backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>90<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In what amounts to a victory of notions of weak sustainability, it is often contended that the continual destruction of nature required by capital accumulation can be offset by the valorization of nature and its internalization within the logic of capital itself, so that there is no net loss of natural capital in economic value terms and the exponential increase of capital accumulation in a limited environment is allowed to proceed. New financialized ecosystems can help support the entire system. If nature is itself capital, the argument goes, there is simply no problem. The destruction of one species or of a whole ecosystem can be compensated for by natural capital that provides ecosystem services for the economy elsewhere. In the words of Solow, representing the neoclassical view of sustainability,<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"quote\"><p>History tells us an important fact, namely that goods and services can be substituted for one another. If you don\u2019t eat one species of fish, you can eat another species of fish. Resources are, to use a favorite word of economists, fungible in a certain sense. They can take the place of each other. That is extremely important because it suggests that we do not owe to the future any particular thing. There is no specific object that the goal of sustainability, the obligation of sustainability, requires us to leave untouched.\u2026 Sustainability doesn\u2019t require that any <i>particular<\/i> species of fish or any <i>particular<\/i> tract of forest be preserved.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en91\" id=\"en91backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>91<\/sup><\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Like most capitalist economists, Solow fails to recognize that each species and each ecosystem is unique, and that extinction is irreversible, affecting the whole complex evolution of the Earth System. For Credit Suisse, conservation finance is about turning nature into \u201cfungible\u201d cash flow and products in precisely Solow\u2019s sense.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en92\" id=\"en92backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>92<\/sup><\/a> Species and ecosystems may be treated as commensurable and substitutable in the economic value terms of the capitalist economy, but in reality they are incommensurable and irreplaceable. Their individual demise represents real ecological consequences. To think otherwise is to fall prey to what Marxist geographer David Harvey called \u201cthe madness of economic reason,\u201d in which there are no limits\u2014quantitative or qualitative\u2014to the valorization and financialization of capital, conceived as value in motion, absorbing all of reality, including nature itself.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en93\" id=\"en93backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>93<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>As ecological economist John Gowdy declared, the concept of natural capital as it is now employed \u201ccontains two contradictory concepts: \u2018natural\u2019 indicating a world governed by biophysical laws and \u2018capital\u2019 indicating a world governed by the laws of market capitalism.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en94\" id=\"en94backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>94<\/sup><\/a> Attempts to overcome this contradiction by subsuming material nature within capital run into the contradiction that Marx expressed between the earth as natural-material and the earth as capital. For Marx, human production and extra-human nature had to be seen as complementary and co-evolutionary, requiring that natural systems be maintained in terms of their material flows and complex web of relations, preserving the metabolism of humanity and nature for the entire chain of human generations and for the sake of life on earth itself, in accord with the principle of acting as good heads of the household.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en95\" id=\"en95backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>95<\/sup><\/a> In the classical Marxian view, as emphasized by Ernst Bloch in <i>The Principle of Hope<\/i>, nature and humanity are \u201cco-productive,\u201d in the sense that \u201cthe creations slumbering in the womb of nature\u201d are the material basis of all human productivity.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en96\" id=\"en96backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>96<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>What this means is that other, wider ecological principles, applicable to both natural and human systems, need to displace current attempts to solve the planetary crisis generated by capitalism by simply absorbing the earth itself within the logic of the system, in an extension of commodity fetishism to the realm of nature itself.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en97\" id=\"en97backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>97<\/sup><\/a> Ecology has generated new bases for promoting sustainable human development and the overcoming of economic and ecological imperialism.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en98\" id=\"en98backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>98<\/sup><\/a> Within Marxism, there is a long, if disputed, tradition of the dialectics of nature, which stands strongly opposed to reductionist approaches to nature and its evolution, exposing the dangers of all attempts to commodify the natural world and insisting that human beings \u201cbelong to nature and exist in its midst, and\u2026all our mastery of it consists in the fact that we have the advantage of all other creatures of being able to learn its laws and apply them correctly.\u201d<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en99\" id=\"en99backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>99<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>Such a critical, dialectical, and materialist perspective requires the abandonment of both the naturalization of capital and the capitalization of nature, as well as the recognition of the inescapable social character of capital, associated with a particular historical system: capitalism. Only an ecological and social revolution that would allow humanity as a whole, the associated producers, to regulate the human social metabolism with the earth in a rational and sustainable way, in accord with a broad scientific understanding and with the aim of promoting genuine, free human development, can offer a way out of the current planetary crisis.<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en100\" id=\"en100backlink\" class=\"endnote-link\"  rel=\"footnote\"><sup>100<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"mr-heading\">Notes<\/h2>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"en1\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en1backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> The term <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">original expropriation<\/cite> here is used in place of what is often mistakenly referred to as Karl Marx\u2019s notion of <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">primitive accumulation<\/cite>. Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 1 (London: Penguin, 1976), 871. Marx carefully distanced himself from this concept of classical-liberal political economy by referring to \u201cso-called primitive accumulation,\u201d since, as he insisted, this was not the case of the accumulation of capital, but rather \u201cexpropriation\u201d of property. Moreover, the <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">primitive<\/cite> in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">primitive accumulation<\/cite> was itself a mistranslation of what Marx, following classical political economy, referred to as <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">original<\/cite> or <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">primary<\/cite>. Capitalism prior to the British Industrial Revolution required such original expropriation to monopolize the means of production, amass start-up capital, and generate a proletarianized labor force. Yet, expropriation of land\/nature and thus of the means of production of the workers, as Marx himself indicated, does not stop there, and is continually replicated in the history of capitalism, colonialism, and imperialism, now taking on new dimensions in the twenty-first century. For a more detailed discussion, see John Bellamy Foster, Brett Clark, and Hannah Holleman, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.14452\/MR-071-07-2019-11_1\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Capitalism and Robbery<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Monthly Review<\/cite> 71, no. 7 (December 2019): 1\u201323. On the expropriation of the English commons, see John Bellamy Foster, Brett Clark, and Hannah Holleman, \u201cMarx and the Commons,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Social Research<\/cite> 88, no. 1 (2021): 1\u201330; Ian Angus, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/climateandcapitalism.com\/2022\/01\/15\/against-enclosure-the-commoners-fight-back\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Against Enclosure: The Commoners Fight Back<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Climate and Capitalism<\/cite>, January 15, 2022.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en2\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en2backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Polanyi, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Great Transformation<\/cite> (Boston: Beacon, 1944), 178.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en3\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en3backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> William Makepeace Thackeray, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Newcomes<\/cite> (London: Penguin, 1996), 488.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en4\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en4backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.intrinsicexchange.com\/solution\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Solution<\/a>,\u201d Intrinsic Exchange Group, accessed January 13, 2022.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en5\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en5backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Charles Darwin, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">On the Origin of Species<\/cite> (London: John Murray, 1859), 73. The term <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">ecosystem services<\/cite> is usually credited to Paul Ehrlich and Ann Ehrlich, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Extinction: The Causes and Consequences of the Disappearance of Species<\/cite> (New York: Random House, 1981).<\/li>\n<li id=\"en6\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en6backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/assets.publishing.service.gov.uk\/government\/uploads\/system\/uploads\/attachment_data\/file\/516698\/ncc-state-natural-capital-second-report.pdf\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The State of Natural Capital: Restoring Our Natural Assets<\/a> (London: Natural Capital Committee, 2014).<\/li>\n<li id=\"en7\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en7backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> See Erik Gomez-Baggethun, Rudolf de Groot, Pedro L. Lomas, and Carlos Montes, \u201cThe History of Ecosystem Services in Economic Theory and Practice: From Early Notions to Markets and Payment Schemes,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Economics<\/cite> 69 (2010): 1213. They write, in what purports to be a definitive analysis: \u201cSchumacher [in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Small Is Beautiful<\/cite>] was probably the first author that used the concept of natural capital.\u201d<\/li>\n<li id=\"en8\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en8backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> The names here are listed in chronological order in accordance with when they are known to have used the term <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">natural capital<\/cite> or the notion of the <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">earth\u2019s capital stock<\/cite>. A good preliminary treatment of the origins of the term is provided in Antoine Missemer, \u201cNatural Capital as an Economic Concept, History, and Contemporary Issues,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Economics<\/cite> 143 (2018): 90\u201396. However, Missemer misses the roles of Marx, Engels, Waring, Carey, and Liebig in this respect. He also privileges the neoclassical concept of natural capital focusing on exchange value, seeing earlier references to natural capital to be of little significance simply because they did not conform to present usage. Thus, despite referring to numerous thinkers who used the term in the nineteenth century, Missemer claims, by sleight of hand, that \u201cthe natural capital concept was indeed coined in the 1900s,\u201d thereby privileging the neoclassical conception of natural capital as the <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">only valid concept<\/cite>. Missemer, \u201cNatural Capital,\u201d 93\u201394. Besides the names mentioned above, a number of other thinkers used the notion of <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">natural capital<\/cite> prior to the 1860s. Jean-Baptiste Say\u2019s use of the term, where it stood for natural human capital, is highlighted in Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">What Is Property?<\/cite> (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 109.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en9\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en9backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> The early reference to \u201cnatural capital\u201d by Considerant and others was not simply a metaphor, related to commodity capital, but reflected in part the classical recognition that the concept of capital itself had arisen out of a consideration of natural use values and only took on the primary meaning of capital as accumulated exchange value with the rise of capitalism. The word <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">capital<\/cite> thus arose from <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">capita<\/cite>, meaning <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">heads<\/cite>, referring to heads of cattle, the entire herd of which was regarded as a <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">stock<\/cite>. All of this was in physical or use-value terms. Herman Daly, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/steadystate.org\/use-and-abuse-of-the-natural-capital-concept\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Use and Abuse of the \u2018Natural Capital\u2019 Concept<\/a>,\u201d Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy, November 13, 2014.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en10\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en10backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Rondel Van Davidson, \u201cVictor Considerant: Fourierist Legislator, and Humanitarian\u201d (PhD dissertation, Texas Tech University, December 1970), 68\u201369; John Cunliffe and Guido Erreygers, \u201cThe Enigmatic Legacy of Charles Fourier,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">History of Political Economy<\/cite> 33, no. 3 (2001): 467; Missemer, \u201cNatural Capital,\u201d 91\u201392.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en11\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en11backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Ebenezer Jones, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Land Monopoly, the Suffering and Demoralization Caused by It, and the Justice and Expediency of Its Abolition<\/cite> (London: Charles Fox, 1849), 6, 18\u201321, 27.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en12\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en12backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Jones, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Land Monopoly<\/cite>, 10.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en13\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en13backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Jones, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Land Monopoly<\/cite>, 19. The complexity of Jones\u2019s analysis, which focused on natural capital as the proceeds of nature, defies Missemer\u2019s claim that the notion of natural capital was used by Jones simply as a \u201csynonym for land,\u201d particularly as land, in classical political economy, was a category that stood for all of nature. Missmer, \u201cNatural Capital,\u201d 91.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en14\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en14backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Hal Draper, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Marx-Engels Chronicle<\/cite> (New York: Schocken, 1985), 12.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en15\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en15backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Collected Works<\/cite>, vol. 5 (New York: International Publishers, 1975), 66\u201373.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en16\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en16backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> On Marx\u2019s critique of the naturalization of capital and the treatment of nature divorced from labor as a source of value, see Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3 (London: Penguin, 1981), 953\u201357. All subsequent references to <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, except as indicated in endnote 22 are to this edition.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en17\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en17backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Marx, \u201cThe Value-Form,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital &amp; Class<\/cite> 4 (1978): 134; Karl Marx, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/libcom.org\/files\/the%20commodity%20chapter%201%20volume%201%20of%20first%20edition%20of%20capital.pdf\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Commodity<\/a>,\u201d chap. 1 in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 1, libcom.org; Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Texts on Method<\/cite> (Oxford: Blackwell, 1975), 198, 200, 207.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en18\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en18backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> John Bellamy Foster, Brett Clark, and Richard York, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\"><a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/product\/ecological_rift\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Ecological Rift<\/a><\/cite> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2010), 53\u201364; Marx and Engels, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Collected Works<\/cite>, vol. 37, 732\u201333.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en19\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en19backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> McCulloch, quoted in Marx and Engels, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Collected Works<\/cite>, vol. 29, 224.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en20\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en20backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 954.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en21\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en21backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 756.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en22\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en22backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Poverty of Philosophy<\/cite> (New York: International Publishers, 1963), 164. <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Terre-mati\u00e8re<\/cite> and <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">terre-capital<\/cite> have been inserted here in square brackets to better convey Marx\u2019s meaning, as indicated in Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 756.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en23\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en23backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 755\u201356. In this sentence, Marx uses the term <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">valorise<\/cite> to refer to the landlord\u2019s realization in exchange-value terms of monopoly rents. It should be noted that the concept of <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">valorization<\/cite> (<cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Verwetung<\/cite>) is used in two senses in Marx, to refer to: (1) the whole capitalist process of surplus value production, and (2) (more often) the realization of surplus value at the end of the circulation process. Traditionally, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Verwetung<\/cite> was translated as <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">realization<\/cite>, which corresponds to the latter, more limited meaning. However, the 1976 Penguin edition of <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite> introduced the word <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">valorization<\/cite> (which did not at that time exist in the English language) to capture the broader meaning. Here, we are using it in today\u2019s more commonplace sense (looser than Marx\u2019s second meaning) of conferring value or prices on goods and services. This should not be taken as indicating that land in itself is a <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">source<\/cite> of commodity value, which is a product of socially necessary labor and production. Rather, the exchange value is received by the owner of the land in the form of rent. Valorization is thus used here simply in the sense of conferring titles and exchange value to land and resources, which generate rents, and are connected to financial markets. Ultimately, this is dependent on the labor and production system. Ernest Mandel, introduction to <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 1, 36; translator\u2019s note in Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 1 , 252.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en24\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en24backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Das Kapital<\/cite> (Hamburg: Verlag von Otto Meissner, 1894) (<cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Verwandlung von Surplusprofit in Gundrente<\/cite>), 158. Translation slightly altered from Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 756\u201357, changing <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">raw material<\/cite> to <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">mere matter<\/cite>. The correction is in conformity with the 1894 German edition, which literally translates <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">blosser materie<\/cite> as <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">mere matter<\/cite> rather than <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">raw material<\/cite>, and with the French translation, which, in line with the distinction first developed in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Poverty of Philosophy<\/cite>, refers to \u201c<cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">la terre-mati\u00e8re une terre-capital<\/cite>.\u201d Marx, chap. 37 in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.marxists.org\/francais\/marx\/works\/1867\/Capital-III\/kmcap3_36.htm\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">French translation<\/a> available at marxists.org. In Marx and Engel\u2019s <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Collected Works<\/cite>, vol. 3, 613\u2013614, the entire phrase is unaccountably missing. The Ernest Untermann translation incorporates the phrase but translates the terms as <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">material land<\/cite> and <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">land capital<\/cite>. See Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3 (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 1909), 725\u201326. This then misses the full significance between the earth\/land as <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">mere matter<\/cite> and the formation of earth-capital. As his references to James Anderson and Henry Carey make clear in the same passage, Marx was concerned here with the ecological issue of the circulation of matter, particularly soil nutrients.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en25\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en25backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 637\u201340; Andreas Malm, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Fossil Capital<\/cite> (London: Verso, 2016), 309\u201314.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en26\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en26backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 910\u201311.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en27\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en27backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 2 (London: Penguin, 1978), 435; Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 213\u201314; Marx and Engels, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Collected Works<\/cite>, vol. 30, 63; Paul Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marx and Nature<\/cite> (Chicago: Haymarket, 2014), 141\u201347; G\u00f3mez-Baggethun, Groot, Lomas, and Montes, \u201cThe History of Ecosystem Services in Economic Theory and Practice,\u201d 1211.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en28\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en28backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> George E. Waring Jr., \u201cThe Agricultural Features of the Census of the United States for 1850,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Bulletin of the American Geological Association<\/cite> 2 (1857): 189\u2013202.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en29\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en29backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> C. Carey, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Slave Trade, Domestic and Foreign<\/cite> (Philadelphia: A. Hart, 1853), 199; Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Selected Correspondence<\/cite> (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1955), 78.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en30\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en30backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 756\u201357; John Bellamy Foster, <a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/product\/marxs_ecology\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marx\u2019s Ecology<\/cite><\/a> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2000), 144\u201354.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en31\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en31backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Karl Marx, Critique of the Gotha Programme (New York: International Publishers, 1938), 1. In <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, Marx wrote of \u201cthe dull and tedious dispute over the part played by nature in the formation of exchange-value. Since exchange-value is a definite social manner of expressing the labour bestowed on a thing, it can have no more natural content [separate from labor] than has, for example, the rate of exchange.\u201d This did not, however, prevent Marx from constantly insisting that all real <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">wealth<\/cite>, as opposed to <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">value<\/cite>, stems from nature. Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 1, 134, 176.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en32\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en32backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> See John Bellamy Foster and Brett Clark, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\"><a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/product\/the-robbery-of-nature\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Robbery of Nature<\/a><\/cite> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2020), 12\u201334.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en33\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en33backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> James Maitland, Earl of Lauderdale, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">An Inquiry into the Nature and Origin of Public Wealth and into the Means and Causes of Its Increase<\/cite> (Edinburgh: Archibald Constable and Co., 1819), 37\u201359; Foster, Clark, and York, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Ecological Rift<\/cite>, 54\u201358.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en34\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en34backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Irving Fisher, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Nature of Capital and Income<\/cite> (New York: Macmillan, 1919), 76; Paul Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite> (Chicago: Haymarket, 2006), 112; Alejandro Nadal, \u201c<a href=\"http:\/\/www.paecon.net\/PAEReview\/issue74\/Nadal74.pdf\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Natural Capital Metaphor and Economic Theory<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Real-World Economics Review<\/cite> 74 (2016): 64\u201384.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en35\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en35backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Joshua Farley, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.uvm.edu\/~jfarley\/publications\/Natural-Capital-Farley.pdf\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Natural Capital<\/a>,\u201d in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Berkshire Encyclopedia of Sustainability<\/cite>, vol. 5 (Great Barrington, MA: Berkshire, 2012), 264\u201367; Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite>, 95\u2013101.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en36\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en36backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Robert M. Solow, \u201cThe Economics of Resources or the Resources of Economics,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">American Economic Review<\/cite> 64, no. 2 (1974): 146\u201349.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en37\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en37backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Schumacher, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Small Is Beautiful<\/cite>, 15\u201316.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en38\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en38backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite>, 95\u2013101, 108\u20139.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en39\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en39backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Entropy Law and the Economic Process<\/cite> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1971).<\/li>\n<li id=\"en40\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en40backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Herman Daly, \u201cToward Some Operational Principles of Sustainable Development,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Economics<\/cite> 2 (1990): 1\u20136.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en41\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en41backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite>, 95\u2013101, 108\u20139.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en42\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en42backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite>, 113.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en43\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en43backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> The basic elements of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen\u2019s thermodynamic critique of neoclassical economics were accepted from the start by Marxian economists, and viewed as consistent with the classical Marxian tradition, though lacking a social critique. See Paul M. Sweezy, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.14452\/MR-068-09-2017-02_6\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Ecology and Revolution: A Letter to Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, July 31, 1974<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Monthly Review<\/cite> 68, no. 9 (February 2017): 55\u201357; Elmar Altvater, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Future of the Market<\/cite> (London: Verso, 1993); John Bellamy Foster and Paul Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marx and the Earth<\/cite> (Chicago: Haymarket, 2016), 137\u201364.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en44\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en44backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> World Bank, <a href=\"http:\/\/ina.bnu.edu.cn\/docs\/20140606092234982051.pdf\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">World Development Report 2003: Sustainable Development in a Dynamic World<\/cite><\/a> (Washington DC\/New York: World Bank\/Oxford University Press, 2003), 14\u201315; Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite>, 100.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en45\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en45backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> See Burkett, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marxism and Ecological Economics<\/cite>, 101\u20132.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en46\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en46backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> See John Bellamy Foster and Hannah Holleman, \u201cThe Theory of Unequal Ecological Exchange: A Marx-Odum Dialectic,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Journal of Peasant Studies<\/cite> 41, no. 1\u20132 (2014): 223\u201328.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en47\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en47backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Robert Costanza and Herman E. Daly, \u201cNatural Capital and Sustainable Development,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Conservation Biology<\/cite> 6, no. 1 (1992): 38.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en48\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en48backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> G\u00f3mez-Baggethun, Groot, Lomas, and Montes, \u201cThe History of Ecosystem Services in Economic Theory and Practice,\u201d 1213.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en49\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en49backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Costanza and his coauthors argue: \u201cIt is not very meaningful to ask the total value of natural capital to human welfare, nor to ask the value of massive, particular forms of natural capital. It is trivial to ask what is the value of the atmosphere to humankind, or what is the value of rocks and soil infrastructure as support systems. Their value is infinite in total. However, it is meaningful to ask how changes in the quantity and quality of various types of natural capital and ecosystems services may have an impact on human welfare.\u201d In practice, then, the analysis is shifted almost entirely to ecosystem services, rather than natural capital. Robert Costanza et al., \u201cThe Value of the World\u2019s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Nature<\/cite> 387 (1997): 255.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en50\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en50backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Robert Costanza et al., \u201cChanges in the Global Value of Ecosystem Services,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Global Environmental Change<\/cite> 26 (2014): 154; Costanza et al., \u201cThe Value of the World\u2019s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital.\u201d<\/li>\n<li id=\"en51\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en51backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Herman Daly, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/steadystate.org\/integrating-ecology-and-economics\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Integrating Ecology and Economics<\/a>,\u201d Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy, June 5, 2014.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en52\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en52backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Commodifying ecosystem services\u2014whether in the form of parts of the contemporary economy based directly on the exploitation of natural resources, or through imputing value to ecosystem services\u2014requires \u201can extreme division (simplification) of nature\u201d antithetical to ecological systems. John Bellamy Foster, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\"><a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/product\/ecology_against_capitalism\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Ecology Against Capitalism<\/a><\/cite> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2002), 33.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en53\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en53backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Enrique Leff, \u201cMarxism and the Environmental Question,\u201d in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Greening of Marxism<\/cite>, ed. Ted Benton (New York: Guilford, 1996), 146.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en54\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en54backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Costanza et al., \u201cThe Value of the World\u2019s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital.\u201d<\/li>\n<li id=\"en55\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en55backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/seea.un.org\/ecosystem-accounting\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Methodology: Ecosystem Accounting<\/a>,\u201d UN System of Environmental and Economic Accounting, accessed January 17, 2022.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en56\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en56backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Costanza et al., \u201cChanges in the Global Value of Ecosystem Services.\u201d<\/li>\n<li id=\"en57\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en57backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Jutta Kill, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Financialization of Nature<\/cite> (Amsterdam: Friends of the Earth International, 2015), 3.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en58\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en58backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> G\u00f3mez-Baggethun et al., \u201cThe History of Ecosystem Services,\u201d 1214.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en59\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en59backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Nature itself is not strictly a commodity, since it is not produced by human labor. However, it is turned into an economic asset and provides a stream of exchange value that is valorized or realized by the landlord through rent, constituting one of the forms in which total surplus value is divided. In this way, it becomes part of the general commodity exchange process.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en60\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en60backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201cAn Inclusive Economy,\u201d Intrinsic Exchange Group, accessed January 26, 2022.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en61\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en61backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sian Sullivan, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Financialisation, Biodiversity Conservation and Equity<\/cite> (Penang, Malaysia: Third World Network, 2012), 17.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en62\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en62backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sian Sullivan, \u201cNoting Some Effects of Fabricating \u2018Nature\u2019 as \u2018Natural Capital,\u2019\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Citizen<\/cite> 1, no. 1 (2017): 65\u201367.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en63\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en63backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sian Sullivan, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/theconversation.com\/nature-is-being-renamed-natural-capital-but-is-it-really-the-planet-that-will-profit-65273\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Nature Is Being Renamed \u2018Natural Capital\u2019\u2014But Is It Really the Planet That Will Profit?<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Conversation<\/cite>, September 13, 2016; Natural Capital Coalition, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\"><a href=\"https:\/\/capitalscoalition.org\/capitals-approach\/natural-capital-protocol\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Natural Capital Protocol<\/a><\/cite> (The Hague: Natural Capital Protocol, 2016).<\/li>\n<li id=\"en64\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en64backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201c<a href=\"http:\/\/teebweb.org\/our-work\/nca\/understanding-nca\/in-a-nutshell\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Natural Capital Accounting: In a Nutshell<\/a>,\u201d Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity, accessed January 19, 2022.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en65\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en65backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sullivan, \u201cNature Is Being Renamed Natural Capital,\u201d 69\u201371; Tanja Havemann et al., <a href=\"http:\/\/cpicfinance.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/03\/levering-ecosystems.pdf\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Levering Ecosystems<\/a> (Z\u00fcrich: Credit Suisse, 2016), 3, 24.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en66\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en66backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Chart on \u201cCreating Natural Asset Companies,\u201d in \u201cThe Solution,\u201d Intrinsic Exchange Group.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en67\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en67backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201cThe Solution,\u201d Intrinsic Exchange Group.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en68\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en68backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Fabian Huwyler, Ju\u0308rg K\u00e4ppeli, and John Tobin, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Conservation Finance: From Niche to Mainstream<\/cite> (Z\u00fcrich\/New York: Credit Suisse\/McKinsey Center for Business and Environment, 2016), 16, 22.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en69\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en69backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sullivan, \u201cNoting Some Effects of Fabricating \u2018Nature\u2019 as \u2018Natural Capital,\u2019\u201d 69\u201370; Havemann et al., <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Levering Ecosystems<\/cite>, 3.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en70\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en70backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Whitney Webb, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.rcreader.com\/commentary\/natural-asset-company-launch-advances-wall-streets-nature-takeover\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">New Asset-Class Launch Advances Wall Street\u2019s Nature Takeover<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">River Cities\u2019 Reader<\/cite>, December 6, 2021.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en71\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en71backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sullivan, \u201cNature Is Being Renamed \u2018Natural Capital.\u2019\u201d<\/li>\n<li id=\"en72\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en72backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> On the contradictions of capitalist forestry, see Foster, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecology Against Capitalism<\/cite>, 104\u201336.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en73\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en73backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomberg.com\/news\/articles\/2022-01-06\/-crazy-carbon-offsets-market-prompts-calls-for-regulation\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Crazy Carbon Offsets Market Prompts Calls for Regulation<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Bloomberg<\/cite>, January 6, 2022.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en74\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en74backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Martin Crook, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/climateandcapitalism.com\/2018\/03\/15\/conservation-as-genocide\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Conservation as a Genocide: REDD versus Indigenous Rights in Kenya<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Climate and Capitalism<\/cite>, March 15, 2018.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en75\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en75backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sullivan, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Financialisation, Biodiversity Conservation and Equity<\/cite>, 17.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en76\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en76backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Kanyinke Sena, \u201cRecognizing Indigenous Peoples\u2019 Land Interests Is Critical for People and Nature,\u201d World Wildlife Fund, October 22, 2020.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en77\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en77backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Stefano B. Longo, Rebecca Clausen, and Brett Clark, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Tragedy of the Commodity: Oceans, Fisheries and Aquaculture<\/cite> (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2015).<\/li>\n<li id=\"en78\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en78backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Declan Foraise, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ecosystemmarketplace.com\/articles\/banks-bankrolling-extinction-to-tune-of-2-6-trillion\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Banks Bankrolling Extinction to Tune of $2.6 Trillion<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecosystem Marketplace<\/cite>, October 29, 2020.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en79\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en79backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.ft.com\/content\/ff1eccc8-645a-497b-a02d-6eb38efe6219\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Global Finance Industry Sinks $119bn into Companies Linked to Deforestation<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Financial Times<\/cite>, October 20, 2021.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en80\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en80backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> \u201cJust 100 Companies Responsible for 71% of Global Emissions, Study Says,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Guardian<\/cite>, July 10, 2017.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en81\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en81backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> On the potential negative role of nature derivatives in this respect, see Sullivan, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Financialisation, Biodiversity Conservation and Equity<\/cite>, 21\u201323.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en82\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en82backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Schumacher, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Small Is Beautiful<\/cite>, 46.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en83\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en83backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Poverty of Philosophy<\/cite>, 164; Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 756\u201357.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en84\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en84backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> John Bellamy Foster, <a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/product\/ecological_revolution\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Ecological Revolution<\/cite><\/a> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2009), 161\u2013200.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en85\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en85backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 1, 381.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en86\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en86backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Daly, \u201cThe Use and Abuse of the \u2018Natural Capital\u2019 Concept.\u201d<\/li>\n<li id=\"en87\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en87backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Foster, Clark, and York, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Ecological Rift<\/cite>, 284\u201387.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en88\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en88backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Sullivan, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Financialisation, Biodiversity Conservation and Equity<\/cite>, 18.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en89\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en89backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> On monopoly-finance capital and the current financial crisis tendencies, see John Bellamy Foster, R. Jamil Jonna, and Brett Clark, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.14452\/MR-072-08-2021-01_1\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">The Contagion of Capital<\/a>,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Monthly Review<\/cite> 72, no. 8 (January 2021): 1\u201319.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en90\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en90backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Herman Daly, \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/steadystate.org\/capital-debt-and-alchemy\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Capital, Debt, and Alchemy<\/a>,\u201d Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy, April 8, 2012.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en91\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en91backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Robert Solow, \u201cSustainability: An Economist\u2019s Perspective,\u201d in <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Economics of the Environment<\/cite>, ed. Robert Dorfman and Nancy S. Dorfman (New York: Norton, 1993), 181.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en92\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en92backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Huwyler, K\u00e4ppeli, and Tobin, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Conservation Finance<\/cite>, 17.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en93\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en93backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> David Harvey, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Marx, Capital, and the Madness of Economic Reason<\/cite> (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 92.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en94\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en94backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> John M. Gowdy, \u201cThe Social Context of Natural Capital,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">International Journal of Social Economics<\/cite> 21, no. 8 (1994): 43.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en95\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en95backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 911. On the human economy and nature as complementary, see Herman Daly, \u201cThe Return of the Lauderdale Paradox,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Economics<\/cite> 25 (1988): 23.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en96\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en96backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Ernst Bloch, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Principle of Hope<\/cite>, vol. 2 (Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press, 1995), 686, 695.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en97\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en97backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Nicol\u00e1s Kosoy and Esteve Cobera, \u201cPayments for Ecosystem Services as Commodity Fetishism,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Economics<\/cite> 69 (2010): 1228\u201336.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en98\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en98backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> In any rational path of sustainable human development, ecosystems need to be comprehended in their full complexity in terms of natural science, particularly in its more dialectical forms, as in Richard Levins and Richard Lewontin, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">The Dialectical Biologist<\/cite> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1985). Such a rational path requires moving away from the capitalist commodity market and toward social control. For a comprehensive approach based in natural science and political-economic critique, see Fred Magdoff and Chris Williams, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\"><a href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/product\/creating_an_ecological_society\/\"  target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Creating an Ecological Society<\/a><\/cite> (New York: Monthly Review Press, 2017). Material flow analysis and comprehensive energy approaches offer superior alternatives to the natural capital\/ecosystem analysis in understanding the changing human relation to nature. Howard Odum\u2019s analysis, in particular, provides the basis of a deep critique of ecological imperialism. See Friedrich Hinterberg, Fred Luks, and Friedrich Schmidt-Bleek, \u201cMaterial Flows vs. \u2018Natural Capital\u2019: What Makes an Economy Sustainable?,\u201d <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Ecological Economics<\/cite> 23 (1997): 1\u201314; Howard Odum, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Environment, Power, and Society<\/cite> (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007), 276\u201378, 303\u20135.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en99\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en99backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx and Engels, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Collected Works<\/cite>, vol. 25, 461.<\/li>\n<li id=\"en100\" class=\"endnote hovernote\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9#en100backlink\" >\u21a9<\/a> Marx, <cite class=\"journal\u2212book\">Capital<\/cite>, vol. 3, 959.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<p>_____________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"categories\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/category\/2022\/\" title=\"View all items in 2022\" ><em>2022<\/em><\/a><em>, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/category\/2022\/volume-73-issue-10-march\/\" title=\"View all items in Volume 73, Issue 10 (March 2022)\" >Volume 73, Issue 10 (March 2022)<\/a><\/em><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><em><a href=\"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/John_Bellamy_Foster_-_2013.jpg\" ><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-image-206819 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/03\/John_Bellamy_Foster_-_2013-e1646970018134.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"100\" height=\"68\" \/><\/a>John Bellamy Foster is a North American professor of sociology at the University of Oregon and editor of the <\/em>Monthly Review<em>. He writes about political economy of capitalism and economic crisis, ecology and ecological crisis, and Marxist theory.<\/em><\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/monthlyreview.org\/2022\/03\/01\/nature-as-a-mode-of-accumulation-capitalism-and-the-financialization-of-the-earth\/?mc_cid=97c745a5fc&amp;mc_eid=c82a1f20a9\" >Go to Original &#8211; monthlyreview.org<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>1 Mar 2022 &#8211; From Sep-Nov 2021, overlapping with the UN Climate Change Conference, three major developments in global finance marked a turning point in the financial expropriation of the earth and a shift in the economic paradigm to unlimited accumulation of total capital, which is now seen as including \u201cnatural capital.\u201d <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":206819,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[67],"tags":[232,686,2814,1354,354,401,562,642,1022,1677,391,1200,493,870,124],"class_list":["post-206817","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-reviews","tag-capitalism","tag-climate-change","tag-commodification-of-the-earth","tag-earth","tag-economics","tag-environment","tag-finance","tag-literature","tag-marxism","tag-marxist-ecology","tag-nature","tag-natures-rights","tag-paris-climate-agreement","tag-reviews","tag-united-nations"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/206817","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=206817"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/206817\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":284560,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/206817\/revisions\/284560"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/206819"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=206817"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=206817"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=206817"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}