Egor Kotkin delivers a jarring pivot in the climate debate: the true catastrophe isn't the extinction of the human species, but the collapse of the very institutions required to save us. While public discourse oscillates between fatalistic doom and naive optimism, Kotkin argues that the most probable future is a slow-motion disintegration where rising temperatures supercharge social contradictions until civilization loses the capacity for collective action. This is not a story about melting ice caps alone; it is a warning that our current economic order is already failing to feed billions, and that climate change will turn this latent hostility into open, catastrophic violence.
The Myth of Population Collapse
Kotkin immediately dismantles the Western obsession with depopulation, framing it as a distraction from the real crisis of distribution. He writes, "We are being gaslit about depopulation… despite intense gaslighting in media and 'new media,' the planet's population has been growing and continues to grow." He points to UN projections indicating a peak of 10.3 billion in the mid-2080s, arguing that anxiety over fertility rates is often rooted in racist assumptions rather than demographic reality. Instead of worrying about a shrinking workforce, the author insists we should focus on the fact that "around 673–757 million people worldwide suffer from chronic undernourishment annually, which kills 9 million people every year—primarily children under 5."
This framing is effective because it strips away the Malthusian panic that often paralyzes policy discussions. By highlighting that we currently produce enough food for 10–11 billion people yet still allow millions to starve, Kotkin exposes the issue as one of political will, not physical scarcity. Critics might argue that population density in specific regions does strain local infrastructure, but Kotkin's broader point holds: the global system is already failing its most basic test of survival.
A system that is unable to provide food for everyone on the planet under conditions of a still-favorable climate, agricultural revolution, and the resulting surplus food production has no safety margin in the event of a deterioration in each of these variables.
The Architecture of Starvation
The essay's most disturbing section connects current geopolitical failures directly to future climate outcomes. Kotkin argues that the West's reaction to the migration of 7 million people from Africa and the Middle East since 2015 has already fractured the political landscape of the European Union and Britain. He draws a chilling parallel between current policies and historical atrocities, stating, "Today, with the ultimate goal already known, the West is ready to move on to the Holocaust and death camps—even without World War III."
This is a heavy claim, one that demands scrutiny. While the comparison to the Holocaust is extreme, Kotkin uses it to illustrate the speed at which democratic norms can erode when faced with resource scarcity. He suggests that the "capitalist realism" of the current era has normalized the starvation of millions, creating a system where "latent hostility will turn into open fear" once climate change triggers mass migration. The author notes that climate migration is predicted to reach "tens and hundreds of millions of people by 2050–2100," asking rhetorically what will happen when the current political apparatus, which is already struggling with minor influxes, faces a tidal wave of displaced people.
The historical context here is vital. As Kotkin notes, neoliberal reforms launched in the 1970s by figures like Margaret Thatcher and Jimmy Carter were not innovations but a "rollback of the regulatory and institutional changes" made after the Great Depression. This brings us back to the conditions of the 1920s, a period that history tells us leads to fascism. The author writes, "The rollback of regulations introduced after the Great Depression did the only thing it could do: it returned the conditions of capitalism to the very state that led to the rise of fascism and the Great Depression in the 1920s."
The Final Boss of Humanity
Kotkin's central thesis is that partial reforms are insufficient. He argues that "capitalism that is not abolished in its roots inevitably pushes to the restoration of the unlimited, uncontested power of capital." The author warns that we cannot afford another century of experimentation, noting that "climate change takes away the opportunity to learn a lesson the second time." The window to reorganize society is closing rapidly; if we wait until the food crisis becomes a famine affecting hundreds of millions, it will be too late to respond constructively.
The argument is stark: the current system is "anti-human" by definition because it allows billionaires to exist while millions starve. Kotkin writes, "If, however, we allow a system that produces billionaires while starving millions of people a year to death to persist, then even the super-rich—obsessed with their fear of death and desire to live forever—will only live long enough to see the effects of the civilization corrupted for the sake of their greed collapse." This is a powerful indictment of the idea that technology or market forces will naturally solve the crisis. Instead, he posits that the system itself is the obstacle.
Critics might suggest that Kotkin underestimates the adaptability of global markets or the potential for green technology to boost yields significantly. However, the author counters that even with technological progress, the political will to distribute food equitably is the missing variable. The "good news" that agricultural capacity could theoretically feed 10 billion people is rendered moot by the "bad news" that we cannot even feed the current 8 billion.
Bottom Line
Kotkin's most compelling contribution is the shift from environmental anxiety to institutional analysis, arguing that the collapse of civilization will come not from a lack of resources, but from a lack of the social cohesion needed to manage them. The piece's greatest vulnerability is its reliance on a binary choice between total systemic overhaul or catastrophic collapse, potentially overlooking incremental but meaningful reforms. Yet, the urgency of his warning—that we are already witnessing the early stages of eco-fascism—is a necessary alarm for a world running out of time to fix its broken systems.
Humanity must realize that almost 10% of the world being constantly undernourished, killing millions of people per year, is not the problem of those who do not have enough food, but of everybody—because the system itself is anti-human, i.e., by definition a danger to everyone.