I especially like that part about "30 percent more than is available."  <G>

I am wondering when the world's economists are going to begin recognizing 
... oh, never mind.

Tom

***

BRUSSELS, Belgium, October 20, 2000 (ENS) - If every human alive today 
consumed natural resources and emitted carbon dioxide at the same rate as 
the average American, European or Australian we would need at least another 
two earths, WWF, the conservation organization, revealed at the launch today 
of its Living Planet Report 2000.

The same applies to the amount consumed by the average person in many of the 
world's richest countries including Australia, Canada, United Kingdom, Czech 
Republic, Hong Kong, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, Estonia, Sweden, Norway, 
Finland, Ireland, New Zealand, Denmark, Kuwait, Singapore and United Arab 
Emirates.
The Living Planet Report 2000 shows that the natural wealth of the earth's 
forests, freshwater and marine ecosystems has declined by one-third since 
1970.

The area required to produce the natural resources consumed and absorb the 
carbon dioxide emitted by mankind has doubled since 1961, and by 1996 was 30 
percent larger than the area actually available.

For the first time, a measure of human pressure on global ecosystems known 
as the "ecological footprint" was calculated for the WWF report.

It shows the biologically productive area needed to produce the food and 
wood each country consumes; for towns, roads and other infrastructure; and 
to absorb carbon dioxide emisisons from burning fossil fuels.

"The only way to reverse these dangerous trends is to start considering the 
planet's natural resources seriously," said Professor Ruud Lubbers, 
president of WWF International.
Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 1982 to 1994, Lubbers is urging 
fellow world leaders to use the new report as they make sustainable 
development plans for the future.

He is especially asking European Union leaders drawing up their 
Sustainability Strategy for the Gotenberg Summit in 2001, and world leaders 
meeting in the Rio+10 Conference in 2002, to use the ecological footprint 
measurement to agree on specific actions to limit the burden we place on 
nature.

"We have to think long term," Lubbers stressed. "We have borrowed this 
planet from our children and grandchildren."

"The ecological footprint shows us the limits of nature's productivity," 
Lubbers said. "It provides a useful tool for measuring and monitoring 
sustainability."

"It is the consumers of the rich nations of the temperate northern regions 
of the world who are primarily responsible for the ongoing loss of natural 
wealth in the tropics," said Jonathan Loh, editor of the Living Planet 
Report.
The area needed to produce the natural resources consumed and absorb the 
carbon dioxide emitted by the average North American is almost twice the 
area required by the average Western European, and some five times greater 
than required by the average Asian, African and Latin American.

[from: http://panda.org/livingplanet/lpr00/ :- At some time in the 1970s, 
humanity as a whole passed the point at which it lived within the global 
regenerative capacity of the Earth, causing depletion of the Earth's natural 
capital as a consequence (although locally this has occurred many times and 
in many places throughout human history). This is the ultimate cause of the 
decline in the natural wealth of the world's forest, freshwater, and marine 
ecosystems, as indicated by the Living Planet Index (LPI). ]

The LPI, WWF's measure of the state of natural ecosystems, was produced in 
collaboration with the United Nations Environment Programme and the World 
Conservation Monitoring Center.

This year's Index found that the combined natural wealth of forests, 
freshwater ecosystems and ocean environments has declined by about 33 
percent since 1970, an average drop of about one percent per year.

Between 1970 and 1999, forests declined by 12 percent, freshwater ecosystems 
declined by 50 percent and ocean environments declined by 35 percent, with 
the most severe deterioration occurring in the tropical and southern 
temperate regions of the world.

The Living Planet Report 2000 can be found on online at: http://www.wwf.org.

(c) Environment News Service (ENS)



and ....




HONG KONG - The United Arab Emirates is the world's biggest consumer of 
natural resources, the World Wide Fund for Nature said in a report released 
on Friday.


If each of the world's roughly six billion people used up resources at the 
same rate as the people of the UAE, six more planets would be needed to 
support the consumption, it said.
"This is a very worrying trend for our future generations," said Alex Yau, 
conservation manager of WWF Hong Kong.

The report ranked Singapore second, with the United States in third place.

By sucking in imports, developed countries tend to waste natural resources 
at the expense of the developing world, where consumption levels are far 
lower, Yau said.

The organisation calculated for 151 countries the average consumption per 
capita of natural products such as grain, wood, and seafood, as well as the 
emission of carbon dioxide resulting from the direct use of natural fuel.

Hong Kong, where the WWF released the global survey, ranked eighth.

The study also found a steady decline in the population of 730 forest, 
freshwater and ocean species, including animals like the bluefin tuna and 
sparrowhawk, over the past 30 years.

The report was released just four days after the Hong Kong government's 
decision to block a railway project which proposed to cut through the Long 
Valley wetland in the New Territories, which is now a sanctuary for many 
species of rare birds.

REUTERS


_____________________________________________________________________________________
Get more from the Web.  FREE MSN Explorer download : http://explorer.msn.com


_______________________________________________
Crashlist resources: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.wwpublish.com/mailman/listinfo/crashlist

Reply via email to