'Green' Measures Key to Earth's Future, Report SaysNews Home Page Home
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Source of this article - Los Angeles Times, January 20, 2006
With costs rising, the administration plans to show ways for homes and
businesses to save.
By Usha Lee McFarling
Times Staff Writer
By 2050, the planet's population will increase to 9 billion, with most people
migrating to massive cities. Better vaccines will lessen the epidemic of HIV and
offset flu pandemics. The global economy will quadruple. Demand for food, fresh
water and raw materials for construction and heat will stretch natural resources
to their limits, according to an analysis released Thursday.
If major
changes are not made in the way humans consume natural resources, there will be
widespread famine, severe shortages of clean water and huge impacts from natural
disasters such as hurricanes. Cities will be beset by vast amounts of wastewater
and sewage. Sea levels will rise, fisheries will collapse, emerging disease
epidemics will sweep across the globe and coral reefs will die off, said authors
of the new report, "The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment." Commissioned by the
United Nations, the work is a four-year effort by 1,300 scientists from 95
countries.
This grim scenario, however, can be avoided through policy
decisions that emphasize environmental technology, poverty reduction and
investments in education and health, the report's authors said.
"Despite
what looks like steady decline, this is a story of hope," said Stephen
Carpenter, a lead author of the report and expert on ecosystem management at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. "The good news is that we can make a very
positive difference by 2050."
During the last 50 years, living
conditions have improved for a majority of the planet's population: People live
longer, are better nourished and wealthier and are able to participate more in
government, said Walter Reid, a professor at Stanford University's Institute for
the Environment and director of the assessment. That progress, though, has come
at a heavy cost to natural resources. The continued degradation of resources
such as forests and fresh water will severely affect quality of life,
particularly for the poor, he said.
"There's an unbreakable link between
human well-being and the health of the planet," Reid said at a news briefing in
Washington to release the report.
One way to improve the future of both
the planet and its residents, Reid said, is through "green" technology, such as
the construction of energy-efficient homes and offices.
"The number of
buildings that will be built in the 21st century is on the order of the number
of buildings built in the entirety of human history," Carpenter said.
Agricultural practices will also have to improve because farming is the
most extensive modification of the Earth's surface caused by humans and is the
largest user of fresh water, he said.
The report also calls for natural
resources such as water to be priced to reflect their true value and not as
though they were infinite.
Countries also need to start curtailing the
use of fossil fuels to limit the effects of climate change, which could raise
temperatures by 3.5 degrees by 2050 and increase sea levels by several inches,
the report says. Although climate change could bring more rain and fresh water
to some areas, it also could cause flooding and increase vulnerability to
hurricanes in others.
All of the technologies and policy changes needed
to improve the planet's future outlook are available today, Carpenter said, but
they are not in widespread use and face political hurdles. "Substantial changes
would have to be made," he said.
One suggestion calls for ending the
subsidies that many rich nations give to farmers. These policies keep food
prices artificially low and discourage crop production in poorer countries that
could use the economic boost that can accompany agricultural production. Ending
subsidies would also encourage the reversion of much farmland now under
cultivation to more natural states — forests or meadows — that could improve the
environment, said Prabhu Pingali, a director of the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture
Organization and one of the report's authors. Pingali, an economist, said the
world's poorest people had the most to lose if improvements were not made.
Economic policy changes could improve the environment, which in turn could boost
economies, he added. "Ecology and economics can work together," he said.
The authors said that reaction to the report was favorable, with some
countries, including China and the Netherlands, already implementing some
suggestions or planning national assessments. Many developing countries said
they were not embracing the report as readily because they lacked the resources
to implement many of the changes. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and
U.S. Department of Agriculture's Forest Service are studying the report and may
implement some suggestions, Reid said.
"The Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment" is the first analysis that includes natural resources and land use
in projections of how population and the economy will change over the long term,
its authors said.