| ENVIRONMENT: Report
Finds Hope in Changing Attitudes, Actions
Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON, Jan 9 (IPS) - Despite major negative trends,
people who care about the global environment and human welfare
should not despair, according to the latest 'State of the
World' report released here Thursday by WorldWatch Institute.
Local communities and governments, environmental activists,
civil society, and even private businesses are taking the
lead in devising and implementing solutions to major environmental
problems, and are beginning to put the world on a more sustainable
path, says 'State of the World 2003', the 20th such annual
report.
''What is often called the impossible revolution is already
happening,'' said WorldWatch President Christopher Flavin.
''The question is whether we have the political will to scale
up these efforts to the global level,'' where progress in
recent years has been disappointing at best.
Last summer's World Summit for Sustainable Development (WSSD)
in Johannesburg - described in the report as ''something between
a modest step sideways and a small step backwards'' - was
particularly dismaying due to major conflicts between developing
countries and the industrialised world on financial and trade
issues and doubts about the commitment of the United States
to multilateral institutions.
But even WSSD had its positive side: the participation of
more than 8,000 non-governmental organisations (NGOs), most
from poor countries, and hundreds of corporate and labour
union leaders - a sign of growing ''global issues networks'',
which can better address the scale and complexity of many
problems that traditional nation-states or governmental processes
can no longer cope well with.
The new report does not try to sugar-coat the major challenges
faced by the world, many of which have become more intractable
in recent years as governments and industry have failed to
change course.
Among these is the continued pumping of ever-increasing amounts
of carbon dioxide into the earth's atmosphere, warming the
global climate at an unprecedented rate with enormous consequences,
including the increased frequency and violence of extreme
weather conditions.
As well, some 5,500 children die each day from diseases linked
to polluted food, air and water, while malaria alone kills
7,000 people every day, affecting prospects for human development
even more profoundly than the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Bird extinctions are also running at some 50 times the natural
rate due to the loss of habitat and other consequences of
human activity.
While such news makes grim reading, the new report emphasises
positive developments that make it clear that humans can make
a difference when they choose to do so.
''The question is where societies choose to put their creative
efforts,'' said Flavin. ''If we can build spacecraft powered
by clean fuel cells, we can build cars that run the same way.
If we can mine copper and other metals from the earth, we
can mine them from landfills and abandoned buildings. And
if we can protect tourists from contracting malaria, we can
do it for people who live with the threat every day,'' he
said.
The report says recent advances in various sectors deserve
more attention, including:
- The growth by more than 30 percent annually over the past
five years in the use of renewable energy sources - solar
and wind power - in countries such as Germany, Japan and Spain
as a result of ''a powerful combination of public demand,
private investment and public-policy change''.
In Denmark, for example, wind power now makes up 18 percent
of all electrical energy produced, while new incentives for
investing in wind power are transforming the energy picture
in Texas.
- In materials' use, the rapid spread of ''take-back'' laws,
particularly in Europe and Asia, as one of a series of measures
that have produced ''tremendous progress'' in the recycling
and re-use of materials. The Netherlands, for example, has
achieved an 86 percent recycling rate for cars, while Denmark
has banned aluminium cans in favour of re-usable glass bottles.
- In agriculture, organic farming has grown by leaps and
bounds, particularly in Europe where three percent of total
food production is now organic, a 15-fold increase since 1990.
- In health, the World Health Organisation's Global Polio
Eradication Initiative has reduced polio cases from some 350,000
in 1988 to 480 in 2001. On the malaria front, new, more targeted,
mosquito eradication programmes have reduced reliance on DDT
and other dangerous chemicals in many communities.
- In transportation, progress in making new technologies,
such as hybrid-electric and diesel-fuelled cars and even hydrogen
fuel cells, commercially viable has been faster than expected.
At the same time, ''car-sharing'' programmes designed to increase
the use of mass transit, have enlisted 125,000 families in
Europe and the United States, while ''car-free'' days are
now a staple of cities in 14 countries.
California defied the U.S. government by imposing the world's
first mandatory limits on greenhouse gas emissions from cars.
- In urban neighbourhoods around the world, micro loans are
transforming the lives of people as poor as the waste pickers
of the Payatas landfill near Manila, while innovative re-cycling
and composting programmes in Egypt, Argentina, and Brazil
are providing poor urban-dwellers with more income, better
community services, and even fresher food.
These kinds of innovations offer the basic building blocks
for practising sustainable development around the world, said
Gary Gardner, WorldWatch's research director.
The most successful initiatives, he said, shared four basic
principles that should guide future efforts: ''Do no harm'',
in the sense that planners should always look to using methods
that have the least impact on the virgin environment, such
as reusing materials, instead of mining them;
''Be wary of simplistic solutions, silver-bullet solutions''
to complex problems that may require a tailored or multi-layered
approach;
Focus on creating the appropriate policy environment, and,
''Build coalitions'' in support of those policies, including,
for example, religious congregations interested in ethical-consumption
practices. (END/2003)
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