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We human beings are being led into a dead
endall too literally. We are living by an ideology of death
and accordingly we are destroying our own humanity and killing
the planet. Even the one great success of the program that has
governed us, the attainment of material affluence, is now giving
way to poverty. The United States is just now gaining a foretaste
of the suffering that global economic policies, so
enthusiastically embraced, have inflicted on hundreds of millions
of others. If we continue on our present paths, future
generations, if there are to be any, are condemned to misery.
Daly and Cobb,
FOR THE COMMON GOOD
TOWARD SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT:
CONCEPTS, METHODS, AND POLICY
published by The International
Society for Ecological Economics and Island Press, 1994. Phone:
800-828-1302 or 707-983-6432; FAX: 707-983-6164
UNSUSTAINABILITY:
A CONSENSUS
"In the 20 years (1972-92) between the U.N.
Conference on the Environment in Stockholm and the one on
Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro, a
scientific consensus has gradually been established that the
damage being inflicted by human activities on the natural
environment render those activities unsustainable. It has become
clear that the activities cannot be projected to continue into
the future, either because they will have destroyed the
environmental conditions necessary for that continuation, or
because their environmental effects will cause massive,
unacceptable damage to human health and disruption of human ways
of life.
"This is not the place to review the
evidence that has led to the scientific, consensus, but now
perceived seriousness of the problem can be illustrated by a by a
number of quotations from the conclusions of reputable bodies
that have conducted such a review. Thus the Business Council for
Sustainable Development stated bluntly in its report to UNCED:
'We cannot continue in our present methods of using energy,
managing forests, farming, protecting plant and animal species,
managing urban growth and producing industrial goods'
(Schmidheiny 1995, 5). The Brundtland report, which initiated the
process that led to UNCED, had formulated its perception of
unsustainability in terms of a threat to survival: 'There are
thresholds which cannot be crossed without endangering the basic
integrity of the system. Today we are close to many of these
thresholds; we must be ever mindful of endangering the survival
of life on earth' (WCED 1987, 32-3).
"The World Resources Institute (WRI), in
collaboration with both the Development and Environment programs
of the U.N., concludes on the basis of one of the world's most
extensive environmental databases that 'The world is not now
headed toward a sustainable future, but rather toward a variety
of potential human and environmental disasters' (WRI 1992, 2).
The World Bank, envisaging a 3.5 times increase in world economic
output by 2030, acknowledged that 'if environmental pollution and
degradation were to rise in step with such a rise in output, the
result would be appalling pollution and environmental pollution
and damage.' (World Bank 1992, 9). The Fifth Action Program of
the of the European Community acknowledges that 'many current
forms of activity are not environmentally sustainable' (CEC
1992a, 4), as indicated by 'a slow but relentless deterioration
of the environment of the Community, notwithstanding the measures
taken over the last two decades' (CEC 1992b, 3)
"In its annual State of the World reports,
the Worldwatch Institute has documented current environmental
damage, concluding in 1993: 'The environmentally destructive
activities of recent decades are now showing up in reduced
productivity of croplands, forests, grasslands and fisheries; in
the mounting cleanup costs of toxic waste sites; in rising health
care costs for cancer, birth defects, allergies, emphysema,
asthma and other respiratory diseases; and in the spread of
hunger. ' These trends mean 'If we fail to convert our
self-destructing economy into one that is environmentally
sustainable, future generations will be overwhelmed by
environmental degradation and social disintegration' (Brown et
al. 1993, 4-5, 21)
"Little wonder, therefore, that in 1992 two
of the world's most prestigious scientific institutions saw fit
to issue a joint statement of warning 'Unrestrained resource
consumption for energy production and other uses could lead to
catastrophic outcomes for the global environment. Some of the
environmental changes may produce irreversible damage to the
earth's capacity to sustain life. ... The future of our planet is
in the balance.' (RS and NAS 1992, 2,
4)" [p. p. 26-27] [see also WORLD
SCIENTISTS' WARNING TO HUMANITY]
This book is edited by: Jeroen C.J.M. van den
Bergh and Jan van der Straaten.
The text is from chapter # 2 which was written
by: Paul Ekins, Department of Economics, Birkbeck College, The
University of London, 7-15 Gresse Street , London, W1P 1PA U.K.
Refs: Brown, L. R. et al. 1993. State of the
World 1993. London: Earthscan
CEC (Commission of the European Communities).
1992a. Towards Sustainability: a European Community Programme of
Policy and Action in Relation to the Environment and Sustainable
Development, Volume 1. Proposal for a resolution of the Council
of the European Communities. Brussels: Commission of the European
Communities.
1992b. Towards Sustainability: a European
Community Programme of Policy and Action in Relation to the
Environment and Sustainable Development, Volume 2. Executive
Summary, Brussels: Commission of the European Communities.
RS and NAS (Royal Society and National Academy of
Sciences). 1992. Population Growth, Resource Consumption and a
Sustainable World. London; New York: RS; NAS
Schmidheiny, S. (with the Business Council for
Sustainable Development). 1992 Changing Course: a Global Business
Perspective on Development and the Environment, Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press.
WCED (World Commission on Environment and
Development). 1987. Our Common Future. New York: Oxford Univ.
Press.
World Bank. 1992. World Development Report
1992-1993. Oxford Univ. Press.
WRI (World
Resources Institute). 1992. World Resources, 1992-93. Oxford; New
York; Oxford Univ. Press.
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