|

These curves are literally drawn from the "business as usual" scenario
on p. 133, Meadows et al., BEYOND THE LIMITS [see http://www.unh.edu/ipssr/BTL.html ]
and from the 1997 Duncan & Youngquist's new World
oil production model described in THE
WORLD PETROLEUM LIFE-CYCLE: Encircling the Production Peak. The model may
be downloaded at http://www.halcyon.com/duncanrc/
. To run this model one must download the free Stella Run-Time at http://www.hps-inc.com/products/STELLA/runtime.html
.
"Business as usual" scenario
from BEYOND THE LIMITS:
"In Scenario 1 the world society proceeds along its
historical path as long as possible without major policy change. Technology advances in
agriculture, industry, and social services according to established patterns. There is no
extraordinary effort to abate pollution or conserve resources. The simulated world tries
to bring all people through the demographic transition and into an industrial and then
post-industrial economy. This world acquires widespread health care and birth control as
the service sector grows; it applies more agricultural inputs and gets higher yields as
the agricultural sector grows; it emits more pollutants and demands more nonrenewable
resources as the industrial sector grows.
"The global population in Scenario 1 rises from 1.6 billion
in the simulated year 1900 to over 5 billion in the simulated year 1990 and over 6 billion
in the year 2000. Total industrial output expands by a factor of 20 between 1900 and 1990.
Between 1900 and 1990 only 20% of the earth's total stock of nonrenewable resources is
used; 80% of these resources remain in 1990. Pollution in that simulated year has just
begun to rise noticeably. Average consumer goods per capita in 1990 is at a value of
1968-$260 per person per yeara useful number to remember for comparison in future
runs. Life expectancy is increasing, services and goods per capita are increasing, food
production is increasing. But major changes are just ahead.
"In this scenario the growth of the economy stops and
reverses because of a combination of limits. Just after the simulated year 2000 pollution
rises high enough to begin to affect seriously the fertility of the land. (This could
happen in the 'real world' through contamination by heavy metals or persistent chemicals,
through climate change, or through increased levels of ultraviolet radiation from a
diminished ozone layer.) Land fertility has declined a total of only 5% between 1970 and
2000, but it is degrading at 4.5% per year in 2010 and 12% per year in 2040. At the same
time land erosion increases. Total food production begins to fall after 2015. That causes
the economy to shift more investment into the agriculture sector to maintain output. But
agriculture has to compete for investment with a resource sector that is also beginning to
sense some limits.
"In 1990 the nonrenewable resources remaining in the ground
would have lasted 110 years at the 1990 consumption rates. No serious resource limits were
in evidence. But by 2020 the remaining resources constituted only a 30-year supply. Why
did this shortage arise so fast? Because exponential growth increases consumption and
lowers resources. Between 1990 and 2020 population increases by 50% and industrial output
grows by 85%. The nonrenewable resource use rate doubles. During the first two decades of
the simulated twenty-first century, the rising population and industrial plant in Scenario
1 use as many nonrenewable resources as the global economy used in the entire century
before. So many resources are used that much more capital and energy are required to find,
extract, and refine what remains.
"As both food and nonrenewable resources become harder to
obtain in this simulated world, capital is diverted to producing more of them. That leaves
less output to be invested in basic capital growth.
"Finally investment cannot keep up with depreciation (this
is physical investment and depreciation, not monetary). The economy cannot stop putting
its capital into the agriculture and resource sectors; if it did the scarcity of food,
materials, and fuels would restrict production still more. So the industrial capital plant
begins to decline, taking with it the service and agricultural sectors, which have become
dependent upon industrial inputs. For a short time the situation is especially serious,
because the population keeps rising, due to the lags inherent in the age structure and in
the process of social adjustment. Finally population too begins to decrease, as the death
rate is driven upward by lack of food and health services." [p.p.132-134,
Meadows; See also http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC36/Gilman1.htm
]
EUR Oil
"The days of the oil shortages are over,"
said economist William Wilson of Comerica Bank in Detroit, adding that's welcome news for
truck owners. "Trucks are here to stay
because Americans like them." -- Detroit Free Press, 12/13/97
As Wilson reminds us, oil industry jargon has confused economists for many years. If
one persists in thinking of energy in terms of "money price", then one simply
can not understand the energy issues. The key to understanding energy issues is look at
the "energy price" of energy. Typical quote from oil-economist:
"One thing I have learned over the years is to
distrust any projections of economically recoverable reserves."
The critical issue here is NOT "economically recoverable reserves", it is
"energetically recoverable resources". In oil industry jargon: "Estimated
Ultimately Recoverable" or "EUR" oil. In fact, official estimates of EUR
oil have "varied little" over the last 50 years.
"For many years geologists and oil companies
have published estimates of the total amount of crude oil that will ultimately be
recovered from the earth over all time. Remarkably, these assessments of Estimated
Ultimately Recoverable (EUR) oil have varied little over the past half century." [
This is direct quote from a 1996 World Resources Institute paper by James MacKenzie. Take
a look: http://www.wri.org/wri/climate/finitoil/eur-oil.html
]
IN 1970, OIL PRODUCTION IN THE LOWER-48
"PEAKED"
40 years ago, geologist M. King Hubbert developed a method for projecting future oil
production and predicted that oil production in the lower-48 states would peak about 1970.
This prediction has proved to be remarkably accurate. Both total and peak yields have
risen slightly compared to Hubbert's original estimate, but the timing of the peak and the
general downward trend of production were correct.

[ http://www.wri.org/wri/climate/finitoil/productn.html
]
Global oil production will begin to "peak" when approximately half of the
"Estimated Ultimately Recoverable" oil has been recovered. The exact date is
unknown, but it could be soon as the year 2000:
"Two important conclusions emerge from this
discussion. First, if growth in world demand continues at a modest 2 percent per year,
production could begin declining as soon as the year 2000. Second, even enormous (and
unlikely) increases in EUR oil buy the world little more than another decade (from 2007 to
2018). In short, unless growth in world oil demand is sharply lower than generally
projected, world oil production will probably begin its long-term decline soon -- and
certainly within the next two decades." [Again from WRI,
please take a look http://www.wri.org/wri/climate/finitoil/futuroil.html
]

"It is reluctantly concluded that there is
strong evidence that the restricted Hubbert Curve for the world's total EUR of oil may
first peak about the year 2000, Fig. 4, after which it may fluctuate along a horizontal
production line (restricted by Saudi Arabia/OPEC) before inevitable decline ..."
[ from WORLD OIL, October 1995, FUTURE WORLD SUPPLIES,
by L. F. Ivanhoe, http://dieoff.org/page85.htm
]
"At the time of writing in late 1996, there are
still three more years to go until the end of the transition." [p. 59, THE
COMING OIL CRISIS, by C. J. Campbell; Multi-Science Publishing Company &
Petroconsultants, 1997; ISBN 0906522110 http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0906522110/3088-4711339-639335
]
PETROCONSULTANTS
Petroconsultants is the world's leading provider of data and analysis for
petroleum exploration and production. With headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland,
Petroconsultants maintains offices in London, Houston, Sydney and Singapore, supported by
over 250 dedicated multilingual and multinational employees and a worldwide network of
correspondents and associates.
[ http://www.petroconsultants.com/ ]
"A new report on world oil resources, World Oil
Supply 1930-2050 (Campbell and Laherre, Petroconsultants Pty. Ltd., 1995), concludes that
the planet's oil supplies will be exhausted much sooner than previously thought.
"The report, written for oil industry insiders
and priced at $32,000 per copy, concludes that world oil production and supply probably
will peak as soon as the year 2000 and will decline to half the peak level by 2025. Large
and permanent increases in oil prices are predicted after the year 2000." [
from EARTH ISLAND JOURNAL, Spring 1997, THE DEATH OF THE OIL ECONOMY, by Ted Trainer http://dieoff.org/page116.htm ]

ECONOMIC IMPLOSION
"The global price of oil after the supply
crunch should follow the simplest economic law of supply and demand: There will be a major
increase in crude oil and all other fuels' prices, accompanied by global hyperinflation,
rationing, etc. After the associated economic implosion, many of the world's developed
societies may look like today's Russia. The United States may be competing with China for
every tanker of oil, with the Persian Gulf oil exporters preferring Chinese rockets to
American paper dollars for their oil." [ from THE FUTURIST, January/February,
1997, GET READY FOR ANOTHER OIL SHOCK!, by L. F. Ivanhoe http://dieoff.org/page90.htm ]
According to Hardin (1993): "The pivotal role of energy in
determining the quality of human life is now widely recognized. In what follows I will,
unless otherwise stated, use the phrase 'quality of life' to refer to the physical quality
of life-to the possibility of enjoying such amenities as a pleasant ambient temperature,
good food, freedom from pollution of many sorts (including noise pollution), ease of
moving from one place to another, and so on. This emphasis does not deny the importance of
nonphysical aspects of livingthe charms of art, music, nature, animal pets, and
human friendship, for example. But the connection of nonmaterial treasures with simple
physical wealth is not easily clarified.
"The ease with which useful energy can be captured has a
great deal to do with the physical quality of life. Cheap energy means abundant supplies
of energy requiring goods; when energy becomes expensive, people start complaining of
shortages. In the last three centuries an increasing fraction of our daily energy supply
has come from petroleum, gas, and coal. What can we say about human history in the light
of the supplies of fossil energy?
"Graphing the rate of use of each fossil energy source
yields a bell-shaped curve. Figure 14-1 gives Hubbert's projection of the world's use of
petroleum over time. Until the year 1900 the level of world production was too low to show
on the scale of this figure. Then it rose exponentially almost until the present. After
1973 the path departed more and more from an exponential curve due to increasingly tighter
supplies. At some point (here estimated to be about 1995, but the date is not precise) the
curve of petroleum use will bend over and start heading downward. As indicated in the
figure, 80 percent of the oil will be used up in a mere fifty-six years, scarcely more
than a moment in the history of mankind. All but a small percentage of the extractable oil
will be taken from the ground in less than two centuries." [p.p. 139-140]
According to BEYOND OIL (1991): "In
any event, world supplies are finite, though large (Figure 2-17). Although demand is now
much less than the maximum possible production rate, this gap could close if less
developed nations build an industrial base that depends on fossil energy. If developing
nations regain the economic momentum of the 1960s and early 1970s, world oil production
will probably peak around the year 2000, and demand may catch up to the maximum possible
production rate by then." [p. 65]
"Two international experts cited by MacKenzie, Jean
Laherrere and Colin Campbell, both of Petroconsultants, Geneva, Switzerland, believe peak
oil production will occur even earlier - four years from now in 2000, followed by an
annual decline of about 2.7% In turn, this will mean that "world oil prices will rise
from their present low levels, though by how much and how fast remains uncertain,"
MacKenzie said in his testimony. http://www.crest.org/renewables/thl/april96-oil.html
See also THE GLOBAL HUBBERT PEAK at:http://hubbertpeak.com/index.html
and FOSSILGATE: http://dieoff.org/page122.htm
And I looked, and behold
a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him. And
power was given unto them over the fourth part of the earth, to kill with sword, and with
hunger, and with death, and with the beasts of the earth. Revelations 6:8
SYSTEMS CRASH
THERE IS NOW GOOD SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE that our life-support systems are
dis-integrating under the impacts of our economic system. What follows are three different
sourcesusing three different methods and data setsthat suggest massive human
die-off will follow worldwide systems crash sometime around the years 2020 to 2030.
Meadows, et al. project a "business as usual" scenario that see our major
systems crashing around year 2030. Remember, these are worldwide systemsthere is
no place to hide.
[p. 133, Meadows, et al., BEYOND THE LIMITS; Chelsea Green Publishing Company,
1992. ISBN 0-930031-62-8. Phone: 800-639-4099 or 603-448-0317; FAX: 603-448-2576.]
[p. 140, Hardin, LIVING WITHIN LIMITS; Oxford University Press, 1993. ISBN
0-19-507811-x]
BEYOND THE LIMITS is an update to the Club
of Rome's 1972 LIMITS TO GROWTH and is endorsed by Jan
Tinbergen. Tinbergen shared the first Nobel Prize for Economics in 1969. [For a good
history of this issue, see: Neurath, 1994: FROM MALTHUS TO THE CLUB OF ROME AND BACK;
M. E. Sharpe, Armonk, NY; ISBN 1-56324-408-X. For a detailed book about the Club of Rome
itself, see: Moll: FROM SCARCITY TO SUSTAINABILITY; Peter Lang, 1995.]
It is interesting to note the latest ozone depletion and global warming data was not
available to the models. Perhaps the models would now project crash even sooner?
See also: Paul and Anne Ehrlich, THE POPULATION EXPLOSION;
Simon and Schuster, 1990; Phone: 212-698-7000. See also: THE MILLENNIUM INSTITUTE.
My second reference is from Worldwatch Institute
and concerns that fact that there will simply not be enough food on the planet to feed
humanity by year 2030. For example, consider the worldwide collapse of the fisheries:
COLLAPSE OF THE WORLD'S FISHERIES
Fishery Declines of more than 100,000 tons from peak year to 1992
|
| Species |
Peak
Year |
Peak
Catch |
1992
Catch |
Decline in
Million Tons |
|
| Pacific herring |
1964 |
0.7 |
0.2 |
0.5 |
-71% |
| Atlantic herring |
1966 |
4.1 |
1.5 |
2.6 |
-63% |
| Atlantic cod |
1968 |
3.9 |
1.2 |
2.7 |
-69% |
| Southern African pilchard |
1968 |
1.7 |
0.1 |
1.6 |
-94% |
| Haddock |
1969 |
1.0 |
0.2 |
0.8 |
-80% |
| Peruvian anchovy* |
1970 |
13.1 |
5.5 |
7.6 |
-58% |
| Polar cod |
1971 |
0.35 |
0.02 |
0.33 |
-94% |
| Cape hake |
1972 |
1.1 |
0.2 |
0.9 |
-82% |
| Silver hoke |
1973 |
0.43 |
0.05 |
0.38 |
-88% |
| Greater yellow croaker |
1974 |
0.20 |
0.04 |
0.16 |
-80% |
| Atlantic redfish |
1976 |
0.7 |
0.3 |
0.4 |
-57% |
| Cape horse mackerel |
1977 |
0.7 |
0.4 |
0.3 |
-43% |
| Chub mackerel |
1978 |
3.4 |
0.9 |
2.5 |
-74% |
| Blue whiting |
1980 |
1.1 |
0.5 |
0.6 |
-55% |
| South American pilchard |
1985 |
6.5 |
3.1 |
3.4 |
-52% |
| Alaska pollock |
1986 |
6.8 |
.50 |
1.8 |
-26% |
| North Pacific hake |
1987 |
0.30 |
0.06 |
0.24 |
-80% |
| Japanese pilchard |
1988 |
5.4 |
2.5 |
2.9 |
-54% |
TOTALS |
|
51.48 |
21.77 |
29.71 |
-58% |
Source FAO.
* The catch of the Peruvian anchovy hit a low of 94,000 tons in 1994, less than one
percent of the 1970 level, before climbing up to the 1992 level.
From NET LOSS, p.p. 14-15, 1994. (Worldwatch Paper #
120) Worldwatch Institute, 1776 Massachusetts
Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20036, Phone: 202-452-1999; FAX: 202-296-7365, wwpub@igc.apc.org.
POPULATION
GROWTH THREATENS NUTRITIONAL STATUS
OF UP TO ONE BILLION PEOPLE
Washington, D.C.Continuing growth in the world's population and a corresponding
rise in demand for fish threaten to push this valuable source of protein out of reach for
the nearly one billion people, most of them poor, who rely on fish as a principal source
of animal protein, according to a new report by Population Action International (PAI).
According to the new study, "Catching the Limit: Population and the Decline of
Fisheries", population growth will especially strain the availability of fish in
developing nations, where more than 700 million people already cannot obtain sufficient
calories and nutrients to lead healthy and active lives.
"At the moment, population growth is fueling about two-thirds of the current
growth in demand for fish," says Robert Engelman, co-author of the study and director
of PAI's population and environment program. "As population pressures on this
resource grow, fish prices will continue to climb, further reducing consumption among the
poor. In the next century, many species of fish will become luxuries only the well-to-do
can afford."
Despite the vastness of the planet's coastal waters, where most fish are caught, an
unforeseen natural threshold was crossed before scientists even knew it existed. The
global fish catch peaked in 1989 at 89 million metric tons and has hovered at around 85
million tons since then. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
estimates that nearly 70 percent of the world's conventional fish species-such as cod,
hake and haddock-are already fished up to or beyond sustainable limits.
Although aquaculturethe farming of fish in either marine or inland
watersproduces more fish each year, it cannot long compensate for the declining
availability of fish caught wild, according to the report's authors. Under two of the
United Nations' three projections for world population for the year 2050, aquaculture
production would have to "exceed" the total wild fish catch in order to maintain
current levels of per capita fish consumption-a virtually impossible achievement,
according to PAI.
Globally, protein from fish accounts for slightly more than 5 percentor 1 out of
every 18 gramsof the average person's protein intake from animal and vegetable
sources. For at least 640 million people in 39 countries, however, fish consumption
accounts for an average of more than 10 percent of their total protein intake, and at
least 950 million people rely on fish for more than one-third of their animal protein.
Based on U.N. projections for both population growth and fish production,
worldwide per capita consumption of fish caught wild in marine and inland waters could
fall between 25 and 50 percent, from 10.2 kilograms per person per year in 1993 to
somewhere between 5.1 and 7.6 kilograms in 2050, depending on the rate of population
growth. In the world's less wealthy countries, however, projections for per capita fish
production are significantly less than that average, and likely declines in per capita
consumption of fish much steeper.
For example, residents of the coastal African nation of Tanzania currently consume 14.5
kilograms of fish per person per year. If Tanzania were unable to boost domestic
production or imports of fish, population projections indicate that per capita fish
consumption would fall to around four kilograms by 2050a decline of some 70 percent.
This would force Tanzanians to replace fish protein with less nutritious plant
proteinsor to reduce their overall protein intake.
While population growth is the primary factor in the increasing demand for fish,
population pressures are also limiting their supply. A substantial proportion of the
world's people live within a few dozen miles of a seacoast, and the proportion may grow as
people migrate to coastal megacities. The increasing density of human populations in
coastal areas, and the resultant destruction of coastal wetlands, mangrove forests, coral
reefs and other coastal ecosystems, threatens the habitat of many fish species.
With regard to population, the approach endorsed at last year's International
Conference on Population and Developmentand reaffirmed at the recently concluded
Fourth World Conference on Womenemphasizes human development and individual choice,
especially for women, as the guiding principles of population policies. An essential
component of this approach is universal access to voluntary, quality family planning and
other reproductive health services.
"Stabilizing population alone will not reverse the decline of fisheries,"
says PAI's Engelman. "But the vulnerability of fisherieslike other natural
resourcesto population pressures offers a powerful argument for sound population
policies and programs. The good news is that the very policies most likely to stabilize
population size in the near future are also those most likely to improve the lives of
women and their families today."
"As we observe World Food Day this Monday, we need to think about more than what
we may or may not have to eat today," says Hugo Hoogenboom, president of Population
Action International. "We need to be thinking about how we are going to feed
ourselvesall of usin the future and, in particular, how to safeguard the food
sources, such as fisheries, on which the most vulnerable of us rely."
- - -
"Catching the Limit: Population and the Decline of Fisheries" is available
for purchase from: Population Action International 1120 19th Street, NW-Suite
550/Washington, DC 20036 Phone: 202-659-1833
Contact: Sally Ethelston 202-659-1833 ext. 133, sae@popact.org; FAX 202-293-1795
Patricia M. Sears, Deputy Director, Media Relations 202-659-1833 ext. 131, pmsears@popact.org; OR pmsears@aol.com.
Salmon
Farming Industry Threatens B.C.s Wild Fish Stocks
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
VANCOUVER - Open netcages, unregulated drug use, and imported Atlantic salmon eggs
threaten wild fish stocks, according to a David Suzuki Foundation report released today.
"The way it operates today, B.C.s salmon netcage industry threatens the
survival of fragile wild fish stocks, such as the Fraser River salmon, and may even put
human health at risk. To manage these hazards we must immediately stop importing Atlantic
salmon eggs, monitor drug use, and change the open fish cages, which release sewage and
diseases, into closed pens," says the Foundations Executive Director Jim
Fulton.
The Suzuki Foundation says B.Cs industry stands in sharp contrast to the sound
practices followed in 85% of the worlds fish farming, which is carried out on land
and closely tied to agriculture. Fish wastes in Asia are used as crop fertilizer, but in
B.C. become sewage.
"The unsurpassed wild environment along the B.C. coast supports a multi-billion
dollar commercial and sport fishery and tourism business. It is the foundation of Native
culture, and it provides a home and recreation for hundreds of thousands of people. We
appreciate the jobs salmon farming can bring. But this study tells us we stand to lose far
more than we gain. We need to set this industry on a course which helps us, not hurts
us," explained Fulton.
The major risk is that wild fish could be decimated by the spread of virulent diseases.
The problem starts with the netcage system itself. These cages float in the ocean, and are
filled with high densities of farm fish. The jammed and stressful conditions of the
netcages mean they can become breeding grounds for disease epidemics. The use of fish
grown from imported Atlantic salmon eggs compounds this danger. Atlantic salmon are
preferred by the industry because they grow more rapidly, and they are more docile. The
trouble is, the imported fish can bring new diseases with them which can spread like
wildfire among our native fish. To combat these threats, the industry injects fish with
drugs and regularly mixes drugs with the feed.
These measures dont always work. In Norway the industry uses similar netcage
systems to those in B.C. There, eggs imported from Scotland brought epidemics of such
diseases as furunculosis, which spread rapidly among wild fish which had little resistance
to the new pathogens. In fruitless efforts to control the spread of disease, the Norwegian
government spent, in one instance, $100 million of taxpayers funds. In an earlier
attempt to eradicate an epidemic, the government completely poisoned 20 rivers.
The fundamental problem is that the netcages are open to the ocean environment. Escapes
of farm fish are inevitable, leading to genetic and other harmful interactions with wild
fish. Sewage from fish feces and other wastes builds up in the areas around the netcages,
sewage which contains disease pathogens and drugs. In total the sewage is equivalent to
the amount produced by a half million people. This refuse is deposited right into the food
chain along the B.C. coast, to be picked up by fish such as black cod, herring and salmon.
Eight disease outbreaks have already occurred, and many scientists report that a
large-scale epidemic will eventually happen among both wild and farmed fish. The netcages
are typically located in sheltered bays such as Clayoquot Sound, areas with rich marine
life. Close to fifty of the cages are found among the islands and bays along Johnstone
Strait, right in the path of most Fraser River spawning salmon.
"At least 140 distinct salmon stocks in B.C. are already extinct. To help rebuild
salmon stocks, commercial, native and sport fishermen made big sacrifices this year. We
need to make sure this sacrifice is not in vain," says Fulton.
The netcage industrys use of drugs has been targeted by the Foundation because of
its possible effects on human health. The repeated use of drugs to hold the fish diseases
at bay has already led to diseases fully resistant to three types of antibiotics. This
cavalier and largely unregulated overuse of drugs concerns scientists because it reduces
the pool of antibiotics available for human medicine.
The drugs also leave residues in the fish and shellfish in the areas around net cages
which are used for food by local communities, particularly First Nations. There is no
government monitoring of these health effects, or those on fish farm workers who are
frequently exposed to antibiotics and other drugs.
The David Suzuki Foundation makes 12 recommendations. They include using:
- only native salmon,
- closed containment systems which fully treat sewage and prevent contact with wild fish
- mandatory industry insurance covering full ecological restoration of catastrophic events
- government monitoring of drug use and the spread of drug-resistant diseases.
The Foundation is submitting its report to the Salmon Aquaculture Review which is
currently being conducted by B.C.s Environmental Assessment Office.
For more information please contact: David Hocking Communications Director, The David
Suzuki Foundation (604) 732-4228
Executive Summary
Salmon aquaculture in British Columbia follows an intensive, industrial model, with
detrimental effects on the pristine environment in which it is situated. This stands in
sharp contrast to the way fish farming is practiced in most of the world. Eighty-five
percent of global aquaculture production involves non-carnivorous species produced in
land-based ponds for domestic markets. Most ponds are ecologically integrated into the
agricultural, industrial, and community fabric; wastes, for instance, become fertilizers
rather than pollutants.
The infant B.C. salmon netcage industry is part of a much smaller and more lucrative
component of aquaculture, where publicly owned fresh and saltwater environments are used
to subsidize intensive private feedlot operations that raise carnivorous species for
export.
The industry has been encouraged by governments because it provides new economic
opportunities in coastal areas. However, these benefits are more than offset by a wide
array of environmental and social costs. The costs include:
- Risks of disease transfer from netcage fish to wild stocks, such as black cod, herring,
and salmon, and in particular to large numbers of migrating Fraser River salmon
- Risks of introduction of exotic diseases from the continued importation of Atlantic
salmon
- Pollution from fish sewage, similar in magnitude to the sewage from a city of about half
a million people, with associated disease risks, contamination of shellfish, and loss of
habitat
- Death, wounding, and harassment of mammal and bird populations due to shootings, net
entanglements, and acoustic deterrent devices
- Loss of access to traditional fisheries for First Nations people, with increased risks
to their health from exposure to drug residues from food collected near netcage operations
- Competition for spawning beds and genetic interaction between wild and escaped salmon in
fresh and salt water
- Lost access to anchorages and pristine scenery for sportfishing, recreation, and tourism
- Loss of revenue for commercial fishermen due to lower salmon prices, and risks to future
revenue for commercial and sportfisheries because of potential declines in wild stocks
- Potential health problems for fish farm workers from the handling of drugs
- Losses in quality of access for foreshore users from odours, visual pollution, and
danger from gunfire
- Costs to taxpayers from government regulatory costs and an array of cash subsidies to
industry
- Losses of wild fish, such as herring and juvenile salmon, consumed by netcage fish
- Endangered human health from the increased use of antibiotics and other drugs, which
have already led to the spread of fish diseases that are fully resistant to three types of
antibiotics
- The net loss of food (four pounds of fish protein are consumed for every pound of
netcage salmon produced)
The combination of public subsidies, human health issues, pollution, threats to native
stocks from disease and habitat damage, and net consumption rather than production of
protein demonstrates that the existing salmon netcage industry in B.C. is not sustainable.
The David Suzuki Foundation therefore recommends the following policy changes:
- Replace open cages with closed containment systems.
- Use native salmon only; prohibit the use of exotic species.
- Eliminate discharge of fish sewage (zero discharge).
- Fully monitor drug use and the spread of drug-resistant diseases.
- Require systematic testing by communities for diseases among farmed and wild fish, to be
fully funded by industry.
- Institute mandatory insurance for operators to cover full ecological restoration costs
of disease epidemics, escapes, genetic pollution, and other catastrophic events.
- Require industry-developed and funded site reclamation plans.
- Introduce a resource-use rent (royalty) for salmon farmers.
- Introduce single-window access to public funds, which will be audited and made public.
- Develop and use a process for gaining the agreement of coastal communities and First
Nations regarding the siting of all existing or proposed aquaculture operations.
- Prohibit the use of firearms and acoustic deterrent devices that harass marine mammals,
and require the use of technologies that safely separate local wildlife from salmon
farming operations.
- Eliminate the use of fish that could be used as human food as the primary feed for
farmed salmon.
WHO WILL FEED CHINA?
by Lester R Brown & Worldwatch
Institute
[The following is a clip from a Worldwatch book review.]
Farmers also often lose in the competition for land. During the five years since 1990,
the diversion of cropland to nonfarm uses has offset gains in land productivity,
preventing any growth in the grain harvest. When Japan went through the stage of
development that China is now entering, cropland losses overrode gains in land
productivity, leading to a 32 percent decline in the grain harvest between 1960 and 1994.
"If China is to avoid a similar decline in grain production, it must either do a
better job than Japan has done of protecting its cropland," says Brown, "or it
must raise land productivity much faster than Japan did. Both will be difficult."
If China is able to somehow outperform Japan and hold the decline in production to,
say, only one fifth by 2030, then, assuming no further improvements in diet, population
growth alone would push grain imports up to 200 million tons in 2030, an amount roughly
equal to this year's world grain exports.
If China continues moving up the food chain, raising its total grain use from just
under 300 kilograms per person at present to 400 kilograms in the year 2030, roughly the
same as that of Taiwan, or half the 800 kilograms consumed in the United States, it will
need to import some 369 million tons of grain in 2030.
Can China afford to import massive quantities of grain?, the author asks. The answer
is, "Yes." China's trade surplus with the United States alone of nearly $30
billion in 1994 was sufficient to buy all grain exported by all exporting countries last
year.
Brown says the more difficult question is, "Who can supply grain on this
scale?" The answer is, "No one." If China's rapid industrialization
continues, its import demand will soon overwhelm the export capacity of the United States
and other grain-exporting countries. In addition to China, more than 100 countries depend
on the United States for grain, including many others whose needs are also rising rapidly.
"With its grain imports climbing, China's rising grain prices are now becoming the
world's rising grain prices. As the slack goes out of the world food economy, China's land
scarcity will become everyone's land scarcity," says Brown. "As irrigation water
losses force it to import more grain, its water scarcity will become the world's water
scarcity."
See also: China's Challenge to
the United States and to the Earth, FULL HOUSE and THE LAST OASIS by Worldwatch
Institute. Also see: THE
MILLENNIUM INSTITUTE: Food and Land.
DWELLERS IN THE LAND, by Kirkpatrick Sale, 1991, New Society Pub. Phone: 800-253-3605 ISBN
0-86571-225-5
OVERSHOOT by Catton, 1982, University of Illinois Press. Phone: 800-545-4703;
FAX: 217-244-8082. ISBN 0-252-00988-6
SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Feb 6, 1996 (Reuter) - A "truly monumental" turnaround in
Chinese grain trade caused China to become a net importer of feed grains in 1994 and will
push purchases up more than 450 percent to 17.6 million tonnes by 2004, the U.S. Feed
Grains Council said in its 10-year Outlook Report.
Three major factors were said to be primarily responsible for China's switch in its
export-import balancea drop in China's grain production in 1994, expanding grain
consumption, and a hoarding of grain by individuals and local governments.
Demand in China is strong for both food grains and meat proteins and is increasing
rapidly, said the report. Growth in consumption is expected to outpace any increases in
yield and production, and population growth will continue to generate "significant
new demand," the report said. China's expanding economy wil continue to fuel demand
for improved diets and more livestock and dairy products that require additional feed
grains to produce. Pork production is seen rising 45 percent in the next ten years, it
said.
LONDON, Feb 21, 1996 (Reuter) - Asia will account for 75 percent of growth in global
grain imports between 1995 and 2000, of which 50 percent will be in China, a USDA expert
said on Monday.
Speaking at the Annual Agra-Europe Conference in London U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) Asia researcher William Coyle said a substantial gap between consumption and
production was developing in Asia.
He predicted a deficit of over 80 million tonnes by 2005 in China alone - a dramatic
shift for a country that in 1992/93 was the world's second biggest exporter of corn.
ASEAN countries, like China, would experience a growing gap in grain consumption and
production.
But rice output is seen rising in those countries, because of higher yields and
increased production areas, Coyle said.
LONDON, March 12, 1996 (Reuter) - The international grain market was thrown into
confusion on Tuesday when discovery of a fungus in Arizona forced the United States to
suspend wheat exports to 21 nations.
America is expected to sell about 33.5 million tonnes of wheat or one-third of world
trade this year.
It halted many deliveries even as global grain stocks stood at 20-year lows after
drought in Australia and North Africa. Prices are already higher than at any time since
the late 1970s when Soviet Russia made huge raids on the world market.
But some experts predicted that Tuesday's U.S. action might not be very dramatic if, as
reports suggested, only durum seed wheat in Arizona was affected by the karnal bunt
fungus.
"It's amber light rather than red," said a top London-based grain expert.
U.S. officials said the fungus looked confined to Arizona but other areas were being
checked.
European grain traders said that wheat prices would soar across the globe, except in
the United States, if the extent of the problem is found to require any prolonged export
freeze.
Traders said the fungus damages the wheat. "It makes it stink like fishmeal"
one said.
[snip]
BEYOND OIL forecasts that a major consequence of our oil vulnerability is that
between 2007 and 2025 the US will cease to be a food exporter, due primarily to rising
domestic demand, topsoil loss, food production inefficiencies, and shortages of costly
petroleum used in agricultureto say nothing of feared climate change problems.
BEYOND OIL, by Gever, et al., 1991, Univ. Press of Colorado, 800-268-6044 or
303-530-5337 ISBN 0-87081-242-4
THE EARTH'S CARRYING
CAPACITY
We have now exceed the carrying capacity of the planet and may have as
little as 35 years before the "functional integrity" of our life-support system
disintegrates:
"If just the present world population of 5.8
billion people were to live at current North American ecological standards (say 4.5
ha/person), a reasonable first approximation of the total productive land requirement
would be 26 billion ha (assuming present technology). However, there are only just over 13
billion ha of land on Earth, of which only 8.8 billion are ecologically productive
cropland, pasture, or forest (1.5 ha/person). In short, we would need an additional two
planet Earths to accommodate the increased ecological load of people alive today. If the
population were to stabilize at between 10 and 11 billion sometime in the next century,
five additional Earths would be needed, all else being equal -- and this just to maintain
the present rate of ecological decline (Rees & Wackernagel, 1994).
"While this may seem to be an astonishing
result, empirical evidence suggests that five phantom planets is, in fact, a considerable
underestimate (keep in mind that our footprint estimates are conservative). Global and
regional-scale ecological change in the form of atmospheric change, ozone depletion, soil
loss, ground water depletion, deforestation, fisheries collapse, loss of biodiversity,
etc., is accelerating. This is direct evidence that aggregate consumption exceeds natural
income in certain critical categories and that the carrying capacity of this one Earth is
being steadily eroded. [We should remember Liebigs "Law of the Minimum" in this
context. The productivity and ultimately the survival of any complex system dependent on
numerous essential inputs or sinks is limited by that single variable in least supply.] In
short, the ecological footprint of the present world population/ economy already exceeds
the total productive area (or ecological space) available on Earth." [ http://dieoff.org/page110.htm ]
Furthermore, There is also a well-known relationship between environmental
scarcities and violent conflict. . . . World War III?
THE COMING ANARCHY
by Robert Kaplan
"The cities of West Africa at night are some of the unsafest
places in the world. Streets are unlit; the police often lack gasoline for their vehicles;
armed burglars, carjackers, and muggers proliferate. `The government in Sierra Leone has
no writ after dark,' says a foreign resident, shrugging. When I was in the capital,
Freetown, last September, eight men armed with AK-47s broke into the house of an American
man. They tied him up and stole everything of value. Forget Miami: direct flights between
the United States and the Murtala Muhammed Airport, in neighboring Nigeria's largest city,
Lagos, have been suspended by order of the U.S. Secretary of Transportation because of
ineffective security at the terminal and its environs. A State Department report cited the
airport for 'extortion by law-enforcement and immigration officials.' This is one of the
few times that the U.S. government has embargoed a foreign airport for reasons that are
linked purely to crime. In Abidjan, effectively the capital of the Cote d'Ivoire, or Ivory
Coast, restaurants have stick-and-gun-wielding guards who walk you the fifteen feet or so
between your car and the entrance, giving you an eerie taste of what American cities might
be like in the future. An Italian ambassador was killed by gunfire when robbers invaded an
Abidjan restaurant. The family of the Nigerian ambassador was tied up and robbed at
gunpoint in the ambassador's residence. After university students in the Ivory Coast
caught bandits who had been plaguing their dorms, they executed them by hanging tires
around their necks and setting the tires on fire. In one instance Ivorian policemen stood
by and watched the 'necklacings,' afraid to intervene. Each time I went to the Abidjan bus
terminal, groups of young men with restless, scanning eyes surrounded my taxi, putting
their hands all over the windows, demanding 'tips' for carrying my luggage even though I
had only a rucksack. In cities in six West African countries I saw similar young men
everywherehordes of them. They were like loose molecules in a very unstable social
fluid, a fluid that was clearly on the verge of igniting."
A PREMONITION OF THE FUTURE
"West Africa is becoming THE symbol of worldwide
demographic, environmental, and societal stress, in which criminal anarchy emerges as the
real `strategic' danger. Disease, overpopulation, unprovoked crime, scarcity of resources,
refugee migrations, the increasing erosion of nation-states and international borders, and
the empowerment of private armies, security firms, and international drug cartels are now
most tellingly demonstrated through a West African prism. West Africa provides an
appropriate introduction to the issues, often extremely unpleasant to discuss, that will
soon confront our civilization. ..."
THE
COMING ANARCHY, by Robert Kaplan, in the Feb 1994 Atlantic Monthly.
Also see: Thomas Homer-Dixon, Jeffrey Boutwell, and George Rathjens, "Environmental
Scarcity and Violent Conflict," Scientific American, February 1993; and from
Homer-Dixon, "Environmental Scarcity and Global Security" Headline Series (New
York: Foreign Policy Association, 1993). The Project on Environment,
Population and Security: Conflict, Sustainable Development Center for Security Studies and Conflict Research
The American Association
for the Advancement of Science's gopher.
My third reference posits approximately the same time frame "before destroying the
functional integrity of the ecosphere". In this case, the underlying studies were
scientific analyses of the global carbon cycle. And remember folks, when the ecosphere
goes, everything goes.
HOW CLOSE TO PRACTICAL LIMITS?
"There is accumulating evidence that humanity my soon have
to confront the real carrying capacity constraints. For example, nearly 40% of terrestrial
net primary productivity (photosynthesis) is already being used ("appropriated")
by humans, one species among millions, and this fraction is steadily increasing (Vitousek
et al. 1986). If we take this percentage as an index of the human carrying capacity of the
earth and assume that a growing economy could come to appropriate 80% of photosynthetic
production before destroying the functional integrity of the ecosphere, the earth will
effectively go from half to completely full within the next doubling periodcurrently
about 35 years (Daly 1991).
"The significance of this unprecedented convergence of
economic scale with that of the ecosphere is not generally appreciated in the current
debate on sustainable development. Because the human impact on critical functions of the
ecosphere is not uniform "effective fullness" may actually occur may actually
occur well before the next doubling of human activity. (Liebig's law reminds us that is
takes only a single critical limiting factor to constrain the entire system.) Indeed, data
presented in this chapter suggests that long-term human carrying capacity may already have
been at less than the present 40% preemption of photosynthesis. If so, even current
consumption (throughput) cannot be sustained indefinitely, and further material growth can
be purchased only with accelerated depletion of remaining natural capital stocks.
"This conundrum can be illustrated another way by
extrapolation from our ecological footprint data. If the entire world population of 5.6
billion were to use productive land at the rate of our Vancouver/Lower Fraser Valley
example, the total requirement would be 28.5 billion ha. In fact, the total land area of
Earth is only just over 13 billion ha, of which only 8.8 billion ha is productive
cropland, pasture, or forest. The immediate implications are two-fold: first, as already
stressed, the citizens of wealthy industrial countries unconsciously appropriate far more
than their share of global carrying capacity; second, we would require an additional
"two Earths," assuming present technology and efficiency levels, to provide for
the present world population at Canadian's ecological standard of living. In short, there
may simply not be enough natural capital around to satisfy current development
assumptions. The difference between the anticipated ecological footprint of the human
enterprise and the available land/natural capital base is a measure "sustainability
gap" confronting humankind." [p. 383]
A CAUTIONARY NOTE
"We admittedly make no allowance for potentially large
efficiency gains or technological advances. Even at carrying capacity, further economic
growth is possible (but not necessarily desirable) if resource consumption and waste
production continue to decline per unit GDP (Jacobs 1991). We should not, however, rely
exclusively on this conventional rationale. New technologies require decades to achieve
the market penetration needed to significantly influence negative ecological trends.
Moreover,there is no assurance that savings will not simply be directed into alternative
forms of consumption. Efficiency improvements may actually increase rather than decrease
resource consumption (Saunders 1992). We are already at the limit in a world of rising
material expectations in which the human population is increasing by 94 million people per
year. The minimal food-land requirements alone each year for this number of new people is
18,800,000 ha (at 5 people/ha, the current average productivity of world
agriculture)the equivalent of all cropland in France." [p. 386]
From: INVESTING IN NATURAL CAPITAL, ISBN 1-55963-316-6
published by The International Society
for Ecological Economics and Island Press,
1994. Phone: 800-828-1302 or 707-983-6432; FAX: 707-983-6164
EDITED BY: AnnMari Jansson, Monica Hammer, Carl Folke, and Robert Costanza
The quoted text was taken from chapter # 20 which was by: William E. Rees and Mathis
Wackernagel from The University of British Columbia School of Community and Regional
Planning 6333 Memorial Road Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z2
REFERENCES:
Daly, H. 1986. Comments on "Population Growth and Economic Development."
Population and Development Review 12: 583-585
------- 1990. Sustainable development: from concept and theory towards operational
principles. Population and Development Review (special issue 1990) (Also published in
Daly, H. 1991. Steady State Economics. 2d, ed. Washington, DC: Island Press)
--------1991. From empty world economics to full world economics: recognizing an
historic turning point in economic development. In Environmentally Sustainable
Development: Building on Brundtland, eds. R. Goodland, H. Daly, and S. El Serafy.
Washington DC: The World Bank
--------1991. Steady State Economics. 2d, ed. Washington, DC: Island Press
Vitousek, P., P. Ehrlich, A. Ehrlich, and P. Matson, 1986. Human appropriation of the
products of photosynthesis. BioScience 36: 368-74
WHAT IS NPP?
[ Posted by Alan McGowen <amcgowen@hposl02.cup.hp.com> to ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
<ecol-econ@csf.colorado.edu> ]
Net primary production. It's the photosynthetic production of plants minus what they
use for their own life processesso it's the amount of food left over for everything
else. Think of it as the GNP of an ecosystem.
Let's look at some numbers.
| NPP ACCOUNT |
| |
NPP (Pg/yr)
(1 Pg = 10^15g) |
| Total terrestrial NPP ["terrestrial" means "on land" and doesn't
include marine NPP.] |
132 |
| NPP used |
|
| ----- Consumed by humans |
0.8 |
| ----- Consumed by domestic animals |
2.2 |
| ----- Wood used by humans |
2.4 |
TOTAL |
5.2
(4% of total) |
| NPP dominated |
|
| ----- Croplands (1) |
15 |
| ----- Converted pastures (1) |
10 |
| ----- Tree plantations (1) |
2.6 |
| ----- Human-occupied lands (1) |
0.4 |
| ----- Consumed from little-managed ecosystems (2) |
3 |
| ----- Land clearing |
10 |
TOTAL |
41
(31% of total) |
| NPP lost to human activity |
|
| ----- Decreased NPP of cropland vs. natural systems (3) |
10 |
| ----- Desertification |
4.3 |
| ----- Human-occupied areas |
2.6 |
TOTAL |
17
(together with the
NPP dominated,
39% of total
potential NPP) |
(1) This includes the total NPP of wholly human-dominated ecosystems.
(2) This category includes wood harvested and forage consumed by domestic animals on
little-managed systems, and anthropogenic fires.
(3) This accounts for a decrease (on average) in the NPP of crop systems compared to
the natural systems they replace, due primarily to the substitution of annuals for
perennials. If we follow Olson et al. (1983) and assume that cropland NPP is equal to or
above that of natural systems, this component of loss dissappears but is replaced by an
equivalent amount of cropland NPP dominated by humanity. [From Vitousek et al., 1986,
quoted in Vitousek, 1994.]
"NPP dominated" refers to NPP of human-dominated systems. These are areas
that function in wholly different ways as a result of human use and human-caused land use
change.
Refs. Olson, J. S., J. A. Watts, and A. J. Allison. 1983. Carbon in live vegetation of
major world ecosystems. Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA.
Vitousek, P. M., P. R. Ehrlich, A. H. Ehrlich, and P. A. Matson. 1986. Human
appropriation of the products of photosynthesis. BioScience 36:368-373.
Vitousek, P. M. 1994. Beyond global warming: ecology and global change (MacArthur award
lecture). Ecology 75(7), pp. 1861-1876.
INFECTIOUS DISEASES
SURGE:
ENVIRONMENTAL DESTRUCTION, POVERTY TO BLAME
Rates of infectious disease have risen rapidly in many countries during the past
decade, according to a new study released by the Worldwatch
Institute. Illness and death from tuberculosis, malaria, dengue fever, and AIDS are up
sharply; infectious diseases killed 16.5 million people in 1993, one-third of all deaths
worldwide, and slightly more than cancer and heart disease combined.
The resurgence of diseases once thought to have been conquered stems from a deadly mix
of exploding populations, rampant poverty, inadequate health care, misuse of antibiotics,
and severe environmental degradation, says the new report, Infecting Ourselves: How
Environmental and Social Disruptions Trigger Disease. Infectious diseases take their
greatest toll in developing countries, where cases of malaria and tuberculosis are
soaring, but even in the United States, infectious disease deaths rose 58 percent between
1980 and 1992.
Research Associate Anne Platt, author of the report, says, "Infectious diseases
are a basic barometer of the environmental sustainability of human activity. Recent
outbreaks result from a sharp imbalance between a human population growing by 88 million
each year and a natural resource base that is under increasing stress."
"Water pollution, shrinking forests, and rising temperatures are driving the
upward surge in infections in many countries," the report says. "Only by
adopting a more sustainable path to economic development can we control them."
"Beyond the number of people who die, the social and economic cost of infectious
diseases is hard to overestimate," Platt says. "It can be a crushing burden for
families, communities, and governments. Some 400 million people suffer from debilitating
malaria, about 200 million have schistosomiasis, and nine million have tuberculosis."
By the year 2000, AIDS will cost Asian countries over $50 billion a year just in lost
productivity. "Such suffering and economic loss is doubly tragic," says Platt,
"because the cost of these diseases is astronomical, yet preventing them is not only
simple, but inexpensive."
The author notes, "The dramatic resurgence of infectious diseases is telling us
that we are approaching disease and medicine, as well as economic development, in the
wrong way. Governments focus narrowly on individual cures and not on mass prevention; and
we fail to understand that lifestyle can promote infectious disease just as it can
contribute to heart disease. It is imperative that we bring health considerations into the
equation when we plan for international development, global trade, and population
increases, to prevent disease from spreading and further undermining economic
development."
The report notes that this global resurgence of infectious disease involves old,
familiar diseases like tuberculosis and the plague as well as new ones like Ebola and Lyme
disease. Yet all show the often tragic consequences of human actions:
Population increases, leading to human crowding, poverty, and the growth of
mega-cities, are prompting dramatic increases in dengue fever, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS.
Lack of clean water is spreading diseases like cholera, typhoid, and dysentery. Eighty
percent of all disease in developing countries is related to unsafe drinking water and
poor sanitation.
Poorly planned development disrupts ecosystems and provides breeding grounds for
mosquitoes, rodents, and snails that spread debilitating parasites and disease.
Inadequate vaccinations have led to resurgences in measles and diphtheria.
Misuse of antibiotics has created drug-resistant strains of pneumonia and malaria.
Vastly increased human mobility from air travel can move infectious agents between
continents in hours.
The report shows that the methods of preventing and treating most infectious diseases
are well known. But the growing pressures of budget cuts and population growth are
overwhelming efforts in many countries to control epidemics. As a result, many nations
lack the money, personnel, and resources to provide adequate prevention and treatment.
Platt agrees with World Health Organization officials who say that poverty is the
deadliest disease. It is the main reason that babies are not vaccinated, clean water is
not provided, and effective drugs are not available. For example, government-owned water
utilities may provide services only to landowners or homeowners, leaving large squatter
populations, typical of many Third World cities, outside the scope of the service.
Even the United States often fails in the most obvious ways to prevent infectious
diseases. Only 58 percent of Americans are immunized, far below the rates in many
developing countries, including India, Mexico, Thailand, and Uganda. An estimated 3
million American children are not immunized against traditional childhood infections. And
although water quality has improved in the U.S., waterborne infectious diseases such as
giardiasis cost the nation nearly 20 billion dollars each year.
The report recommends a four part plan, to control the spread of infectious diseases.
1. Slow population growth and stabilize the world's climate. The world needs to
implement the World Population Plan of Action, as adopted at the 1994 International
Conference on Population and Development in Cairo, and to allocate more money for family
planning and reproductive health programs, as well as the prevention of sexually
transmitted diseases. Effective implementation of the International Climate Convention is
crucial to address the increasing global emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse
gases.
2. Improve social and environmental conditions. A combination of measures to reduce
poverty, prevent pollution, and improve living conditions, particularly in poor urban and
rural areas, are needed to address the underlying causes of infectious disease. More than
one-fifth of humanity lacks regular access to safe drinking water and sanitation.
Environmental protection efforts must be invigorated in developing and developed countries
alike to restore air and water quality, and to preserve biological diversity and the
integrity of ecosystems, which keep many infectious organisms in check.
3. Expand coverage of basic public health measures, including vaccines, antibiotics,
and medicines. Supplies of clean syringes, rubber gloves, and other basic health equipment
are sorely needed in developing countries. Funding for ongoing public health programs,
including outreach, education, and research should be a top priority at local, national,
and international levels of government. Nations also need to expand access to basic health
care and medical services, especially for women and children, and to raise public
awareness.
4. Establish a global health monitoring system. In 1995, the World Health Organization
General Assembly passed a resolution urging member states to strengthen surveillance;
improve rapid diagnosis, communication, and response; and conduct routine testing for drug
resistance. Policymakers would do well to integrate environmental, climate, population,
and land use data and information to detect conditions conducive to disease outbreaks, to
provide early warning to health officials, and to create an efficient response network.
Today, disease control is crisis driven, with public health agencies and governments
reacting to epidemics, not preventing them; paying larger sums for treatment of disease
rather than pennies a day for preventive measures. In the long run, prevention is our most
effective weapon against infectious disease: public health measures that improve the
health of individuals and populations, as well as sustainable economic and environmental
policies that control the emergence and spread of infectious diseases and maintain the
natural checks and balances will go a long way toward promoting a healthier world. The
price of failing to understand these links is clear: rising health care costs and a world
in which, even now, more than half the people live in fear of plagues.
Worldwatch Institute, 1776 Massachusetts Ave.,
NW, Washington, DC 20036, Phone: 202-452-1999; FAX: 202-296-7365, wwpub@igc.apc.org.
[See also RS AND NAS STATEMENT, WORLD
SCIENTISTS' WARNING TO HUMANITY, A Joint Statement by 58 of the
World's Scientific Academies, and WORLD SCIENTISTS' CALL FOR ACTION AT THE KYOTO CLIMATE
SUMMIT ]
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