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Eco
warning echoes
UN
report finds environmental progress inadequate, urges stepped-up
action

While
political attention to environmental issues is increasing, this
has not sufficed to achieve significant progress on climate change,
loss of biodiversity and other challenges which face the planet
and threaten humanity, according to the views of 390 scientists
synthesized in a major new United Nations report on the issue.
The fact that we are in the year 2007, with all the knowledge
that we have and with all the capacity to do things differently
to present to the world at this point a report that essentially
says that our response has been woefully inadequate is a very sobering
realization, said Achim Steiner, Executive Director of the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), at the launch in New
York of the agencys report, Global Environment Outlook: environment
for development (GEO-4) last week.
The report notes that environmental concerns are much closer to
mainstream politics everywhere today than when they were first addressed
by the Brundtland Commission in its landmark report Our Common
Future two decades ago. But it warns that despite these advances,
problems persist which, if not addressed, may undo progress and
threaten humanitys survival.
Over the past 20 years, the international community has cut,
by 95 per cent, the production of ozone-layer damaging chemicals;
created a greenhouse gas emission reduction treaty along with innovative
carbon trading and carbon offset markets; supported a rise in terrestrial
protected areas to cover roughly 12 per cent of the Earth and devised
numerous important instruments covering issues from biodiversity
and desertification to the trade in hazardous wastes and living
modified organisms, Mr. Steiner noted.
At the same time, persistent problems include the decline of fish
stocks; loss of fertile land through degradation; unsustainable
pressure on resources; dwindling amount of fresh water; and risk
that environmental damage could pass unknown points of no
return, UNEP said.
Climate change, the destruction caused by forest fires and floods
and other problems demonstrate the cost of humanity trying
to cope with the scale of environmental impacts, said Mr.
Steiner.
The report acknowledges that technology can help to reduce peoples
vulnerability to environmental stresses, but says there is sometimes
a need to correct the technology-centred development paradigm.
It argues that the future will be largely determined by the decisions
individuals and society make now. Our common future depends
on our actions today, not tomorrow or sometime in the future,
it cautions.
Widely considered the most comprehensive UN report on the environment,
GEO-4 was prepared by some 390 experts and reviewed by more than
1,000 others across the world.
The cost of inaction greatly exceeds the cost of action,
said Olav Kjorven, Director of the UN Development Programme (UNEP)
Bureau for Development Policy, pointing out that local efforts around
the world demonstrate the potential for change.
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