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5.
The Environmental Impact of Populations |
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2006
6 November 2006. China
to Pass U.S. in 2009 in Emissions. By
KEITH BRADSHER. NY Times. Excerpt:
LONDON, Nov. 6 - China will surpass the
United States in 2009, nearly a decade ahead
of previous predictions, as the biggest
emitter of the main gas linked to global
warming, the International Energy Agency
has concluded in a report to be released
Tuesday. As a developing country, China
is exempt from the Kyoto Protocol's requirements
for reductions in emissions of global warming
gases. Unregulated emissions from China,
India and other developing countries are
likely to account for most of the global
increase in carbon dioxide emissions over
the next quarter-century. Moreover, the
biggest current emitter of the gases, the
United States, has rejected the protocol
in part because most lawmakers and President
Bush say its exemption for rising powers
like China is unfair. If nothing is done,
global energy demand is projected to grow
53 percent by 2030, the energy agency said.
As a result [of increased coal and oil consumption],
energy-related carbon dioxide emissions
will increase 55 percent, to 44.1 billion
tons in 2030. Environmental
officials from around the world began meeting
Monday in Nairobi to discuss a new agreement
after the Kyoto Protocol.
24 October 2006 Humans
living far beyond planet's means: WWF.
By Ben Blanchard. BEIJING
(Reuters) - Humans are stripping nature
at an unprecedented rate and will need two
planets' worth of natural resources every
year by 2050 on current trends, the WWF
conservation group said on Tuesday. Populations
of many species, from fish to mammals, had
fallen by about a third from 1970 to 2003
largely because of human threats such as
pollution, clearing of forests and overfishing,
the group also said in a two-yearly report.
..."If everyone around the world lived
as those in America, we would need five
planets to support us," Leape, an American,
said in Beijing. ..."If the rest of
the world led the kind of lifestyles we
do here in Australia, we would require three-and-a-half
planets to provide the resources we use
and to absorb the waste," said Greg
Bourne, WWF-Australia chief executive officer.....
Spring 2006. Consequences
of China's Growth. By Michelle Chan-Fishel.
Friends of the Earth news magazine. Excerpt:
...At its current growth rate, China is
expected to bypass Japan as the world's
third largest economy by 2020. But although
its economic growth has been astounding,
it has also been very uneven, with about
800 million rural poor excluded from the
benefits. As a result,millions have migrated
to cities in search of work, creating a
pool of 100-150 million underemployed in
China's cities. ...China's economy shows
no signs of slowing down. Unfortunately,
China's growth has also created an environmental
crisis, marked by unchecked industrial pollution
and acute public health impacts. The country's
own State Environmental Protection Administration
reported that breathing the air in China's
most polluted cities is the equivalent of
smoking two packs of cigarettes a day, and
according to some sources, the water in
five of China's biggest river systems cannot
be touched, let alone drunk.... To help
fuel China's growth, Chinese companies are
actively purchasing timber, oil, gas and
mineral assets around the world.... In many
respects, it's ... about saving the world
from what Lester Brown (in his new book
Plan B, 2.0) described as the ... the Western
economic model: the fossil-fuel-based, auto-centered,
throwaway economy. "If it will not
work for China," Brown states, "it
will not work for India." Nor will
it work for any country on our planet, including
our own.
2 February 2006. High-Rises
That Have Low Impact on Nature. By ROBIN
POGREBIN, NY Times. Excerpt:
With ... the Bank of America building rising
at 1 Bryant Park in Manhattan ... it's not
architecture with a capital A that makes
the tower unusual. ...It is the double-wall
technology that dissipates the sun's heat;
ventilation that runs under the floor rather
than through overhead ducts; carbon-dioxide
monitors that assure adequate fresh air;
and a system that collects and reuses rainwater
and wastewater, saving 10.3 million gallons
of water each year. ...Not so long ago,
green construction was largely dismissed
as prohibitively expensive and as just so
much political correctness. But the arrival
of the Condé Nast tower in Times
Square in 1999, designed by Fox & Fowle
... sent the message that corporate America
saw something to gain from the green model. "What
we did was take it from a Birkenstock cultural
environment into a pinstripe environment," said
Bruce Fowle, of what is now FXFowle. ...Motion
sensors will allow for lights and computers
to be turned off when a room is empty, and
the roof will collect rainwater, thus reducing
runoff by 25 percent. Collected in two 14,000-gallon
reclamation tanks in the basement, the rainwater
will replace water lost to evaporation in
the building's air-conditioning system and
will irrigate plantings and trees inside
and outside the building.... Building green
used to add as much as 20 percent to a project's
cost, by some estimates. That figure has
recently declined to between 2 and 5 percent,
largely because of the availability of new
technologies and building materials...."It's
almost become as American as apple pie now,"
he said.
24 January 2006. Official Release: Gridded
Population of the World, Version 3.
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2005
4 October 2005, A
New Measure of Well-Being From a Happy Little
Kingdom. By ANDREW C. REVKIN, NY Times. ...The
gross domestic product, or G.D.P., is routinely
used as shorthand for the well-being of a
nation. But the small Himalayan kingdom of
Bhutan has been trying out a different idea.
In 1972, concerned about the problems afflicting
other developing countries that focused only
on economic growth, Bhutan's newly crowned
leader, King Jigme Singye Wangchuck, decided
to make his nation's priority not its G.D.P.
but its G.N.H., or gross national happiness.
Bhutan, the king said, needed to ensure that
prosperity was shared across society and that
it was balanced against preserving cultural
traditions, protecting the environment and
maintaining a responsive government. The king,
now 49, has been instituting policies aimed
at accomplishing these goals. ...While household
incomes in Bhutan remain among the world's
lowest, life expectancy increased by 19 years
from 1984 to 1998, jumping to 66 years. The
country...requires that at least 60 percent
of its lands remain forested, welcomes a limited
stream of wealthy tourists and exports hydropower
to India. "We have to think of human
well-being in broader terms," said Lyonpo
Jigmi Thinley, Bhutan's home minister and
ex-prime minister.
"Material well-being is only one
component. That doesn't ensure that
you're at peace with your environment
and in harmony with each other."
...It is a concept grounded in
Buddhist doctrine, and even a decade
ago it might have been dismissed by
most economists and international policy
experts as naïve idealism.
January 2005. Blue
Oil. by Stephanie Pool, Terrain Magazine. The
World Bank predicts that by 2025, two-thirds
of the world's population will be short of
water. Private corporations capitalize on
this imminent crisis by contracting with municipalities
to provide water services. Water is redefined
as a scarce commodity subject to market forces,
with corporations controlling its price-and
who is allowed to buy it.....
January 2005. Ecological Footprint Quiz - http://www.myfootprint.org/ - A
tool to show your impact on Earth resources. |
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2004
October 2004. The
Ecological Footprint. A
resource management tool that measures how
much land and water area a human population
requires to produce the resources it consumes
and to absorb its wastes, taking into account
prevailing technology.
July 2004. Thoughts
on Long-Term Energy Supplies: Scientists
and the Silent Lie. Physics Today. [Must
be AGU member for access.] The
world's population continues to grow. Shouldn't
physicists care? by Albert A. Bartlett.
The most sacred icon in the "religion"
of the US economic scene is steady growth
of the gross national product, enterprises,
sales, and profits. Many people believe
that such economic growth requires steady
population growth. Although physicists address
the problems that result from a ballooning
population-such as energy shortages, congestion,
pollution, and dwindling resources-their
solutions are starkly deficient. Often,
they fail to recognize that the solutions
must involve stopping population growth.
Physicists understand the arithmetic of
steady, exponential growth. Yet they ignore
its consequences, including the first law
of sustainability:
"Population growth or growth in the
rate of consumption of resources cannot
be [indefinitely] sustained." (See
Ben Zuckerman's letter to the editor, Physics
Today, July 1992, page 14.) Sustainability
requires solutions that will be effective
over time periods much longer than a human
lifespan. Indeed, Paul Weisz makes a case
on page 47 of this issue that many time-honored
20th-century energy sources, such as petroleum,
natural gas, and coal, have been reduced
to the point that their longevities are
now expected to be of the order of a human
lifespan.... Among physicists, there is
a growing recognition that we have a responsibility
to become more directly involved in the
scientific aspects of problems facing society.
...
Unchecked population growth as a source of problems is not news.
More than 200 years ago, mathematician Robert Malthus (1766-1834)
addressed the issue in his famous essay. He understood that populations
had the biological potential for steady growth and that food
production did not. Today, energy production does not have the
capability of steady growth. Nevertheless, we are all aware of
nonscientists with academic credentials who proclaim that our
modern technology has proven Malthus wrong. The most egregious
of the high priests of endless growth was the late Julian Simon,
professor of economics and business administration at the University
of Illinois and later at the University of Maryland. In 1995,
he wrote: Technology exists now to produce in virtually inexhaustible
quantities just about all the products made by nature.... We
have in our hands now ... the technology to feed, clothe and
supply energy to an ever?growing population for the next seven
billion years. In the eyes of the general public, the silence
of scientists on the problems of population growth seems to validate
the messages of the politically appealing and influential Julian
Simons of the world.... Researchers continue to debate when the
peak of world petroleum production will be reached. Analytical
estimates range from 2004 to about 2025. But from a per capita
perspective, world petroleum production reached a peak in the
1970s. I believe future historians may identify this peak as
one of the most important events in all of human history.
23 June 2004. NASA RELEASE: 04-201 NASA
SCIENTISTS GET GLOBAL FIX ON FOOD, WOOD & FIBER
USE -- NASA
scientists working with the World Wildlife
Fund and others have measured how much of
Earth's plant life humans need for food,
fiber, wood and fuel. The study identifies
human impact on ecosystems.
13 January 2004. Consumer appetite
erodes quality of life for all, By GreenBiz.com. The
world is consuming goods and services at an
unsustainable pace, with serious consequences
for the well-being of people and the planet,
according to the Worldwatch Institute's annual
report, State of the World 2004.
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