Global Destruction
of Mother Earth on Fast Track. UN Assessment
Without a change in current trends, ‘the state of the world’s
environment will continue to decline’
With no region of the Earth untouched by the ravages of environmental
destruction, the state of the world’s natural resources is in a rapid downward
spiral, a comprehensive assessment by the United Nations has found.
Published
Thursday, Global Environmental
Outlook from the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) involved the
expertise of more than 1,200 scientists and over 160 governments, and exposes
through reports on each of the world’s six regions that the rate of
environmental deterioration is occurring faster than previously thought—and can
only be halted with swift action.
“It is essential
that we understand the pace of environmental change that is upon us,” stated
UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner.
A little girl searches for recyclable materials in a garbage dump with
smelling gas evaporating around her in Mandalay city, Mandalay province,
Myanmar. (Photo: Nyaung U/United Nations Development Programme)
One threat many of
the world’s inhabitants are facing is that of water scarcity. For North America (pdf),
for example, it “is of increasing concern,” though it’s just one of many
“worsening pressures.”
The report points
to the recent five-year drought around Texas—a problem exacerbated by climate
change. It also notes how the impacts of climate change were vividly felt when
Hurricane Sandy struck in 2012.
“The 30 centimeters
of sea level rise off New York City since 1900 likely expanded Hurricane
Sandy’s flood area by approximately 65 square kilometers, flooding the homes of
more than 80 000 additional people in New York and New Jersey alone,” UNEP
states, adding: “Climate change is generating impacts across the region, and
aggressive hydrocarbon extraction methods bring the possibility of increased
emissions, water use and induced seismicity. The coastal and marine environment
is under increasing threat from nutrient loads, ocean acidification, ocean warming,
sea level rise, and new forms of marine debris.”
And even with
successful efforts to rein in carbon emissions, the outlook for the region
isn’t bright, the report notes:
A wide range of
potentially catastrophic impacts are built in to the near and medium term
climate, so that climate change impacts are highly likely to increase
regardless of how fast the region reduces greenhouse gas emissions, and how
fast it supports global emissions reductions. The consequences for human lives
and livelihoods will depend on measures to adapt to climate change and increase
resilience that, while showing signs of promise, are not yet sufficient to meet
the threats. The region has been surprised by the emergence of major failures
in traditional environmental issues, such as drinking water safety, suggesting
that past successes are in jeopardy.
Or take the Latin American and Caribbean region (pdf),
where greenhouse gas emissions are growing, a problem fueled in part by
agriculture. UNEP notes:
- Agriculture has had a strong impact on the
emission of nitrous oxide and carbon dioxide. Nitrous oxide emissions –
from soils, leaching and runoff, direct emissions, and animal manure –
increased by about 29 per cent between 2000 and 2010. The abundance of
beef and dairy cattle in the region has also increased methane emissions,
which grew by 19 per cent between 2000 and 2010.
- Andean glaciers, which provide vital water
resources for millions of people, are shrinking and an increase in the
intensity and frequency of extreme weather events are affecting economies.
In Asia and the Pacific,
meanwhile,
Increasing
unsustainable consumption patterns have led to worsening air pollution, water
scarcity and waste generation, threatening human and environmental health.
Increased demand for fossil fuels and natural resources – extensive
agriculture, palm oil and rubber plantations, aquaculture and the illegal trade
in wildlife – are causing environmental degradation and biodiversity loss.
Spreading
desertification is a key threat for West Asia, while Africa’s land degradation,
due, in part, to deforestation, are among the environmental challenges for
those regions.
And, of course,
there’s the Arctic region—”a barometer for change in the rest of the world”
—with dropping levels of summer sea ice extent and glacier ice loss.
Among the
recommendations UNEP calls for are scaling back fossil fuel dependency and
increasing sustainable infrastructure investments.
While the UN body
said there was still time to address many of the threats, urgent action, it
stressed, was key.
“If current trends
continue and the world fails to enact solutions that improve current patterns
of production and consumption, if we fail to use natural resources sustainably,
then the state of the world’s environment will continue to decline,” Steiner
said, emphasizing the urgency “to work with nature instead of against it to
tackle the array of environmental threats that face us.”
The original source
of this article is Common Dreams
Copyright © Andrea Germanos, Common Dreams, 2016
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