Tighten your belts, scientists tell the world's rich
by Steve Connor
The world's wealthiest people must urgently reduce their consumption
to save the Earth from a "vortex of economic, socio political and
environmental ills", a major report by Britain's leading scientific
academy concludes.
The Royal Society panel of 23 eminent academics from around the world
in the fields of economics, population studies and conservation science,
calls for a radical "re-balancing" of global consumption to go
hand-in-hand with attempts to curb further rapid rises in population.
It concludes that tackling global inequality is central to solving
the problem of too many people exploiting dwindling natural resources.
The global population, which has reached seven billion, is growing at
about 80 million a year. Developing countries will need to build the
equivalent of a city of a million people every five days for the next 40
years because of urban migration.
The increased demands this will place on the Earth's limited
resources means that people living in rich countries will need to
consume fewer natural resources so that poorer nations can consume more,
the scientists say.
"Human impact on the Earth raises serious concerns, and in the
richest parts of the world per capita, material consumption is far above
the level that can be sustained for everyone in a population of seven
billion or more," the report says.
"This is in stark contrast to the world's 1.3 billion poorest people,
who need to consume more in order to be raised out of extreme poverty,"
it says.
It recommends a "decoupling" of economic activity from the natural
resources of the global environment so that economic growth and human
well-being are no longer linked with the increased utilisation of the
finite goods and services provided by nature.
Expanding the availability of contraceptives to the poorest people in
the world will not on its own solve some of the most difficult problems
associated with an increase in human numbers and a depleted natural
environment, the report concludes.
Sir John Sulston, the chairman of the working group, said that
separating the twin problems of overpopulation and over consumption had
in the past polarised the debate over the effects of rising numbers of
people inhabiting the planet.
"The world now has a very clear choice. We can choose to address the
twin issues of population and consumption... to rebalance the use of
resources to a more egalitarian pattern of consumption," Sir John said.
"Or we choose to do nothing and to drift into a downward vortex of
economic, socio-political and environmental ills, leading to a more
unequal and inhospitable future," he said.
"Improving the well-being of individuals so that humanity flourishes
rather than survives requires moving from current economic measures to
fully valuing natural capital," the report says.
The report is unequivocal about the pressing need to slow down and
stabilise the population of those countries where numbers are expected
to rise rapidly in the coming century.
- The Independent
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