friends of the earth international
30 March, 2005
millenium ecosysem assessment: main
findings and reaction
United Nations goals to halve poverty and
hunger by 2015 will not be met, and hunger
and malnutrition will remain problem even in
2050 unless governments pay greater attention
to what nature does for humanity, says a UN
report published on 30 March.
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
(launched on 30 March 2005 in London, Tokyo,
Beijing, Delhi, Cairo, Nairobi, Washington
and Brasilia) was prepared over the past four
years by 1300 scientists from 95 countries.
This scientific assessment of the impact that
changes to ecosystems will have on human
well-being is a joint project of a range of
UN and international scientific agencies and
NGOs.
reaction:
Friends of the Earth International
welcomes the Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment's recognition of environmental
limits - the constraints nature places on
what we can take out or put into the
environment.
"We would have liked to see greater
recognition of the disparities in consumption
between countries. Northern countries have
consumed more than their fair share of the
world's resources. They bear the greatest
responsibility for the pressure that
ecosystems are now under," said Friends of
the Earth International Chair Meena Raman in
Malaysia.
For comments contact:
Friends of the Earth International Chair
Meena Raman (in Malaysia)
mobile +60-12-4300042; office direct line
+60-4-8295612;
email: meenaco@pd.jaring.my
the four main findings of the synthesis
report are:
I. Humans have changed ecosystems more
rapidly and extensively over the last 50
years than in any comparable period of time
in history:
-
More land has been converted to
cropland since 1945 than during the whole
of the 18th and 19th centuries
combined;
-
One quarter of the world's coral reefs
and about 35 per cent of the mangroves, in
countries surveyed, were destroyed or badly
degraded in the last decades of the 20th
century;
-
The amount of water impounded behind
dams has quadrupled since 1960, and three
to six times more water is held in
reservoirs than is in rivers;
-
More than half of all the synthetic
nitrogen fertilizer ever used has been used
since 1985;
-
The atmospheric concentration of carbon
dioxide has increased by almost a third
since 1750. 60 per cent of that increase
has happened since 1959.
-
The population size or range of the
majority of species in many groups of
animals and plants is decreasing and the
number of species on the planet is
falling.
II. The changes made have contributed to
substantial gains in well-being for some
people but are unsustainable and have left
many in poverty:
-
Between 1960 and 2000, the world
population doubled, food production
increased by two and a half times, water
use doubled, wood pulp and paper harvests
tripled, hydropower doubled and timber
production rose by more than a half;
-
15 out of 24 ecosystem services
assessed in the study are being degraded or
used unsustainably - e.g. at least a
quarter of commercially important fish
stocks are over harvested and 15-35% of
irrigation withdrawals could exceed
replenishment rates;
-
Actions to increase one ecosystem
service often cause the degradation of
another - e.g. increased fertilizer use
pollutes water supplies;
-
The degradation of ecosystem services
often causes significant harm to human
well-being - e.g. the collapse of the
Newfoundland cod fishery has cost at least
$2 billion in income support and
retraining
-
Pressures on ecosystems may be
increasing the chance of sudden changes
which could harm human well-being -
examples include new diseases, coastal dead
zones, collapsing fisheries, invasive
species and regional climate change;
-
Despite increased use of ecosystems,
levels of poverty remain high, inequalities
are growing - over one billion people
survive on less than $1 a day, 856 million
are under-nourished and 1-2 billion are
affected by water scarcity;
-
The degradation of ecosystem services
is harming many of the world's poorest
people and is sometimes the principal
factor causing poverty - 1.8 million people
die annually due to inadequate hygiene,
sanitation or water supply;
-
Wealthy countries cannot insulate
themselves from ecosystem degradation.
III. The degradation of ecosystems could
grow significantly worse over the next fifty
years and is a barrier to achieving the
Millennium Development Goals. The Assessment
considered four different scenarios for
global development over the next fifty years.
In all four, the pressures on ecosystems
continued to grow and biodiversity continues
to be lost:
-
A further 10-20 per cent of grassland
and forestland is forecast to be converted
to agriculture;
-
Fish harvests are expected to
increasingly focus on less valuable, 'lower
trophic level' species (e.g. smaller fish,
shellfish, jellyfish etc);
-
The flow of nitrogen through coastal
ecosystems is likely to rise by 10-20 per
cent;
-
10-15 per cent of plant species may go
extinct by 2050;
-
Climate change may be the dominant
driver of biodiversity loss and changes to
ecosystem services by 2100;
-
The Millennium Development Goal to
halve hunger between 1990 and 2015 is not
achieved and hunger and child malnutrition
remain problems even in 2050;
-
Ecosystem degradation will also be a
barrier to the achievement of Millennium
Development Goals on poverty eradication,
health and environmental protection.
IV. We can reverse the degradation of
ecosystems and meet increasing demands for
ecosystem services, but only by changing the
way we manage our economies. Three of the
four scenarios analysed showed that
significant changes in policy can reduce many
of the bad effects of rising pressures on
ecosystems, although the changes required are
large and not happening. Significant
investments in environmentally sound
technology, adaptive management, preventative
action, investments in education and
infrastructure and the reduction of poverty
and inequality are all needed. Interventions
include:
-
Better governance: the integration of
ecosystem management in decision-making and
in development planning; better
coordination within environmental policy
and between environmental, economic and
social policy; greater transparency and
accountability of government and the
private-sector, including more involvement
of concerned stakeholders.
-
Financial carrots and sticks: ending
subsidies which encourage excessive use of
ecosystems; taxes and market-based
approaches, including payments, to manage
pressure on ecosystems;
-
Changes in behaviour: changes in
consumption, education, empowerment of
directly affected communities, including
women, indigenous people and young
people;
-
New technology: cleverer farming,
ecosystem restoration
-
Wider intelligence-gathering: building
non-market values into resource management
decisions and using traditional and
practictioners' knowledge.
The Assessment recognises that our limited
understanding of ecological and human
processes means that any forecast is
uncertain, but praises active adaptive
management of ecosystem services as a way of
ensuring benefits to humanity are maintained.
This implies that governments must intervene
in the economy to ensure ecosystems are
managed sustainably.
How will it be launched and followed
up?
The Assessment's outputs will be released
from 30 March, 2005. The partner institutions
are organising press conferences in London,
Tokyo, Beijing, Delhi, Cairo, Nairobi,
Washington and Brasilia. They will distribute
the reports widely once they are printed.
The detailed schedule is as follows:
30th March - "Millennium Ecosystem
Synthesis Report" and a statement from the MA
Board, "Living Beyond Our Means: Natural
Assets and Human Well-being."
19th May - The "MA Biodiversity Synthesis
Report" will be released from Montreal.
10th June - The "MA Business and Industry
Synthesis Report" will be released from
Tokyo.
17th June - The "MA Desertification
Synthesis Report" will be released from
Bonn.
There are also plans for seminars around
the world on 5 June (World Environment Day)
and subsequent outreach.
How is it likely to be used?
The Assessment aims to provide
policy-relevant information to support the
work of the Convention on Biological
Diversity, the Convention to combat
Desertification and the Ramsar Convention on
Wetlands. It has also produced a methodology
for producing similar assessments at local
and regional levels (and over 30 local
assessments are being produced in places as
diverse as Canada, Colombia, Papua New
Guinea, Chile and South Africa).
What about local/traditional
knowledge?
As part of the Assessment, the organisers
held a conference on "Linking Local Knowledge
and Global Science in Multi-Scale
Assessments". This aimed to foster dialogue
among academics and indigenous peoples on how
to integrate information and insights from
individuals who possess different "ways of
knowing the world". The Assessment says that
"effective management of ecosystems typically
requires "place-based" knowledge - that is,
information about the specific
characteristics and history of an ecosystem.
Traditional knowledge or practitioners'
knowledge held by local resource managers can
often be of considerable value in resource
management but is too rarely incorporated
into decision-making processes and indeed is
often inappropriately dismissed."
Where can I learn more?
The official website contains lots of
information:
www.millenniumassessment.org
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