MA in the News
A selection of news reports on the MA
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《荷兰王储在第二届黄河国际论坛开幕式上的致辞 》
中国水网
(10/18/2005) 毫无疑问,前一段时间将以一个洪灾肆虐的时期载入历史,不仅仅是印度洋数国
发生了损失惨重的海啸。今年夏天,中欧地区发生了大洪水。美国的海湾地带遭遇了台风卡特里娜和丽塔的袭击,几星期前,台风达维从中国扫过,也造成了严重的洪灾。
在这些面前,人类显得微不足道,面对自然的伟力,需要以全人类的力量去和它对抗。我们越来越多地意识到气侯变化所带来的影响,我们对其的认识越多,我们就越来越强烈,越来越迫切地意识到,必须根本改变这样的趋势
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Checking Earth's Vital Signs
NASA Earth
Science Data and Services
(10/12/2005) Mention to someone that a little
known species such as the ‘Alerce’ —
a large tree native to Chile and
Argentina — is endangered, and
they’re likely to not bat an
eyelash. But then drop the name of a
more relatable endangered species
such as, say, the Slender Loris from
Sri Lanka — a fuzzy little primate
with brown eyes that would give any
teddy bear a run for its money — and
it’s likely to elicit more
compassion.
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Natural Accounting Essential for
Poverty Reduction - United Nations
Environment Programme
UNEP Press
Release (10/10/2005) Poverty will only be made history
when nature’s capital is factored
into national profit and loss books,
one of the world’s leading
economists will assert today. Key to
this is creating markets that give
real and long lasting value to the
goods and services nature provides.
Traditional measures such as gross
domestic product (GDP) are short
changing current and future
generations, says Professor Sir
Partha Dasgupta of Cambridge
University.
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Wetlands satellite mapping scheme
yielding first results
ESA News
(10/10/2005) Earth's wetlands are havens for
wildlife and vital to the water
cycle, but they are also under
threat. An ESA-led initiative aims
to develop a global wetland
information service based on Earth
Observation for conservation
efforts. The Globwetland project has
now entered a new phase, with
prototype products being developed
based on sites across four
continents.
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Business sector must restore public
trust
Scoop
(10/7/2005) The business sector may have to
demonstrate more responsibility for
the communities and ecosystems where
its consumers, investors and
employees reside if it is to win
back public trust, according to the
New Zealand Business Council for
Sustainable Development (the
Business Council) in its annual
report released today. Chair Rob
Fenwick said a recent public survey
showing New Zealanders are
distrustful of the business sector
was deeply disturbing.
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Banking on our natural capital
CNEWS
(10/7/2005) Anyone who regularly reads science
journals knows there's no shortage
of research about how human
activities are affecting our
ecosystems. But translating that
research into action to conserve
those systems is another matter.
Sometimes it seems there are dire
predictions about the future of the
planet's ecosystems coming out
almost every day. Then the headlines
fade (if there even were headlines)
and so does the sense of urgency.
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Burden Of Disease Increased By
Environmental Degradation
Noticias Info
(10/5/2005) Close to one-fifth of the burden of
disease in developing countries can
be attributed to environmental risks
– with unsafe water, poor
sanitation, and poor hygiene as
leading risk factors, causing 1.7
million premature deaths per year;
and urban air pollution estimated to
cause about 800,000 premature deaths
annually, according to the World
Bank’s annual publication,
Environment Matters, released today.
-
Creating Pro-Poor Markets for
Ecosystem Services 10-12 October
2005, London, United Kingdom
Earth
Negotiation Bulletin (10/3/2005)
Several reports and processes
addressing the link between poverty
reduction and a healthy environment
have been released in recent months,
including the report of the UN
Millennium Project, “Investing in
Development: A Practical Plan to
Achieve the Millennium Development
Goals”; the report of the Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment (MA), including
its synthesis reports, “Ecosystems
and Human Well-being” and
“Biodiversity and Human Well-being”;
and the report by the UN Development
Programme (UNDP), “Environmental
Sustainability in 100 Millennium
Development Goal Country Reports.”
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Should conservation be driven by
finance
SciDev
(9/29/2005) Since the late 1980s, conservation
efforts have focused on biodiversity
'hotspots' — regions that are home
to many species at risk of
extinction. But some
conservationists now believe this
approach is misguided. In this
article in Nature, Lucy Odling-Smee
reports on increasing evidence that
efforts to slow or halt the loss of
biodiversity would be more effective
if driven by financial interest
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Whither the Endangered Species Act -
Protection is good economics
San Francisco
Chronicle (9/28/2005) We're frequently told that the
Endangered Species Act, a
cornerstone of U.S. environmental
law, must be "improved." At the
heart of these arguments are claims
of economic damage, as critics
agonize that the well-being of
critters is placed above that of
humans. These criticisms arise from
a limited understanding of both
endangered species protection and
economics. A key purpose of the ESA
is to enhance our well-being, and in
particular that of future
generations.
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Salvation army
The Observer
(9/23/2005) Given that 10-30 per cent of all
species are now under serious threat
of extinction, according to the
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment,
conservation has never been so
critical. With that in mind I
recently spent two Saturday
afternoons at my local park
conservation scheme. Mostly my tasks
involved fishing crisp bags out of
the boating lake where the herons
nest - not glamorous, but
conservation is all about getting
your hands dirty.
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UN SUMMIT FAILS WORLD - NO ACTION ON
CLIMATE CHANGE
Friends of
the Earth (9/16/2005) The United Nations (UN) Summit,
which ends today in New York, has
been criticised by Friends of the
Earth for failing to agree any firm
action on climate change. The final
outcome document of the Summit does
not recognise the immense challenge
to stabilise the world's climate,
and the threat that climate change
poses upon reaching the UN
Millennium Development Goals by
2015.
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UN says Earth's ecosystem is no
luxury
Webindia123
(9/13/2005) The United Nations says any debate
about security and human rights must
include the ecosystem and ignoring
it will lead to catastrophe and
economic disaster. The environment
is not a luxury, not a Gucci
accessory bag or a fancy silk tie
affordable only when all other
issues have been resolved, U.N.
Environment Program Executive
Director Klaus Toepfer said Monday.
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World Summit must be red ribbon for
environment
Daily
Observer (9/7/2005) Across the capitals of the world,
heads of state and government are
making plans for one of the most
important meetings of the early 21st
century - the 2005 World Summit,
taking place in early September in
New York, aims to strengthen the
United Nations in many areas,
including security and human rights.
It will also take stock of how we
are faring on the 2015 Millennium
Development Goals. These cover
poverty eradication, the supply of
safe and sufficient supplies of
safe- drinking water, the
empowerment of women and reversing
the spread of infectious diseases.
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Glaciers on the Roof of the World at
Risk
Environment
News Service (9/6/2005) The mountains of Asia, including the
towering Himalayas, are facing
accelerating threats from a rapid
rise in roads, settlements,
overgrazing and deforestation,
experts are warning in a new report.
New calculation by experts with the
Chinese Academy of Sciences indicate
that China's highland glaciers are
shrinking by an amoiunt equivalent
to all the water in the giant Yellow
River each year.
-
Asia's water security under threat
999 Today
(9/5/2005) The mountains of Asia, including the
Himalayas, are facing accelerating
threats from a rapid rise in roads,
settlements, overgrazing and
deforestation experts are warning in
a new report. There is concern that
the region’s water supplies, fed by
glaciers and the monsoons and vital
for around half the world’s
population, may be harmed alongside
the area’s abundant and rich
wildlife
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UNEP urges government to finance
restoration of ecosystems
Angola Press
(9/2/2005) The United nations Environment
Programme (UNEP) has called on world
governments to financially support
the restoration of ecosystems as a
way of improving rural households.
According to a new report, entitled
`The Wealth of the Poor` and
produced by the Washington-based WRI
in collaboration with UNDP, UNEP and
the World Bank, targeted investments
in ecosystems in developing
countries could change peoples
lives.
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World Leaders Urged to Finance
Ecosystem Restoration as Root to
Better Rural Lives
UNEP Press
Release (9/1/2005) A new report on the environment was
described today “as essential
reading for any world leader serious
about defeating poverty”. Klaus
Toepfer, Executive Director of the
United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP), said the study entitled The
Wealth of the Poor clearly
demonstrated “the importance of
healthy forests, marine
environments, freshwaters and other
key ecosystems for meeting
internationally agreed development
targets”.
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Environment key to helping poor
BBC (UK)
(8/31/2005) The key Millennium Goal of halving
poverty in a decade cannot be met
without better environmental
protection, according to a new
report. The World Resources 2005
document says that most of the
world's poor depend on nature for
their income.
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How business can create a roadmap to
a sustainable future
Øfootprint
(8/31/2005) A new in-depth report on the current
and possible future state of the
Earth’s ecosystems and their impact
on our well-being highlights the
challenges and opportunities this
presents for business.
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DEVELOPMENT: Connecting Nature,
Power and Poverty
Inter Press
Service News Agency (8/31/2005)
In a significant challenge to
neo-liberal orthodoxy, a major
Washington-based think tank is
calling for greater local and
democratic control over
environmental resources as the most
effective means to lift some two
billion people out of rural poverty.
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Forgive Us Our Debts-Why aren't
conservationists fighting poverty?
GRIST
Magazine (8/11/2005) It's a shame. Conservationists are
sitting on the sidelines while the
Big Game unfolds before our eyes. A
major campaign is under way to
change the terms of development,
alleviate crushing debt, and help
poor people around the world live
better lives. Successes are being
racked up. And conservation and
environmental groups are nowhere to
be seen.
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Roadmap guides agriculture to 2020
Manila
Bulletin Online (8/9/2005)
A key farm roadmap called
"Philippine Agriculture 2020"
(PA2020) is seen to bring about a
stunning rise in farm growth by
2020, lifting agriculture’s gross
value added to P422 billion by 2020
from a 2000-2004 base of P206.2
billion or a yearly seven percent
growth. Initiated by the National
Academy of Science and Technology’s
(NAST) agricultural sciences
division, PA2020 is being drawn in
coordination with the Department of
Agriculture and its attached
agencies, Department of Environment
and Natural Resources, Department of
Science and Technology, and
Department of Land Reform.
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'Ecosystem services': a vital term
in policy debates
SciDevNet -
Editorial; Walter Reid, Robert
Watson and Harold Mooney (8/4/2005)
Walter Reid, Robert Watson and
Harold Mooney defend the use of the
term 'ecosystem services' as an
essential way of communicating to
policymakers the importance of the
benefits that people receive from
ecosystems.
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Scarce, degraded land is spark for
Africa conflict
REUTERS
(South Africa) (7/22/2005)
On a continent where a man's worth
is often measured by his cattle,
rivalry for the beasts and the
degraded land they graze on is
sparking lethal conflicts across
Africa. The Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment, compiled by U.N.
agencies and other groups, says
drylands occupy more than 41 percent
of the world's land area and are
home to more than 2 billion people,
some of them the world's most
impoverished.
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Earthwatch Calls On Private Sector
To Act On MEA Business & Industry
Synthesis Report
Earthwatch
(Europe) (7/18/2005) A new scientific report released
this week reinforces the need for
business and industry action to
protect natural systems for the sake
of continued business success as
well as the operating environment
they require to function
effectively. Major changes that will
have a profound affect on business
include climate change, loss of
biodiversity and water scarcity; all
essential for human well being,
according to Earthwatch Institute
(Europe).
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G8 Leaders Told It Pays to Protect
Forests
Associated
Press (Newsday) (7/6/2005)
The U.N. environment chief has a
message for leaders of the world's
major industrialized nations:
scientists have shown that it pays
to preserve forests, coastal waters
and marshes. Klaus Toepfer made the
case that investing in the
environment will go a long way
toward meeting U.N. goals to reduce
poverty, supply clean drinking water
and fight the spread of infectious
diseases.
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La mortalidad infantil en países
pobres se duplica en tierras secas
Diarohoy.net
(6/19/2005) La mortalidad infantil en las
tierras secas de los países en vías
de desarrollo alcanza a unos 54
niños de cada mil nacimientos, el
doble que las zonas con agua, según
un informe difundido hoy por la
organización Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment.
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Desertificação e poeira representam
ameaça global
TERRA
(Brazil) (6/17/2005) A desertificação ameaça expulsar
milhões de pessoas de suas casas nas
próximas décadas, e enormes nuvens
de poeiras podem afetar a saúde de
pessoas a milhares de quilômetros de
distância, afirmou hoje um relatório
internacional. "A desertificação
surge como um problema global que
afeta a todos", disse Zafar Adeel,
diretor-assistente da academia
hídrica da Universidade da ONU e um
dos principais autores do relatório
que resume o trabalho de 1,36 mil
cientistas de 95 países.
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Desertification, dust 'global
threats'
NEWS.com.au
(6/17/2005) DESERTIFICATION threatens to drive
millions of people from their homes
in coming decades while vast dust
storms can damage the health of
people continents away, an
international report said today.
"Desertification has emerged as a
global problem affecting everyone,"
said Zafar Adeel, assistant director
of the UN University's water academy
and a lead author of a report
drawing on the work of 1360
scientists in 95 nations.
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World's dry regions set to expand
BBC News (UK)
(6/17/2005) Desertification is a growing menace
that puts at risk global efforts to
tackle poverty and hunger, a new
report from a coalition of
scientists states. The group says
bad crop management and the misuse
of irrigation in a number of regions
is putting unsustainable pressure on
dryland areas.
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La désertification, menace majeure
pour l'environnement
AFP (France)
(6/16/2005) La désertification croissante dans
le monde représente l'un des plus
grands problèmes environnementaux et
hypothèque la lutte contre la
pauvreté, met en garde un rapport
des Nations unies publié jeudi. La
désertification, définie comme une
dégradation des terres arides et
semi-arides résultant de facteurs
climatiques et d'activités humaines,
"compte parmi les plus grands défis
pour l'environnement de notre
planète et nos sociétés", souligne
le document réalisé dans le cadre de
l'évaluation de l'écosystème pour le
millénaire conduit surtout par
l'Onu.
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History shows that environmentalists
haven't cried wolf
The New
Zealand Herald (6/2/2005) Colin James' Perspectives page
diagnosis of the environmental
movement betrays a doctor who has
not been listening attentively
enough to, or examining closely
enough, the patient he seeks to
treat. His criticisms of the
environmental movement - and by
extension the Green Party - boil
down to two claims: first, that we
are overly alarmist and negative;
and secondly that we instinctively
favour regulation over market
mechanisms in solving the problems
we perceive. He portrays the Greens
as out of step with the times -
modern society being unerringly
positive and market-focused and we
being negative and
regulation-focused. To call us
alarmist is to suggest that
environmentalists keep crying wolf
about problems that never
materialise. The problem with this
argument is that even a cursory
glance at history illustrates how
baseless it is.
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UN-backed ecological report warns of
potential new diseases and ‘dead
zones’
UN News
Centre (5/13/2005) The emergence of new diseases,
sudden changes in water quality,
creation of coastal “dead zones,”
the collapse of fisheries and shifts
in regional climate are just some of
the potential consequences of
humankind’s degradation of the
planet’s ecosystems, according to a
new United Nations-backed report
launched today.
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تهويد القدس بين الكنيست الإسرائيلي
والكونجرس الأمريكي
Al Ahram
(Egypt) (5/13/2005) يتنافس الكنيست الإسرائيلي والكونجرس
الأمريكي علي تهويد القدس العربية
وجعلها عاصمة موحدة وأبدية
لإسرائيل, ويتباري المجلسان(
الكنيست والكونجرس) في السنوات
العشر الأخيرة في إصدار المزيد من
القوانين التي تحاول إسباغ شرعية
إسرائيلية زائفة علي المدينة
المقدسة, وليس أدل علي هذا من
محاولات الكونجرس الأخيرة لتمرير
مشروع قانون جديد بالاعتراف بالقدس
كعاصمة لإسرائيل لا تقبل التقسيم,
وأن يتم نقل موقع السفارة الأمريكية
في إسرائيل من تل أبيب إلي القدس في
مدة لا تزيد علي180 يوما قبل
الاعتراف بالدولة الفلسطينية, وأكثر
من هذا فإن مشروع القرار يسجل مزاعم
وادعاءات تاريخية باطلة لا سند لها في
كتب التاريخ وبمختلف اللغات( راجع
مقال السفير محمد بسيوني المنشور
بالصفحة الأحد الماضي).
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Assessing global environment
The Navhind
Times (India) (4/26/2005) For the first time, a group of
scientists has accomplished the
daunting task of evaluating the
status of all of the ecosystems on
Earth, and the outlook is troubling.
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Environmental Economics: Rescuing
environmentalism
The Economist
(UK) (4/22/2005) Market forces could prove the
environment's best friend—if only
greens could learn to love them.
-
The environment On the edge of
destiny
Ithaca
Journal (Editorial) (4/18/2005)
Through the arrogance of hindsight,
all Americans find some things hard
to imagine.
-
Earth watch
The Observer
Magazine (UK) (4/17/2005) Mother nature has 38 billion years'
experience in conservation, so she's
an ideal source of inspiration.
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国連、地球保護を強化
China Radio
International (Japan) (4/12/2005)
国連およびその関連機構はこのほど、一連の研究報告を発表し、人類の活動が環境と生態系システムに厳しい脅威をもたらしていると指摘し、行動を起こし、地球を守るよう各国に呼びかけています。
-
More health problems to come our way
soon
Sun Star
(Philippines) (4/9/2005) Some 60 percent of the benefits that
the global ecosystem provides to
support life on Earth (such as fresh
water, clean air and a relatively
stable climate) are being degraded
or used unsustainably, according the
recently released Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment (MA).
-
Declare war on threat to ecosystems
Financial
Times (Letter) (4/8/2005) The UN Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment should be compulsory
reading for governments, citizens
and business everywhere.
-
Wake-up call on environment
Trinidad &
Tobago Express (4/8/2005) Even as disaster preparedness
organisations are meeting in
Trinidad and Tobago to coordinate
their responses to future crises
against the backdrop of the
devastation caused by Hurricane
Ivan, the world at large is being
called upon to consider what has
been described as "the most
comprehensive survey ever into the
state of the planet".
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推动循环经济发展成为工作重点
NTEM.com
(China) (4/8/2005) 由科技部和国家环保总局共同主办的“千年生态系统评估(MA)成果发布会暨中国西部生态系统综合评估项目(MAWEC)成果发布会”于日前在北京举行。科技部部长徐冠华在致辞中表示,加强生态建设和环境保护,推动循环经济的发展,是未来5到10年工作的重要内容。
-
「世界の生態系の3分の2が破壊の危機」、国連環境計画が報告書
Nikkei BP
(Japan) (4/8/2005) 国連環境計画(UNEP)はこのほど、世界の生態系の現状に関する報告書を発表した。このなかで世界中の生態系の約3分の2が破壊の危機にあることが明らかになった。過去50年間に行われた生態系の改変は、人類史上最も大規模なものという。
-
Assessment a reminder of plight
facing environment
SABC News
(South Africa) (4/7/2005) The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
provides a timely reminder of the
plight facing the global
environment. But its scare tactics
could alienate those whose support
is needed to reverse current trends.
-
淡水、大気と水の制御など 生態系機能の60%が劣化 国連大学、ミレニアム評価事務局 報告書で警告
Environmental
News (Japan) (4/6/2005) 国連大学高等研究所とミレニアム生態系評価(MA)事務局は先月30日、「ミレニアム生態系評価プロジェクト総合報告書東京発表会」を東京都渋谷区の国連大学ビルで開催した。報告書によると、淡水、大気と水の制御、地域の気候など生態系の機能は、約60%が劣化、または非持続的に利用されていると指摘している。検討した24の生態系機能のうち、15の生態系における機能劣化の進行は、地球気候を突然変化させる可能性を増加していると警告を発している。
-
Så använder vi jorden
Ny Teknik
(Sweden) (4/6/2005) År 2001 sjösatte Kofi Annan i FNs
regi Millennium Ecosystem
Assessment, en gigantisk
världsomfattande inventering för att
se hur jordens resurser används.
Sammanlagt 1 360 forskare från 95
länder (varav tre från Sverige) har
deltagit i undersökningen. Nu har
deras slutrapport kommit. Resultatet
är både uppmuntrande och nedslående.
-
A healthy planet can fight poverty
SABC News
(South Africa) (4/5/2005) Preserving healthy ecosystems is
essential for alleviating global
poverty, according to reports on the
Science and Development Network
website.
-
Report Tallies Hidden Costs of Human
Assault on Nature
The New York
Times (US) (4/5/2005) For decades, scientists have been
warning that human activities were
extinguishing species, altering the
climate and degrading landscapes.
Now a group of experts has reframed
the issue.
-
Tipping the balance
The Star
Online (Malaysia) (4/5/2005)
Man is living on borrowed time. A
study examining the planet’s life
support systems has found that
two-thirds of the services provided
by nature to mankind has been
damaged by human pressure. And the
harmful effects of the degradation
will get worse in the next 50 years.
-
Planet in peril: Humans push natural
systems to the brink
New Scientist
(4/2/2005) It has cost $24 million and taken
more than 1300 scientists in 95
countries four years to put
together. This week, the first ever
global inventory of natural
resources was finally published. Its
overwhelming conclusion: we are
living way beyond our means.
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L'épuisement de la nature menace le
progrès
Le Monde
(France) (4/1/2005) Pour la première fois, 1 300
chercheurs ont dressé un bilan de
l'état des écosystèmes de la planète.
L'augmentation de la production
agricole a réduit la faim, mais
l'activité humaine dégrade
l'environnement. A terme, c'est le
bien-être même de l'homme qui va se
détériorer Plus de 1 300
scientifiques originaires de 95 pays
ont élaboré à la demande de l'ONU un
rapport sur l'état des ÉCOSYSTÈMES
de la planète.
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Risorsi Naturali: Il futuro
dell'uomo
Modus Vivendi
(Italy) (4/1/2005) Le Nazioni Unite hanno promosso la
più grande ricerca mondiale per
valutare lo stato degli ecosistemi e
delle risorse naturali e individuare
le possibilità di azione per un
futuro sostenibile. Possibilità che
esistono e che richiedono la
partecipazione di tutti
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動物10-30% 絶滅の危機 森林破壊で新疾病も 生態系悪化 国連が報告
Shimbun
Akahata (Japan) (4/1/2005)
国連は30日、地球規模で初めて行われた生態系評価「ミレニアム生態系評価総合報告」を公表しました。同報告は人類の活動の結果、地球上の生命を支えている生態系機能の約60%が悪化の一途をたどり、向こう50年間にはさらにひどくなると指摘。「このまま進行すれば、貧困、飢餓克服をめざす2000年合意の国連ミレニアム開発目標達成の障害になる」と警告しました。
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Humans are slowly destroying the
Earth
Pretoria News
(South Africa) (3/31/2005)
Planet Earth stands on the cusp of
disaster and people should no longer
take it for granted that their
children and grandchildren will
survive in the
environmentally-degraded world of
the 21st century.
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Verden lever over evne
Dagsavisen
(Norway) (3/31/2005) Ifølge en omfattende FN-studie som
ble lagt fram i går, er to
tredjedeler av naturens
livsnødvendige maskineri skadet og
svekket av menneskelig rovdrift.
Skoger, hav, elver, grunnvann og
jordbruksland er i fare. Hvis ikke
utviklingen snur, står hele
økosystemet i fare. «Vi lever
bokstavelig talt på lånt tid», heter
det i rapporten.
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全球评估结果显示地球“健康”欠佳
Nanfang Daily
(China) (3/31/2005) 北京消息 地球“健康”状况如何?经过95个国家1300多名科学家连续4年的工作,科学家发现,过去50年,人类对生态系统的影响比以往任何时期都要快速和广泛,地球生态系统的服务功能正在不断退化。
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Humanos esgotam capital natural da
Terra, dizem cientistas
Folha de São
Paulo (Brazil) (3/30/2005)
A humanidade está fazendo um saque a
descoberto no grande (porém finito)
banco dos ecossistemas globais. O
resultado é um colapso futuro na
capacidade do planeta de fornecer
bens e serviços naturais aos seres
humanos, cujo primeiro efeito
prático deve ser a impossibilidade
de atingir as metas das Nações
Unidas de combate à fome em 2015.
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Forskere slår alarm om økosystemer
Aftenposten
Nettutgaven (Norway) (3/30/2005)
Verdens økosystemer kneler under vår
jakt på mat, brensel og ferskvann.
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Jordkloden truet av miljøkollaps:
Rovdrift på jordens økosystemer
VG Nett
(Norway) (3/30/2005) Nå er miljøet på jordkloden så
presset av menneskelig rovdrift at
FNs kamp mot fattigdom står i fare.
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Damage to ecosystems poses growing
threat to human health
World Health
Organization (3/30/2005) A new report shows that some 60% of
the benefits that the global
ecosystem provides to support life
on Earth (such as fresh water, clean
air and a relatively stable climate)
are being degraded or used
unsustainably. In the report,
scientists working on the Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment (MA) warn that
harmful consequences of this
degradation to human health are
already being felt and could grow
significantly worse over the next 50
years.
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1360名科学家认为地球不“健康”
Science and
technology daily(China) (3/30/2005)
本报北京3月30日电
“过去50年,人类改变生态系统的速度和范围前所未有。在未来50年内将进一步加剧。国际自然与自然资源保护联盟首席科学家杰夫•迈克尼利在今天的千年生态系统评估(MA)成果发布会上发出这样的警告。
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人类欠自然一笔巨账 三分之二地球资源已快用光
Dongfang
Zaobao (East China Morning Post)
(3/30/2005) 来自全球95 个国家的1360
名科学家通力合作,历时四年完成的“新千年生态系统评估”报告(MillenniumEcosystemAssessment),于3
月30 日
正式公布。报告警告说,由于人类活动的干预,三分之二支持地球生命系
统运转的自然资源已被严重破坏,几近耗光。
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生態系資源の6割に損失 国連の評価報告書が警告
Kyodo Tsushin
(Yahoo Japan News) Japan (3/30/2005)
国連は30日、食糧や水資源など自然の生態系から人類が受けている恩恵のうち、約60%が過去50年間の人間の活動で大きく損なわれたと警告する生態系評価報告書を発表した。
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