Earth’s environment getting worse, not better, says WWF ahead of Rio+20

A new report from WWF called “Living Planet” says that 20 years on from the Rio Earth summit, the environment of the planet is getting worse not better.  There is swelling human population, mass migration to cities, increasing energy use and soaring CO2 emissions which mean humanity is putting a greater squeeze on the planet’s resources then ever before. Particularly hard hit is the diversity of animals and plants. The report estimates that global demand for natural resources has doubled since 1996 and that it now takes 1.5 years to regenerate the renewable resources used in one year by humans. It takes 18 months for the planet to remove the CO2 produced in one year. By 2030, the report predicts it will take the equivalent of 2 planets to meet the current demand for resources. And the trend is getting worse, fast. Little is being done to slow the rate of damage.

 

 

Earth’s environment getting worse, not better, says WWF ahead of Rio+20

Swelling population, mass migration to cities, increasing energy use and soaring CO2 emissions squeeze planet’s resource

15 May 2012  (Guardian)

Twenty years on from the Rio Earth summit, the environment of the planet is getting worse not better, according to a report from WWF.

Swelling population, mass migration to cities, increasing energy use and soaring carbon dioxide emissions mean humanity is putting a greater squeeze on the planet’s resources then ever before. Particularly hard hit is the diversity of animals and plants, upon which many natural resources such as clean water are based.

“The Rio+20 conference next month is an opportunity for the world to get serious about the need for development to become sustainable. Our report indicates that we haven’t yet done that since the last Rio summit,” said David Nussbaum, WWF-UK chief executive.

The latest Living Planet report, published on Tuesday, estimates that global demand for natural resources has doubled since 1996 and that it now takes 1.5 years to regenerate the renewable resources used in one year by humans.

By 2030, the report predicts it will take the equivalent of two planets to meet the current demand for resources.

Most alarming, says the report, is that many of these changes have accelerated in the past decade, despite the plethora of international conventions signed since the initial Rio Summit in 1992. Climate-warmingcarbon emissions have increased 40% in the past 20 years, but two-thirds of that rise occurred in the past decade.

The report, compiled by WWF, the Zoological Society of London and theGlobal Footprint Network, compiles data from around the world on the ecological footprints of each country and the status of resources like water and forests. It also examines changes in populations of 2,688 animal species, with the latest available data coming from 2008.

The eighth report of its kind, the new Living Planet document, comes five weeks before Rio+20, the latest United Nations conference onsustainable development.

Nussbaum said: “We have taken some important steps forward: the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change is an important step, a way in which the world is seeking to come to agreement about [cutting] greenhouse gases. The Convention on Biological Diversity is an important way of the world identifying steps that can be taken in protecting biodiversity. But the pace in both cases is rather glacial. And unfortunately our lifestyles and the consequences of those are having an impact more quickly than the acts we are taking to protect the planet.”

Wealthy countries have seen some improvement, with the Living Planet biodiversity index, rising 7% since 1970, as nature reserves and protections were introduced. But the biodiversity index has dropped by 60% in developing countries, where people depend more on nature. Demographic shifts have had a significant impact. The world’s cities have seen a 45% increase in population since 1992, according to the Global Footprint Network, and urban residents typically have a much larger carbon footprint than their rural counterparts. The average Beijinger, says WWF, has a footprint three times the Chinese average, due to factors including private car use.

Water security is a growing concern in many parts of the world as population and agriculture drives demand, placing enormous stress on freshwater ecosystems and fishing zones, according to data from WWF.

“The Living Planet report shows that the biggest single drop in the living planet index is for freshwater species in tropical areas, which have shown a decline of 70% since 1970,” said David Tickner, head of freshwater at WWF-UK.

A note of hope for the future, said the authors, is that the world could see peak population sometime this century. Though the population hit 7 billion in 2011, the UNEP reports the population growth rate has fallen from 1.65% to 1.2% since 1992, with women now having an average of 2.5 children.

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/may/15/earth-environment-wwf-rio20?newsfeed=true


 

WWF LIVING PLANET REPORT 2012 – DOWNLOAD

  • The full 2012 Living Planet Report

    PDF 18.51 MB

    The only mention of aviation is to say it will need bioenergy in future.

  • 2012 Living Planet Report Summary Booklet

    PDF 7.55 MB

LIVING PLANET REPORT 2012 AND RIO+20

  • Living Planet Report 2012 – On the Road to Rio+20

    PDF 7.82 MB

 

 


 

 

WWF: We will need two Earths by 2030

Landmark report calls for immediate action after revealing soaring levels of consumption and collapsing biodiversity

By Will Nichols

15 May 2012 ( Business Greenn)

Humanity is currently using 50% more resources than the Earth can provide and by 2030 the combined capacity of two planets will not be sufficient to support global demand unless a step change in consumption patterns can be delivered.

That is the chilling conclusion of the latest Living Planet report from campaign group WWF, a health check on over 2,600 species worldwide, which shows a 30 per cent decline in biodiversity in the last 40 years and echoes the warnings of the last edition in October 2010.

The report argues that the deterioration in services provided by ecosystems and scarcity of resources not only threatens food and water supplies, but also the way businesses and industry operate, including the planet’s ability to deal with carbon emissions.

WWF says it is currently taking one and a half years for the Earth to absorb the CO2 produced each year, leading to rising concentrations of greenhouse gases, while natural capital is being consumed far faster than it can be replenished.

The report also again stresses that consumption levels vary enormously from country-to-country, highlighting that the per capita ecological footprint of a US citizen is six times that of an Indonesian national. As such, if everyone lived as they do in the US, a total of four Earths would be needed to meet the demands placed on nature.

Mark Driscoll, head of food at WWF-UK, said unsustainable consumption patterns were further amplified by high levels of waste resources.

Speaking to reporters, he said as much as 30 per cent of food grown around the world is wasted, while in the UK alone we throw out seven million tonnes of edible food each year. With the global population expected to reach over nine billion by the middle of the century, this type of unsustainable lifestyle cannot continue WWF argues.

Ahead of the Rio+20 conference next month, the NGO is calling for 20 per cent of land, freshwater and marine areas to be protected, to ensure natural capital is better preserved.

The group is arguing that such a move could be justified by the development of a new system for measuring the economic value of natural capital.

It is also calling for a raft of new environmental targets, including goals to minimise food waste, curb consumption, and decrease energy demand by 15 per cent against 2005 levels by 2050.

David Nussbaum, chief executive at WWF-UK, said the world could still develop sustainable economic models, but businesses and governments had to take urgent action.

“It’s not too late to reverse the trend,” he said. “But it will require action comparable to addressing the systemic financial problems from a few years ago. We have got to get more serious. We want government and businesses to step up and work out what action they can take individually and collectively.”

David Tickner, head of freshwater at WWF-UK, added that while some companies were making strides to reduce their environmental impacts, many others had a long way to go to deliver sustainable business models.

“Companies are part of the problem, but they need to be part of the solution as well,” he said. “What we’re seeing now is companies looking at water very differently [and] really seeing water as an increasing strategic risk.

“An increasing number of companies around the world… [are] beginning to say a bit of water efficiency in factories and CSR is not enough. [They] have got to have a risk mitigation strategy [and] acknowledge that a lot of the risk factors are shared with other companies. More advanced companies are working together. That’s a profound change in thinking.”

http://www.businessgreen.com/bg/news/2174612/wwf-earths-2030