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New Reports Released as Rio +20 Earth Summit Approaches
In 1992, President George H.W. Bush, attended the original Rio Earth Summit and pledged America's dedication to reducing ecological degradation. Fast forward 20 years and we are currently looking at the highest harmful emission rates and most pertinent threats to our globe. In a little less than two weeks, the Rio +20 Earth Summit will attempt to rekindle the worldwide efforts in confronting current environmental problems. Now, the one thing the event is missing is an RSVP from President Barack Obama.
As part of the lead up to the Rio +20 earth summit, the journal Nature has released new information and papers regarding the welfare of the environment. In a paper published yesterday, scientists from Chile, Spain, Canada, Finland, and the United States highlight the changes in ecosystems throughout the world, due to the expanding of societies and developed land on ice-free landscapes. Scientists caution that with the continual changes, the warning signs may begin to appear within the next few generations. In the past, the concerns on the environment and the calls to action have been focused on an effect in the distant future. However, these new papers begin to focus the attention on not only the issues and the causes, but the close time frame in which they can begin to take effect. Though the New York Times acknowledges that these reports may be qualified as "alarmism," their importance remains- the concerns to our environment are growing and we, as a world community, need to do something about it.
On May 18th, Citizens for Global Solutions, along with 21 other activists groups, sent a letter to President Obama expressing the importance of his attendance at the Rio +20 Earth Summit. Within the letter, the organizations state,
"Your presence at this Summit would signal its critical importance to all Americans, demonstrate our country's deep concern over urgent global issues that will inevitably affect our security and well-being, and highlight our nation's determination to be a contender in the race to a low-carbon green economy. As United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon stated recently, your participation will be "crucial... This is true both for the success of the summit and progress toward a sustainable future for everyone on this fragile planet, and for your Administration's goals on jobs and clean energy here at home."
The combination of the importance between creating a cleaner America and influencing international policy make Obama an invaluable participant in the Rio +20 Summit. Without strong U.S. involvement in the international meeting, how can we expect the world to take responsibility in the conservation of our planet?
The well being of the globe cannot be tackled by a few nations or activist groups. All nations attending the event need to bond together to make an effective and forward thinking plan. To further encourage Obama's RSVP to the Rio Earth Summit 2012, please click here sign our petition.
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has launched the "Future We Want" campaign for 'Rio+20,' to be held in Brazil on 20-22 June 2012.
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Megan Fantoni
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Comments
If we agree to “think
If we agree to “think globally” about climate destabillization and at least one of its consensually validated principal agencies, it becomes evident that riveting attention on more and more seemingly perpetual GROWTH could be a grave mistake because we are denying how economic and population growth in the communities in which we live cannot continue as it has until now. Each village’s resources are being dissipated, each town’s environment degraded and every city’s fitness as place for our children to inhabit is being threatened. To proclaim something like, ‘the meat of any community plan for the future is, of course, growth’ fails to acknowledge that many villages, towns and cities are already ‘built out’, and also ‘filled in’ with people and pollutants. If the quality of life we enjoy now is to be maintained for the children, then limits on economic and population growth will have to be set. By so doing, we choose to “act locally” and sustainably.
More economic and population growth are soon to become no longer sustainable in many too many places on the surface of Earth because biological constraints and physical limitations are immutably imposed upon ever increasing human consumption, production and population activities of people in many communities where most of us reside. Inasmuch as the Earth is finite with frangible environs, there comes a point at which GROWTH is unsustainable. There is much work to done locally. But that effort cannot reasonably begin without sensibly limiting economic and population growth.
Problems worldwide that are derived from conspicuous overconsumption and rapacious plundering of limited resources, rampant overproduction of unnecessary stuff, and rapid human overpopulation of the Earth can be solved by human thought, judgment and action. After all, the things we have done can be undone. Think of it as ‘the great unwinding of human folly’. Like deconstructing the Tower of Babel. Any species that gives itself the moniker, Homo sapiens sapiens, can do that much, can it not?
“We face a wide-open opportunity to break with the old ways of doing the town’s business…..” That is a true statement. But the necessary “break with the old ways” of continous economic and population growth is not what is occurring. There is a call for a break with the old ways, but the required changes in behavior are not what is being proposed as we plan for the future. What is being proposed and continues to occur is more of the same, old business-as-usual overconsumption, overproduction and overpopulation activities, the very activities that appear to be growing unsustainbly. More business-as-usual could soon become patently unsustainable, both locally and globally. A finite planet with the size, composition and environs of the Earth and a community with the boundaries, limited resources and wondrous climate of villages, towns and cities where we live may not be able to sustain much longer the economic and population growth that is occurring on our watch. Perhaps necessary changes away from UNSUSTAINABLE GROWTH and toward sustainable lifestyles and right-sized corporate enterprises are in the offing.
Think globally while there is still time and act locally before it is too late for human action to make any difference in the clear and presently dangerous course of unfolding human-induced ecological events, both in our planetary home and in our villages, towns and cities. If we choose to review the perspective of a ‘marketwatcher’ who can see what is actually before our eyes, perhaps all of us can get a little more reality-oriented to the world we inhabit and a less deceived by an attractive, flawed ideology that is highly touted and widely shared but evidently illusory and patently unsustainable.
http://www.marketwatch.com/Story/story/print?guid=5690DE5A-B033-11E1-AB8...
This situation is no longer deniable. During my lifetime, many have understood the Global Predicament we are facing now, but only a few ‘voices in the wilderness’ were willing to speak out loudly and clearly about what everyone can see. It is not a pretty sight. The human community has precipitated a planetary emergency that only humankind is capable of undoing. The present ‘Unsustainable Path’ has to be abandoned in favor of a “road less travelled by”. It is late; there is no time left to waste. Perhaps now we will gather our remarkably abundant, distinctly human resources and respond ably to the daunting, human-induced, global challenges before us, the ones that threaten life as we know it and the integrity of Earth as a fit place for human habitation. Many voices, many more voices are needed for making necessary changes.