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Worldwatch Institute Earth Day Report Card 'We have failed to reverse the trends that gave rise to Earth Day 30 years ago' April 5, 2000-While we receive high marks for our ability to turn the Earth's resources to our immediate use, we are failing to protect the Earth from ecological decline, according to the 30 year ecological report card issued in the latest issue of World Watch magazine. The report charts a disconnect between the current growth in the world's economy and the health of the Earth's failing ecology. The number of cars, people, and fishing boats has boomed, but at the same time forest cover, farmland per person, and rates of fish catch have plummeted. The destructive trends that sparked the first Earth Day in 1970 continue to cause massive ecological decline, finds the report.
In looking to the future, the report offers an outline of events-past and future-that could turn the negative trends around in the next 30 years. These shifts include the worldwide rise of citizen groups in response to corporate and government shortcomings, the potential for the Precautionary Principle to play a major role in the outcome of climate negotiations, and the worldwide spread of micropower-small-scale renewable energy that is increasingly providing off-the-grid energy in countries from the Dominican Republic to Zimbabwe. For more information, see the Worldwatch Institute Earth Day web page. |
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