Guardian. 26 August 2002. Ecological decline 'far worse' than official estimates.

JOHANNESBURG -- The real level of world inequality and environmental
degradation may be far worse than official estimates, according to a
leaked document prepared for the world's richest countries and seen by
the Guardian.

It includes new estimates that the world lost almost 10% of its forests
in the past 10 years; that carbon dioxide emissions leading to global
warming are expected to rise by 33% in rich countries and 100% in the
rest of the world in the next 18 years; and that more than 30% more
fresh water will be needed by 2020.  

The background paper for last month's Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development pre-Johannesburg meeting on sustainable
development draws on many previously unseen UN, World Bank, World Trade
Organisation, and academic papers.  

Although the governments of the world's 22 richest nations who make up
the OECD have seen the document, many of the calculations are new and
considerably different from their own.  

It calculates that less than 0.1% of of the average income of the 22
members of the OECD actually finds its way to the world's low income
countries and just 0.05% went to   the least developed countries. 

Recent US and EU initiatives, it says, "will not meet targets at any
time soon." 

Donor assistance for environmental protection and basic social services
has declined to less than 15% of all aid compared with 35% at the time
of the last earth summit in 1992.  

The OECD paper calculates that rich countries now subsidise their
industries by up to $1,000m a year, including more than $300bn in
agriculture. 

This, it says, is having increasing effects on the development of poor
countries. and on environmental degradation. 

If unrestricted market access were given to just the four richest
economies in the world, it would increase per capita incomes of more
than 2 billion people in the world's most populated countries by 4% a
year.  

Meanwhile, the paper finds that foreign assistance from western European
countries, including private funding and direct investment encouraged
through national policies, was more globally oriented in 1900 than it is
today.  

It says that if the EU, Canada, Japan and the US allowed migrants to
make up 4% of their workforce, the returns to poor countries could be
$160bn to 200bn a year -- far more than any debt relief could provide.  

The paper's calculations of environmental degradation suggest the many
conventions, treaties and intergovernmental agreements signed in the
past decade have had little or no effect on stopping the rush for timber
and mineral resources in the developing world and that extinction of
species is now reaching 11% of birds, 18%-24% of mammals, 5% of fish,
and 8% of plants.  

Over the next 18 years, says the report, global energy use is expected
to expand by more than 50%, and by more than 100% in China, east Asia
and the former Soviet Union. 

Transport is by then expected to account for more than half of global
oil demand.  

"The non-renewable fossil fuel resource base is expected to be
sufficient to meet demand to 2020 though problems beyond that point are
foreseen for natural gas and possibly oil," the report says.  

Environment and development groups yesterday reacted to the report with
horror.  

"The rich world knows this is happening," said the chair of Friends of
the Earth International, Ricardo Navarrez. 

"We in poor countries have always known the climate is changing, aid
does not come, and the poor are getting poorer. The richest countries
are here in Johannesburg to keep the system going." 


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Barry Stoller
http://www.utopia2000.org
The NEW ProletarianNews

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