TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Volume 3, No. 12 May- June 1998
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Sustainable
Development: Sharing Abundance not partaking of poverty Editorial,
by Najib Saab |
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8 |
The
House Garden You can transform your garden or backyard into a
miniature natural environment |
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15 |
ESCWA'S
Environmental Concerns in the Arab World Interview with ESCWA'S
secretary general Dr. Hazim Biblawi |
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16 |
Cover
Story: Poison Trade o Will the Developing World Remain a Dump of
Hazardous Wastes? o Chemical Pollution Recognizes No Boundaries o
Waste Dumps: Potential Volcanoes |
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24 |
Asbestos:
Uses and Threats Asbestos fibers cause cancer. Using it cannot be
safe enough |
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30 |
Building With Earth Rebirth of an ancient environmentally friendly
architecture |
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36 |
Environmental Protection in the United Arab Emirates
Forests in the Desert
ADNOC Group: Environmental Protection is a priority Biosaline
Agriculture Center |
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44 |
The
Air We Breathe Microbes, radioactive matter and industrial and car
emissions pollute the air |
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46 |
The
Environmental Report Hazards and measures that should be declared by
industrial companies |
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48 |
Pesticides
Pollute our Food While protecting the crops, pesticides can cause
health problems |
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54 |
Cedars
in Chouf A natural reserve in Lebanon, sanctuary for 2,000,000
cedars |
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"Return
to Nature" Environmental contest, 6 - Green Quotes, 12 - Arab
Environment News, 14 - World Environment News, 22 - Environment Market,
28 - Natural Medicine, 34 - NGO News, Consumer Tips, 52 - Environment &
Development Forum, 60 - Questions & Answers, 62 - Green Library, 63
- Calendar, 64 - Subscription Form, 65
Supplement: The Young Environmentalist
1 Lesson of the Frogs
2 The Polluting Car (short story)
4 Environment Club
6 Get to Know Your Environment
7 Fun With Nature
8 Green Bandar
FROM THE EDITOR:
Sharing abundance, not poverty
by Najib Saab
Resolutions of some international conferences and meetings on
environment and development, are almost an invitation for poor countries
to perish of thirst, starvation and disease. They call for reducing
water consumption and imposing high taxation on water, in countries
where millions of people lack clean water supplies and where the annual
water consumption per person is less than the weekly consumption of a
citizen in an industrialized country. They call for restrictions on
agriculture and food production operation, to save bio-diversity and
soil quality, in countries where the population suffers malnutrition.
Slogans propagated by environmentalists in industrialized countries
cannot be blindly adopted in poor countries where priorities might be
entirely different. We cannot expect poor people striving to feed their
children with the minimum, which in many cases is not available, to
invest in environmental measures designed for the future. They first
should have confidence that there will be a future.
It is true that water is a major global issue. The latest figures
indicate that more than 1bn people, 20 per cent of the world population,
suffer severe shortages in clean drinking water, and 50 per cent lack
sufficient water to meet minimum sanitary and health requirements. This
problem is expected to aggravate during the next 25 years, when one
third of the world population will face water crises.
It is also
true that millions of hectares are transformed annually into deserts
due to intensive and inappropriate land use. Many species are
becoming extinct with urbanization, industrial development,
exploitation of forests and resources, as well as a wide variety of
pressing environmental problems such as river, marine, air and soil
pollution.
All these are undeniable and persistent problems requiring prompt
solutions. But how can restrictions on water use and food production
be imposed on thirsty and hungry people without providing
alternatives? Why is consumption reduction being marketed as the
only solution? While economy in the use of natural resources is
vital, implemented alone it will only lead to more need and poverty,
because it means sharing the decreasing available recourses by an
increasing number of people. This humiliates human dignity and
capabilities, and jeopardizes the rights of the poor.
International conferences are rather expected to adopt programmes
to transfer and tailor technologies to beneficiary developing
countries. This way, environment conservation will be achieved with
due respect to developing local capabilities, and safeguarding
resources will run parallel to developing new appropriate production
techniques which ensure abundance.
Arab countries short in fresh water are all located on seas. Many
oil-producing countries desalinate sea water via distillation or
reverse osmosis processes. All desalination techniques currently
used are very costly and cannot be made accessible to all. They are
fully based on imported technologies developed in countries where
fresh water is plenty and desalination is not needed. Why not invest
huge resources in research programmes to develop cheap desalination
techniques? For example, can solar energy and vast desert areas be
of any use in this area? Is it possible to construct huge collecting
ponds in the desert and pump water through sand to help the
desalination process? Many questions are posed by scientists that
need serious studies. In the Netherlands, for instance, there are
successful experiments to purify water by pumping it underground
through sand dunes. Rather than merely warning against the mis-use
of agricultural land, serious efforts should be made, and resources
invested, in research to develop appropriate means to increase food
production while protecting the environment. New crop varieties can
be engineered that adapt to local climate and conditions.
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Could
it be that scientists, capable of reproducing cells and cloning animals,
are unable to develop seeds that can be planted in salt water with
reasonable costs? Besides technologies oriented to high productivity on
a mass scale, what efforts are made to develop local appropriate
technologies to increase production and improve life quality at the
personal level? Developing countries should reject the alleged equity
theory based on fair distribution of their limited resources, and start
to develop innovative, clean and appropriate production technologies
that provide abundance. After all, equitable and fair distribution in
sustainable development means sharing of abundance not partaking of
poverty.
To Discuss This Topic, Write to nsaab@mectat.com.lb |