The
dramatic and, in some cases, damaging environmental changes sweeping
planet Earth are brought into sharp focus in a new atlas. Produced
by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), One Planet Many
People: Atlas of our Changing Environment compares and contrasts spectacular
satellite images of the past few decades with contemporary ones, some
of which have never been seen before.
The huge growth of greenhouses in southern Spain, the rapid rise of
shrimp farming in Asia and Latin America and the emergence of a giant,
shadow puppet-shaped peninsula at the mouth of the Yellow River are
among a string of curious and surprising changes seen from space.
They sit beside the more conventional, but no less dramatic images
of rain forest deforestation in Paraguay and Brazil, rapid oil and
gas development in Wyoming, United States, forest fires across sub-Saharan
Africa and the retreat of glaciers and ice in polar and mountain areas.
The atlas, produced in collaboration with organizations including
the United States Geological Survey and the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA), highlights UNEP's 2005 global theme of
Green Cities-Plan for the Planet, showing the explosive growth and
changes around some of the major cities of the world such as Beijing,
Dhaka, Delhi and Santiago (see below).
Also covered are developed world cities including Las Vegas, the fastest
growing metropolitan area in the United States, and Miami. Miami's
spread westwards may endanger Florida's famous everglades and their
important wildlife and water supplies.
Specially commissioned images of Bucharest, London, Nairobi and San
Francisco supplements One Planet Many People.
Klaus Toepfer, UNEP's Executive Director, said: " People living
in San Francisco or London may look at these images of deforestation
or melting Arctic ice, and wonder what it has to do with them. That
these changes are the result of other people's lifestyles and consumption
habits hundreds and thousands of kilometres away. But they would be
wrong."
"Cities pull in huge amounts of resources including water, food,
timber, metals and people. They export large amounts of wastes including
household and industrial wastes, wastewater and the gases linked with
global warming. Thus their impacts stretch beyond their physical borders
affecting countries, regions and the planet as a whole," he added.
"So the battle for sustainable development, for delivering a
more environmentally stable, just and healthier world, is going to
be largely won and lost in our cities," said Mr. Toepfer.
Researchers hope that One Planet Many People Atlas of Our Changing
Environment will have a deep impact on governments, private business,
non governmental organizations and the private individual by highlighting
how globalization is driving local and regional change.
Highlights from One Planet Many People Atlas of
Our Changing Environment
Africa
The impact of the civil wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone on the environment
of neighboring Guinea is highlighted in the story of Parrot's Beak.
In 1974 the area was well forested with the local villages and agricultural
areas showing up as patches of light gray in a near continuous sea
of green.
The influx of hundreds of thousands of refugees has now led to widespread
deforestation as trees are felled for fuel, construction materials
and more crops.
This is clearly seen in the latest satellite image from 2002 with
the green colour in retreat and a grey landscape advancing in all
directions.
The population growth around Lake Victoria, East Africa, is the highest
in Africa as a result of the natural resources found there such as
fish.
The phenomenon is shown in a series of images from the 1960s to the
present with the population rise charted as a rapid spreading area
of red zones.
Of the surrounding countries, Kenya seems to have experienced the
largest increase in people within 100km of the lake's shoreline.
The infestation of Lake Victoria by the invasive, alien weed known
as water hyacinth is also spotlighted in a satellite image of 1995.
Large swathes of the weed, which can clog water intake pipes, affect
shipping and fishing and act as a habitat for malaria-carrying mosquitoes,
are clearly visible as green swirls in places like Uganda's Gobero
Bay, Wazimenya Bay and near the port of Kibanga.
However, the recent introduction of natural insect predators appears
to be paying off. The latest satellite image of the Ugandan section
of the lake shows that it is almost totally hyacinth-free.

African Cities
Nairobi, Kenya, has undergone dramatic growth since 1979. Its population
at independence in 1963 was 350,000. Nairobi is now home to well over
three million making it the largest African city between Johannesburg
and Cairo.
The growth is clearly depicted in satellite images from 1979 and the
present with the city sprawling to the new suburbs and slums north,
east and west. The growth of development along the edge of Nairobi
National Park and out to Jomo Kenyatta International Airport is also
underlined.
Asia Pacific and West Asia
The dramatic disappearance of what was once the world's biggest date
palm forest is highlighted.
Along the Shatt al-Arab estuary in Iraq and Iran, there once stood
up to 18 million palms or a fifth of the world's date trees.
War, pests and the salting-up of the region as a result of dams and
the desiccation of the Mesopotamian marshlands have now taken a heavy
toll.
Satellite images indicate that more than 14 million trees, or 80 per
cent of what were there in the 1970s, have gone.
The date trade from the Shatt al-Arab was once second only to oil.
The livelihoods of millions of people dependent on dates for food
and income are in ruin.
The OK Tedi copper mine in Papua New Guinea has had a controversial
history.
Annually the 20 year-old mine, sited in the rain-forested Star Mountains
of the country's western province, discharges 70 million tonnes of
waste. This has spread 1,000km down the OK Tedi and Fly rivers.
Satellite images, taken in 1990 and last year, clearly show changes
to the width of a nearby tributary, the OK Mani river, which has now
become the primary recipient of the mud, sludge and other wastes.
The wastes have raised the height of local riverbeds triggering more
frequent flooding, damaged forests and the area's rich biodiversity.
The Huang He or Yellow River is the world's muddiest. It brings huge
amounts of sediments, mainly mica, quartz and feldspar, from areas
such as the plateaus of north-central China.
A quite remarkable change in the mouth of the river is now seen from
space when compared with an image from May 1979.
Here a giant animal-like head has formed, stretching out into the
Bohai Sea, as a result of sedimentation from the interior.
The drying up of Lake Balkash, Kazakhstan, is graphically illustrated
from space.
Asia's second largest lake after the Aral Sea, Balkash is crucial
for supply water to farmers, towns and cities and industry. It also
supports an important fishery.
But excessive water use is causing the lake to dry up and it may disappear
altogether unless the trend is reversed.
The atlas shows the drying out round the lake's edges and the rapid
disappearance of two smaller, neighboring lakes to the southeast.
The Wadi As-Sirhan region of Saudi Arabia was once so barren and dry
that it could barely support the towns of Al'Isawiyah and Tubarjal.
Seen from space, the area is now a series of curious green dots set
against the desert background.
It is a result of a method of high-tech irrigation known as center-pivot-irrigation,
which was introduced in the early 1990s. The farms are tapping into
ancient, up to 20,000 year-old, underground water supplies.
Satellite images from 1973 to the present day reveal just how bad
the situation in the Dead Sea has become.
Both Israel (Europe) and Jordan draw off water from rivers entering
the sea and there have been extensive development of evaporation ponds
for salt production.
Other developments, including water impoundment projects and land
reclamation schemes, are taking their toll.
As a result, it is estimated that water levels in the Dead Sea are
dropping by about one metre a year.
The images not only chronicle the huge expansion of evaporation ponds
in the southern section of the sea, but also the rapid exposure of
arid land around the coastline.
Levels have fallen so much that the southern section is becoming a
lake after now being almost cut off from the rest of the sea.
Asia Pacific Cities
It may come as no surprise that Beijing, China's capital city, has
undergone tremendous growth since the start of economic reforms in
1979. Its population now numbers some 13 million.
The satellite images underline just how tremendous this has been with
Beijing mushrooming from a small central area to one that has turned
towns some distance away, such as Ginghe and Fengtai, into suburbs.
The expansion is seen to have also gobbled up the deciduous forests
to the west and the rice, winter wheat and vegetable plots that once
surrounded the city.
A similar, huge expansion is seen for Delhi, India's capital. In 1975,
the city had a population of 4.4 million or 3.3 per cent of India's
urban population.
By 2000, the city had well over 12 million inhabitants. By 2010, it
is set to rise to nearly 21 million.
The latest satellite images show Delhi's growth concentrated in the
suburbs of Faridabad, Ghaziabad and Gurgaon.
Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, has grown from a city of 2.5 million
in the early 1970s to one with more than 10 million. The images chart
the spread of urbanization north into Tonji and towards Turag.
Sydney is Australia's largest city with over four million inhabitants.
Its growth is seen spreading west towards the Blue Mountains. The
urbanization is leading to more and more homes being built in the
bush making them vulnerable to summer fires.
West Asia Cities
The rapid expansion of Riyadh, the capital city of Saudi Arabia, since
1972 is starkly portrayed.
Over the past 30 years it has grown from 500,000 people to more than
two million as a result of migration from urban areas, a decrease
in death rates and high birth rates.
The growth has been made possible by Saudi Arabia's big investments
in desalination plants that extract drinking water from seawater.
Seen as small dark and red patch in 1972, the latest satellite image
shows a grid-like network of blue lines that are roads and a more
than trebling of the urban area.
Europe
The atlas focuses on the large, Romanian city of Copsa Mica, which
is believed to be one of the sickliest in the world.
The 1986 image shows very high level of air pollution (black). In
the image of 2004, the air pollution level has substantially decreased
- a positive change in the environment.
The Almeria region of southern Spain was once a typical rural agricultural
area, satellite images from 1974 show.
The latest image tells a different story showing how an area of around
20,000 hectares has been transformed into a vast glass-house for producing
greenhouse crops.
The development has important implications for Spanish water supplies
with the government looking at technologies such as desalination plants.
The Ataturk Dam was built in Turkey on the Euphrates River in 1990.
It generates 8.9 billion kilowatt hours of electricity, which is equivalent
to over a fifth of the country's anticipated needs in 2010.
Its impact on the landscape, as seen from space, is dramatic. The
flooded areas appear as a large jagged mass of black.
South of the dam, around the town of Harran, the landscape has become
green as a result of irrigation schemes made possible by the dam.

Europe Cities
Within the European Union, London is the mostly densely packed city
after Copenhagen, Brussels and Paris. It is also culturally rich with
over 300 languages spoken and nearly a third of its over seven million
residents from an ethnic minority.
The population is forecast to rise eight million in around 2020. Satellite
images from 1976 and 2004 indicate that London's shape and area has
changed little in the past 30 years.
Bucharest, Romania, has undergone quite important changes over the
last 30 years. In the late 1970s satellites reveal that it was a compact,
well defined, city of some seven km in radius.
During the 1980s, during the Presidency of Nicolae Ceausecu, villages
on the outskirts were dismantled to make way for expansion and centrally
planned projects. Today, partly as a result of the re-privatisation
of land, people are moving out of the centre into new suburbs.
Latin America
The massive growth of shrimp farming is brought into sharp focus by
satellite images of the Gulf of Fonseca, Honduras.
Honduras is second only to Ecuador in the cultivation and export of
shrimp from Latin America.
Over a period of 12 years, the images reveal how shrimp farms and
ponds have mushroomed carpeting the landscape around the Gulf in blocks
of blue and black shapes.
There are concerns that the shrimp farms are causing significant environmental
problems. Mangroves, natural coastal defenses and nurseries for wild-living
fish, have been cleared to make way for farms.
The shrimp farms are also linked with pollution and damage to the
Gulf's ecosystems. This is as a result of indiscriminate capture of
marine-life during the collection of shrimp larvae to re-stock ponds.
Similar images emerge from the Gulf of Guayaquil, Ecuador. Between
1984 and 2000, shrimp aquaculture grew by around 30 per cent to cover
118,000 hectares.
Around 70 per cent of Ecuador's shrimp farms are located in and around
the Gulf of Guayaquil.
The border between Mexico and Guatemala was once biologically diverse.
On the Guatemalan side, partly as a result of relatively low populations
and the protected status of the Sierra de Lacondon and Laguna del
Tigre National Parks, the closed forest canopy remains pretty intact.
But on the Mexican side the atlas tells a different story. Between
1974 and now, huge swathes of the Chiapas forest have disappeared
as a result of a rapidly growing population in need of croplands and
pasture.
A similar story emerges from the border of Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay
from two astonishing images separated by just 30 years.
In 1973, the unique Paranaense tropical rain forest was largely intact.
A satellite image from 2003 confirms the loss of over 90 per cent
of the forest to agriculture, mainly soybeans and corn.
Most of the loss, seen as a mosaic of colours, is on the Paraguayan
and Brazilian borders with far less lost in Argentina reflecting different
land use priorities by the countries concerned.
Latin American Cities
Mexico City is one of the fastest growing in the world, as the satellite
images clearly show.
In 1973 it had a population of about nine million rising to 14 million
in 1986 and almost 18 million in 1999. The population now is likely
to be over 20 million.
The city and its infrastructure, shown as gray, can be seen sweeping
and sprawling in all directions causing significant deforestation
in the mountains west and south.
Similar images reflect the doubling of the population to five million
in Santiago, Chile.
North America
The rapid development of Canada's first diamond mine, located in the
Northwestern Territories, is clearly seen from space.
Only a tiny airstrip is seen in the pre-mining image of 1991. Today
the Ekati Mine site, including roads and other infrastructure, is
clearly visible as a large spreading area of white.
Wildlife officials are radio-tracking caribou herds, which range in
size from 350,00 to a million animals, in order to gauge if the mining
activities are affecting their behaviour.
The impact of logging on the temperate forests of British Columbia,
Canada is also clearly visible by satellites.
The landscape around Great Beaver, Carp and McLeod lakes switches
from a reasonably pristine one in 1975 to what is now a brown patchwork
quilt due to accelerated logging.
A massive development of oil and gas wells in the Upper Green River,
Wyoming, United States, is visible from space.
In 1989 the area, which is home to large herds of migrating pronghorn
antelope and mule deer, is seen as a relatively undisturbed landscape.
An image from 2004 tells a different story highlighting the emergence
of some 3,000 wells. According to the Bureau of Land Management, the
rate of well establishment exceeds its development plan by 300 per
cent.
North America Cities
San Francisco, as seen from space, is a densely populated city with
15,000 people per square mile. It is the second most densely populated
area in the United States after New York, which has 24,000 people
per square mile.
One of the most striking features of satellite images of San Francisco
is the preservation of its urban forests over the past 30 years.
The growth of Las Vegas, set in the Nevada desert, has been spectacular
since the early 1970s.
In the 1950s it was home to just over 24,000 people. Today, the population
tops one million, not including tourists, and may double by 2015.
The images reveal how the city has spread in all directions displacing
the few vegetated lands and replacing natural desert with housing
and irrigated golf courses.
Lake Meade, formed by the Hoover Dam, dropped 18 meters from 2000
to 2003.
Despite the regions third worst drought in recent history, new golf
courses continue to be developed.
The atlas chronicles the growth of the Fort Lauderdale-Miami area
over the past 30 years clearly showing the conversion of farmland
into cityscapes and the spread of Miami south and west towards the
Everglades National Park.
The Everglades is not only home to important wildlife, such as the
Florida panther. The Everglades filter groundwater and re-charge the
Biscayne Aquifer.
Part of the mission of the Federal "Smart Growth" Task Force
is to try and better manage urban sprawl in the area in order protect
the Everglades and the ecosystem services it provides.