25th
Session of UNEP's Governing Council/Global
Ministerial Environment Forum 16-20 February
Nairobi, 16 February
2009 - The importance of realizing a Global
Green New Deal and the urgent need for a
transition to a low carbon and resource
efficient Green Economy are spotlighted
in the UNEP Year Book 2009, launched today
at an international gathering of environment
ministers.
The Year Book, compiled
at the request of the UNEP Governing Council,
presents the hard facts and worrying trends
while also underlining some of the transformational
and innovative ideas already being piloted
in both the developed and developing world.
Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary
General and UNEP Executive Director, said:"
The Year Book serves as a reminder to the
international community as to why a Green
Economy is so urgently needed from the bubbling
up of methane gas in the Arctic to the shrinking
availability of croplands".
"But it is also about
optimism and the power of positive policies:
from the way a building in Africa passively
cools itself by mimicking termite mounds
to the way some countries and cities are
pioneering industrial symbiosis-co-locating
businesses and factories to recycle and
re-use wastes as raw material inputs, saving
finite natural resources, millions of dollars
and the planet too," he added.
Highlights
Waste
- Over two billion tones
of waste are being generated throughout
the world annually with someone in a developed
economy throwing away around 1.4 kg of solid
waste refuse daily.
- This is however leveling
off perhaps as a result of waste minimization
and recycling measures.
- Developing nations,
in particular rapidly developing economies
are producing more waste with China expected
to produce 500 million tones of solid waste
a year, and India about 250 million tonnes
by 2030 based on current trends.
Construction and Buildings
There are some positive
developments in particular in the building
and construction sector, not least in energy
efficiency improvements aimed at cutting
the estimated 30 to 40 per cent of global
greenhouse gas emissions linked with the
built environment.
- A world-wide survey
conducted by McGraw-Hill Construction Analytics
found that one third of industry professionals
believe more than 10 per cent of domestic
construction is already moving to higher
resource efficiency.
- A further 50 plus
per cent said principles of resource efficiency
will be applied to 60 per cent of their
projects in the next five years.
- Canada, France and
the United Kingdom are among several countries
that have launched programmes to make buildings
energy neutral-the buildings generate via
technologies such as solar and combined
heat and power systems as much energy as
they consume
- The United Kingdom
for example has launched a voluntary industry
agreement aimed at cutting by half (12.5
million tones) in 2012 the amount of construction
waste going to landfill. It could recover
materials worth an estimated $1 billion.
The Year Book highlights
how copying nature-so called biomimicry-can
offer intriguing solutions. The Eastgate
building in Harare, Zimbabwe has passive,
self-cooling systems modeled on termite
mounds.
The building, a mixture
of offices, shops and car parking, uses
an average of 90 per cent less energy than
a comparable structure saving more than
$3.5 million since opening in the 11000s.
'Materials substitution'
is another emerging field with researchers
around the world in a race to produce cement
and concrete that can be made at temperatures
lower than the current 1,000 degrees C.
- The Massachusetts
Institute of Technology are currently looking
at using magnesium compounds-a waste material
of many other industrial processes-as a
substitute for conventional concrete's calcium-silicate-hydrate
particles.
- Others are looking
at using substitutes based on silicon and
aluminum harvested from waste by-products
such as coal ash and iron slag. They have
the potential to cut C02 emissions from
cement industry by an estimated 20 per cent,
while utilizing an industrial waste and
producing a final product less prone to
weathering-the kind of multiple economic
and environmental benefits at the heart
of the Green Economy initiative.
Dematerialization is
another term in the emerging area of industrial
ecology. At its simplest it can be captured
in consumers demanding less packaging for
example on products. A producer of unbleached
cotton, who uses fewer resources, might
also be able to charge a higher price and
certainly achieve higher profit margins.
Industrial symbiosis,
or what is known in China as the Circular
Economy, is an off-shoot of this concept.
The idea is to co-locate businesses and
facilities in such a way that their wastes
are raw materials for other nearby ones.
- Pioneering Industrial
Symbiosis Network in Kalundborg Denmark,
now has more than 25 industrial waste management
processes integrated in one system.
- The United Kingdom's
Industrial Symbiosis Programme involves
more than 8,000 participant companies.
- It has diverted more
than four million tones of business waste
from landfills.
- Eliminated over 350,000
tonnes of hazardous waste from the environment.
- Saved over nine million
tones of water, avoided the use of 6.3 million
tones of virgin raw materials and reduced
carbon emissions by over 4.5 million tonnes.
- Generated $208 million
in new sales for members and saved them
nearly $170 million.
- Chicago in the United
States and Shanghai in China have adopted
similar symbiosis projects.
China's Circular Economy
initiative is also looking at labeling products
for their resource consumption backed up
by tough penalties for companies who use
processes, materials and techniques on a
so called 'eliminated' list.
- If items on the eliminated
list are used, the government can confiscate
the equipment, materials or product; impose
fines of up to $30,000 or shut the enterprise
down.
- Imported items on
the 'eliminated' list must be returned and
a fine of up to $150,000 can be imposed
under the plan.
- If the importer cannot
be identified, then the carrier can be made
responsible for returning the items or paying
for their disposal.
• Banks or other financial
institutions are also banned from supporting
enterprises that manufacture, import or
distribute items on the 'eliminated' list.
Transport
Transport accounts for
over 20 per cent of global greenhouse gas
emissions. In 2005 there were an estimated
650 million vehicles on the road with that
number expected to double by 2030.
The Indian city of Chennai
is working with the Sustainable Mobility
and Accessibility Research and Transformation
initiative (SMART) at the University of
Michigan in the United States in order to
tackle the twin economic and environmental
challenges of congestion and pollution.
• Railway and bus systems
are to be kitted with wireless technology
so that thousands of computer and software
industry commuters can work en route.
• At the stop closest
to work, the commuters can choose from privately-run,
low-polluting shuttle buses; taxis; rental
cycles or walking paths.
• The system uses the
commuters' mobile phones to forecast anticipated
transport and traffic conditions and needs.
Eventually commuters will be able to use
their phones to check up on the transport
networks and choose the most efficient mode
based on prevailing conditions.
Industrial Water
Currently close to 880
million people lack adequate access to clean
water and 2.5 billion are without improved
sanitation in their homes. By 2030, close
to four billion people could be living in
areas suffering severe water stress mostly
in South Asia and China.
Industry uses 10 per
cent of water in low and middle-income countries
and up to close to 60 per cent in high-income
ones.
• A Finnish paper mill
has switched from chemical to thermo-mechanically
treated pulp and installed a biological
wastewater treatment facility-water savings
of 90 per cent have been achieved.
• An Indian textile
manufacturer has switched from using aluminum
to zinc in synthetic fabrics-water consumption
has been cut by 80 per cent with the cleaner
waste water produced suitable for irrigation
uses on nearby farms.
• By separating process
water from sewage water, a Mexican sugar
cane company has cut water use by 90 per
cent.
• A Spanish company,
managing 300km of highways in Sao Paulo
state, Brazil has designed the roads to
funnel rainwater into 250 containment dams
with a capacity of 2 million cubic metres.
The system allows the rainwater to seep
slowly into the ground, assisting in replenishing
the Guarani aquifer while saving money in
terms of reduced road maintenance.
While some progress
is being made, the Year Book underlines
the scale of the challenge facing the world
towards the end of the first decade of the
21st century.
Climate Change
2008 had the second
smallest area of Arctic sea-ice left following
the summer thaw since satellite monitoring
began in 1979. The National Snow and Ice
Center in the United States found that the
minimum sea-ice cover, which occurred on
12 September, was somewhere over 4.52 million
square kilometers.
"While 2008 saw
10 per cent more ice cover than in 2007,
the lowest figure on record, it was still
more than 30 per cent below the average
for the past three decades. Taken together,
the two summers have no parallel,"
says the Year Book.
• For the second year
in a row, there was an ice-free channel
in the Northwest Passage through the islands
of northern Canada.
• 2008 also witnessed
the opening of the Northern Sea Route along
the Arctic Siberian coast-the two passages
have probably not been open simultaneously
since before the last ice age some 100,000
years ago.
• The Greenland ice
sheet, which could raise sea levels by six
metres if it melted away, is currently losing
more than 100 cubic km a year-faster than
can be explained by natural melting.
• Losses from the West
Antarctic ice sheet have increased by 60
per cent between 1996 and 2006.
• Losses from the Antarctic
Peninsula increased by 140 per cent.
In 2007, the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimated
that sea levels might rise by between 18cm
and 59cm in the coming century. But many
researchers now believe the rise even higher
in part as a result of new assessments of
ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica.
• One study estimates
a sea level rise of between 0.8 and 1.5
metres, while another suggests a sea level
rise of two metres in the coming century
from outflows of ice from Greenland alone.
• A one metre rise in
sea levels world-wide would displace millions
of people. Around 100 million people in
Asia, mostly Bangladesh, eastern China and
Vietnam; 14 million in Europe and eight
million each in Africa and South America.
The Year Book argues
that urgent action is needed to curb greenhouse
gas emissions, not least because some of
the natural carbon storage systems or 'sinks'
may be losing their absorption capacity
raising the spectre of a runaway greenhouse
effect.
• Studies in 2008 indicates
that one key 'sink'-the oceans-are now soaking
up 10 million tones less C02.
The Year Book also flags
up increasing concern among scientists about
releases of greenhouse gases such as methane
from the Arctic as ice melts and permafrost
thaws in part as a result of new studies
indicating that the western Arctic is warming
3.5 times more than the rest of the globe.
This concern has taken on even greater importance
as a result of two recently published studies.
• A study focusing on
North America suggests that upwards of 60
per cent more carbon could be stored in
the permafrost than previously supposed.
• An international study
has now doubled the amount of soil-carbon
in the permafrost across the entire Arctic.
• Marine researchers
have discovered more than 250 plumes of
methane bubbling up along the edge of the
Continental shelf northwest of Svalbard.
• The International
Siberian Shelf Study has found higher concentrations
of methane offshore from the Lena River
delta.
• Researchers calculate
that, once underway, thawing of the east
Siberian permafrost-thought to contain 500
billion tones of carbon-would be irreversible
and that over a century 250 billion tones
could be released.
Monitoring of methane
levels in the atmosphere indicate that concentrations
rose in 2007 and 2008 after nearly a decade
of stability. Intriguingly higher concentrations
were detected in both the northern and southern
hemispheres.
Meanwhile, the Year
Book raises concerns over another carbon
sink-forests. Rising temperatures may be
stressing trees leading to photosynthesis
and thus carbon sequestration halting sooner
in summer months. Stressed forests may also
be more vulnerable to pollution, disease
and pests, again undermining their carbon
storage potential.
The Year Book also focuses
on new research from the Amazon.
• A doubling of C02
could warm the oceans to such a point that
rainfall in the Amazon could decline by
40 per cent.
• Overall an estimated
53 per cent decline in vegetation growth
could occur.
• Forest loss on this
scale could in turn raise temperature 'locally'
by up to eight degrees C triggering further
droughts and putting pressure on the Amazon
River, the world's largest river that carries
one fifth of the world's river water.
The melting of the world's
icy regions, including mountain glaciers
is also triggering other hazards above and
beyond the very serious threats to water
supplies if glaciers melt away: nearly a
billion people in South Asia rely on seasonal
melt waters from the Himalaya-HinduKush
mountain system for example.
• Hazardous substances,
deposited from the atmosphere and locked
away in glaciers, are now being re-released.
• The pesticide DDT
is turning up in unanticipated amounts in
Adelie penguins that live in parts of the
Antarctic coastline.
• Organic pollutants
are being carried back into the environment
from melting glaciers in the Rocky Mountains
of North America.
• Polychlorinated biphenyls
(PCBs) can be found downstream of European
glaciers.
Disasters and Conflicts
The Year Book also discusses
the links between natural disasters, environmental
degradation, conflicts and human or social
vulnerability as well as the importance
of disaster preparedness-issues becoming
of increasing concern in a climate-constrained
world.
• While geological disasters
such as earthquakes and volcanoes have remained
fairly constant over the past century, hydro-meteorological
disasters such as storms, floods and droughts
have increased dramatically since 1950.
• The frequency of these
events has increased by an average of 8.4
per cent a year between 2000 and 2007.
• Another new assessment
says that the total number of disasters
has increased from about 100 events per
decade in the period 1900-1940 to almost
3,000 per decade by the 11000s.
• A further study puts
the total number of disasters between 2000
and 2005 at 4,850 and links this to both
'technological disasters' such as train
wrecks and building failures as well as
weather events.
The Year Book spotlights
Cyclone Nargis that struck Myanmar with
a peak wind speed intensities of 215km per
hour on 2 May 2008 leaving more than 140,000
people dead or missing and 2.4 million people
homeless and 'catastrophically affected'.
• As with the 2004 Indian
Ocean tsunami, the loss of 'environmental
infrastructure' made coastal communities
more vulnerable.
• In the early 20th
century, mangrove forests covered an estimated
more than 242,000 hectares in the Irrawaddy
River Basin, but by the end of the century
just over 48,500 hectares remained with
the loss linked to clearance for charcoal
and latterly for agriculture and shrimp
farms.
Ecosystems
The 2005 Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment concluded that 60 per
cent of the Earth's ecosystems-from forests
and soils to coral reefs and grasslands-are
damaged or being degraded.
The Year Book underlines
that this trend is continuing through 2008.
Increasing demand for
food and agricultural production is, under
current systems and economic models, triggering
a dramatic increase in land under the hoe
and the plough.
Today farmland covers
nearly a quarter of the planet's surface.
• Entire forest systems
have effectively disappeared in at least
25 countries and have declined by 90 per
cent in another 29 countries.
Marine fisheries are
in a state of stagnation and have been that
way for nearly a decade.
• Since the onset of
industrial fisheries in the 1960s, the total
biomass of large, commercially-targeted
marine fish species has declined by a 'staggering'
90 per cent says the Year Book.
• Annual economic losses
as a result of over-exploitation and near
depletion of the most valuable fish stocks
are estimated in 2008 at $50 billion.
Biofuels and their impacts
on food production, poverty and ecosystems
can trigger polarized views with opportunities
for income diversification and a way of
reducing pressures on cropland possible
in small-scale rural models.
At industrial scales,
different crops can have different impacts.
A new study has assessed the impact on water
use in 2030 based on growing industrial-scale
energy crops under current trends.
• An estimated 50 billion
litres of maize-based biofuel produced in
North America would require 20 per cent
of the region's irrigated water supplies
• Producing just under
34 billion litres of sugar-cane derived
biofuel in Brazil would require eight per
cent of irrigated water supplies.
• Rapeseed-derived biofuel
made in the European Union has perhaps the
lowest potential water footprint. Producing
just over 20 billion litres of fuel would
require just one per cent of the EU's irrigated
water.
The Year Book points
out that it is the poor, and especially
the rural poor who depend on healthy and
functioning ecosystems.
• An estimated 90 per
cent of rural poor depend on forests for
at least a portion of their income.
• In rural Africa, small-scale
agriculture is the principal source of income
for some 90 per cent of people.
• Nature-based income
accounts for more than half of the total
income stream for the world's rural poor.
Better and more intelligent
management of ecosystems and their goods
and services will become increasingly critical
as the century unfolds and the population
climbs to over nine billion by 2050.
• On current projections
the availability of cropland per person
is set to drop to 0.1 hectares requiring
a rise in agricultural production "unattainable
through conventional means".
Soil degradation, linked
with intensification, has now and already
affected all but 16 per cent of the world's
croplands-healthy croplands are now confined
to temperate areas of the midwestern United
States, central western Canada, Russia,
central Argentina, Uruguay, southern Brazil,
northern India and northeast China with
a scattering across the Tropics.
• One possibility is to manage land and
landscapes as 'mosaics' in which food production
is one of several central ecosystem services.
So called eco-management
as it is now being termed can date back
in some cases millennia from the grasslands
of Europe to the indigenous peoples of the
Americas who managed woodlands to create
meadows for deer grazing.
• The Terra Preta soils
of central Amazonia have three times more
soil organic matter, nitrogen and phosphorous
and 70 per cent more charcoal when compared
with adjacent soils-the soils were generated
by pre-Columbian native populations by adding
"charred residues, organic wastes,
excrement and bones" to the soils.
Market mechanisms and
financial instruments have a role to play
including payment for ecosystem services.
Clearing of forests
continues at some 13 million hectares annually,
equal to an area half the size of the United
Kingdom. Tropical forest loss accounts for
an estimated 17 per cent of greenhouse gas
emissions.
• Countries are currently
assessing the inclusion of funding for forests
in the UN climate change arrangements to
be agreed in Copenhagen later this year
under the term Reduced Emissions from Deforestation
and Forest Degradation.
Granting fishing communities
and fishers rights and responsibilities
in a fishery may also be a way forward.
• Surveys of various
rights-based catch shares for example in
Canada, Chile, New Zealand, Mexico and the
United States, indicates that they reduce
the risk of fishery ecosystem collapse while
boosting livelihoods.
Harmful Substances and
Hazardous Waste
2008 has been a year
of food and product-contamination crises.
• In March Italy was
rocked by incidents involving dioxin-contaminated
mozzarella cheese. Dioxins, substances linked
with cancer, are by-products from a range
of industrial processes including combustion.
• The cases, centering
on the region of Calabria, were tracked
by authorities to suspected contamination
of pastureland.
• In September, China
was involved in incidents where milk including
baby formulas was found to be contaminated
with the toxic chemical melamine.
• In Japan in October
two major companies recalled noodle products
after discovering insecticide contamination.
• Days later the country's
largest meat processor recalled products
after discovering that underground water
used at a plant near Tokyo contained levels
of cyanide compounds.
• Meanwhile in December
in Ireland, the authorities recalled pork
products again after dioxin contamination
via tainted feed.
Over the past two decades,
arsenic contamination has been detected
in a growing number of countries in South
Asia, says the Year Book.
• About 30 per cent
of private wells in Bangladesh show high
levels of arsenic, at over 0.5 milligrams
per liter, and more than half of the country's
administrative units are affected by contaminated
drinking water.
• The Year Book indicates
that deforestation is aggravating the situation
in the Amazon. Here forest soils naturally
contain up to three times more mercury than
pastureland with deforestation releasing
mercury to the air and to rivers.
Notes to Editors
The UNEP Year Book 2009
can be found at http://www.unep.org/geo/yearbook/yb2009
It can be purchased
at Earthprint http://www.earthprint.com
To read previous UNEP
and GEO Year Books, visit http://www.unep.org/geo/yearbook/
The 25th Session of
the UNEP Governing Council/Global Ministerial
Environment Forum takes place in Nairobi
on 16-20 February 2009
http://www.unep.org/gc/gc25/
For more information on UNEP's Green Economy
Initiative, visit http://www.unep.org/greeneconomy/
For More Information Please Contact
For More Information Please Contact Nick
Nuttall, UNEP Spokesperson and Head of MediaOr
Anne-France White, Associate Information
Officer