Class 4 - Environment and Development
Class 4 - Environment and Development
Sustainable Development
Sustainable development has been defined in many ways, but the most frequently quoted definition is from Our Common Future, also known as the Brundtland Report: "Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
It contains within it two key concepts: 1. The concept of needs, in particular the essential needs of the world's poor, to which overriding priority should be given; and 2. The idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology and social organization on the environment's ability to meet present and future needs.
Key theme of the 2010 HDR, is the enormous progress in human development over the past several decades with three caveats: 1. Income growth has been associated with deterioration in such key environmental indicators as carbon dioxide emissions, soil and water quality and forest cover. 2. The distribution of income has worsened at the country level in much of the world, even with the narrowing of gaps in health and education achievement. 3. While empowerment on average tends to accompany a rising Human Development Index (HDI), there is considerable variation around the relationship
Adverse environmental factors are expected to boost world food prices 3050 percent in real terms in the coming decades and to increase price volatility, with harsh repercussions for poor households. The largest risks are faced by the 1.3 billion people involved in agriculture, fishing, forestry, hunting and gathering. The most disadvantaged people carry a double burden of deprivation: more vulnerable to the wider effects of environmental degradation, they must also cope with threats to their immediate environment posed by indoor air pollution, dirty water and unimproved sanitation.
Protecting and Managing the Natural Resource Base of Economic and Social Development The integration of agriculture with land and water management, and with ecosystem conservation is essential for both environmental sustainability and agricultural production. An environmental perspective must guide the evaluation of all development projects, recognizing the role of natural resources in local livelihoods. To ensure the sustainability of the natural resource base, the recognition of all stakeholders in it and their roles in its protection and management is essential.
In addition, people are now falling prey to modern diseases such as cancer and AIDS, and stress-related disorders. Most developing countries are repositories of a rich tradition of natural resource-based health care. This is under threat, on the one hand from modern mainstream medicine, and on the other from the degradation of the natural resource base.
International There is both a need and a scope for regional and global cooperation in sustainable development. Some of the areas of common concern are marine issues, trans-boundary environmental impacts, management of bio-resources, technology sharing and sharing of sustainable development experiences. There must be mechanisms for monitoring the compliance of countries to their obligations under various environmental agreements