Add new tag biofuels carbon dioxide carbon dioxide emissions carbon emissions clean energy climate change electric car electric cars electricity electric vehicle electric vehicles energy entrepreneur entrepreneurs environment ethanol Facebook fossil fuels fuel consumption global warming Google greenhouse gas emissions greenhouse gases Innovation innovators iPhone lithium money MySpace scientists Silicon Valley social networking solar solar cell solar cells solar panel solar panels solar power start-ups Startups TechCrunch Twitter weekend wind turbines

FatCloud by Netlife

Letting a thousand flowers wither

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Withering Flowers
Image by linkerjpatrick via Flickr

The world will not halt the rate of reduction of biodiversity by 2010

SEEKING to alleviate poverty, reduce world hunger and protect biodiversity sounds, to your correspondent’s ears, like something a Miss World hopeful might have pledged in the 1980s. In fact, it was what a professor of soil quality at a lesser-known university in the Netherlands promised to a scientific conference that concluded on October 16th.

Addressing hundreds of biologists, ecologists and social scientists who were meeting in Cape Town under the auspices of Diversitas, an interdisciplinary group of researchers, Lijbert Brussaard of Wageningen University outlined progress made towards the Millennium Development Goals agreed by members of the United Nations in 2001. One of the targets was to achieve, by 2010, a significant reduction in the rate of loss of biodiversity. That has not happened. Neither will it do so next year.

One reason why Dr Brussaard and his colleagues are concerned about this is that they believe environmental degradation goes hand-in-hand with poverty. Missing the goal for the environment thus risks missing it for the people who live in that environment.

Writing in Science last month, Jeffrey Sachs, an economist at Columbia University, and his colleagues stated, “With increasing global challenges, such as population growth, climate change and overconsumption of ecosystem services, we need further integration of the poverty-alleviation and biodiversity-conservation agendas.” Such a link is, admittedly, complex. Dr Sachs called for future efforts aimed at reducing poverty to be monitored for their effects on ecosystems, and thus on the “services”, such as water cleaning and air purification, that such habitats provide for people.

Another economist, Pavan Sukhdev of Deutsche Bank, told the Diversitas meeting that he had put a price on some of those services. Coral reefs, he reckons, provide services such as acting as nurseries for commercially important fish that would cost up to $130,000 per hectare per year if they had to be paid for. The figures for coastal areas and inland wetlands that, among other tasks, help filter and purify water, were $74,000 and $14,000 per hectare per year respectively.

Read more . . .

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Link To This Post
1. Click inside the codebox
2. Right-Click then Copy
3. Paste the HTML code into your webpage
codebox
powered by Linkubaitor

Related posts:

  1. Big profit from nature protection
  2. Innovation Toronto Weekly Roundup – October 25, 2009
  3. ‘Freezer plan’ bid to save coral
  4. Setting Boundaries: 10 Guidelines to Save Earth
  5. A Natural Obsession

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a comment

We use Thank Me Later.

Opt out of 'Thank You' e-mails..

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

Innovation Search

Translator

English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagChinese (Traditional) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flag
Spanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flag
Croatian flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRomanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flag
Catalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flag
Slovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flagAlbanian flagEstonian flagGalician flagMaltese flagThai flag
Turkish flagHungarian flag      
By N2H

Featured Post

Robotic Audi TTS to tackle Pikes Peak at race speed – without a driver

Image via Wikipedia

The team at the Center for Automotive Research at Stanford (CARS) are aiming to send a specially-equipped robotic Audi at break-neck speed up the tight bends that lead to Pikes Peak without a driver … something that hasn’t been done before.
Pikes Peak, Colorado Springs, sits atop a 12.4-mile Rocky [...]

Categories

30 visitors online now
30 guests, 0 members
Max visitors today: 44 at 03:42 am EST
This month: 57 at 02-07-2010 02:32 pm EST
This year: 70 at 01-17-2010 12:44 pm EST
All time: 113 at 12-03-2009 10:18 pm EST
Better Tag Cloud