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Global Environment Outlook Report - UNEP

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March 18, 2019

Why in news?

The sixth edition of the Global Environment Outlook (GEO-6) from the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) on the theme “Healthy Planet, Healthy People” was released recently.

What is the report for?

  • World leaders came up with the Paris climate deal in 2015, with promised actions to cut emissions, to limit global temperature rises to 1.5 °C.
  • But the health impacts of pollution, deforestation and the mechanised food-chain are less well understood.
  • There is also no international agreement for the environment, similar to what the Paris accord does for the climate.
  • The GEO thus partly addresses this gap by bringing the attention of world nations to the impact of environmental problems on humans.

What are the report highlights?

  • Premature deaths - A quarter of all premature deaths and diseases worldwide are due to manmade pollution and environmental damage.
  • The report notes on deadly smog-including emissions, chemicals polluting drinking water, and the destruction of ecosystems crucial to the livelihoods of many.
  • These are driving a worldwide epidemic that hampers the global economy.
  • Inequality - The GEO depicts a widening gap between rich and poor countries.
  • The top 10% of populations globally, in terms of wealth, are responsible for 45% of GHG emissions, and the bottom 50% for only 13%.
  • Pollution impacts are, however, borne more by the poorer citizens.
  • Rampant overconsumption, pollution and food waste in the developed world leads to hunger, poverty and diseases elsewhere.
  • Health - Poor environmental conditions cause approximately 25% of global disease and mortality, with around 9 million deaths in 2015 alone.
  • Nearly 1.4 million people die each year from preventable diseases with lack of access to clean drinking supplies.
  • E.g. diarrhoea and parasites linked to pathogen-riddled water and poor sanitation
  • Air pollution alone causes 6-7 million early deaths annually.
  • Chemicals pumped into the seas cause "potentially multi-generational" adverse health effects.
  • Land degradation through mega-farming and deforestation occurs in areas of Earth which are home to 3.2 billion people.
  • Unchecked use of antibiotics in food production will result in drug-resistant superbugs becoming the world's number one cause of premature death by mid-century.

What does it call for?

  • Economy - Urgent action at an unprecedented scale is necessary to arrest and reverse the present environment situation.
  • There is an urgent need for retooling of the global economy to more sustainable production lines.
  • Without this, GDP growth may become meaningless against the cost of lost lives, work hours and associated treatment expenses.
  • Human behaviour - The world is unsustainably extracting resources and producing unmanageable quantities of waste.
  • The report thus called for a root-and-branch detoxifying of human behaviour.
  • E.g. By 2050, the world will likely have to feed 10 billion people, but that does not mean that the production has to be doubled.
  • The world currently throws away a third of all food produced; this is driven by 56% of food in richer nations going to waste.
  • So food waste, which also accounts for 9% of global greenhouse gas emissions, could be slashed.
  • The report also advises adopting less-meat intensive diets.
  • The report also called for a rapid drawdown in greenhouse gas emissions and pesticide use to improve air and water quality.

What lies ahead?

  • The GEO was unveiled at the UN Environment Assembly in Nairobi, Kenya.
  • It is likely to add to the debate over who bears the greatest responsibility for the damage already borne by Earth.
  • Some developed nations, led by the United States, had threatened not to "welcome" the GEO report.
  • This is a procedural but nonetheless significant hurdle, for the nations to agree on the necessary cuts in waste, overconsumption and pollution.

 

Source: Economic Times, The Hindu

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