Our
world has an amazing amount of potential,
but alarm bells are going off in all directions,
set off by innumerable experts drawing our
attention to the fact that our current lifestyle
is not sustainable: we cannot carry on like
this! Economic growth, as it has taken shape
over the recent decades, creates increasing
social and ecological stresses. The pressures
on earth’s systems and natural resources
are building up. The economy is expanding
but the ecosystem it depends on is not; this
discrepancy is creating a relationship that
is increasingly strained. Environmental indicators
are increasingly negative. Forests are shrinking,
ground water is becoming polluted, the soil
is becoming eroded, fish are growing scarce,
rivers drying up, coral dying, entire vegetable
and animal species vanishing.
We are behaving as though we are the last
generation on earth.
The divide is widening between so-called
developed countries and the others: the rich
getting richer, the poor getting poorer with
less and less chance of improving their lot.
And within our countries this gap between
the rich and those excluded by the economy
is also widening.
We are behaving as though the human family
did not exist.
Many of us benefit from this growth. But
it is a growth whose fruits go principally,
and increasingly, to those who are already
affluent; a growth that has very little discernment
in polluting and exploiting the limited heritage
that has been entrusted to us, the natural
environment. To the extent that there are
some who predict major disasters, either ecological
or social, or even both.
Where does the fault lie?
Rather than talk about fault, we prefer to
formulate the question as follows: “who
is behind these imbalances?” and, hence,
“who bears responsibility for them?”
And “can, would, that same ‘who’
participate in rebalancing what needs to be
rebalanced?”
In 1987, the United Nations published the
Brundtland Report. The report underlined the
correlation between poverty around the world
and the damage to the natural environment.
It also demonstrated that long-term economic
growth, the fight against poverty and effective
management of the environment often go hand
in hand. The report was the first to define
the concept of sustainable development, implying
a type of economic development that is ecologically
sensible and socially fair.
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