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U.N. Millennium Development Goals

 

Environmental Sustainability and Development

Sustainable development can only be attained by protecting the environment and the judicious use of natural resources. Countries both rich and poor have an equal stake in this stewardship of the earth. The very survival of our planet depends upon it.

Fifteen percent of the world’s population accounts for 56 percent of the world’s total resources consumption. The poorest 40 percent of the world’s population accounts for only 11 percent of consumption.

The strain on resources varies depending on locale. For example, in Rwanda, 60 percent of the population lives below the poverty line. Ninety percent depend on subsistence agriculture for survival, and just 2 percent have access to electricity.

Despite increasing awareness of resources, energy consumption is expected to increase at a rate of 2 percent per year until 2020. At the current rate of consumption and production levels, we are living beyond our means at approximately 25 percent higher than the earth’s sustainable carrying capacity.

While the developed world poses its threat through the rate of consumption of fossil fuels, with resulting changes in the earth’s climate through emissions of carbon dioxide, poor, rural populations rely on local resources for survival, often leading to a lack of resource management, and subsequent deforestation and topsoil erosion, leaving regions even more vulnerable to damage caused by natural disasters, such as floods or earthquakes.

Nowhere is the issue of sustainable development more focused than on the issue of clean water and sanitation. The issue is as vital in rural communities as it is in urbanized centers. Water is life and one of the planet’s most sought after resources. Today some 1.1 billion people in developing countries have inadequate access to water and 2.6 billion lack basic sanitation. Twenty liters (5.2 gallons) per person per day is considered the minimum threshold requirement to meet basic needs. Most of the people classified as having inadequate access to water use about 5 liters (1.3 gallons) a day. On average people in the United States use more than 400 liters (105.6 gallons) for drinking, washing and flushing toilets.
Considerable progress has been made between 1990 and 2002 in improved drinking water. In 1990 drinking water sources had improved for 7.9 percent of the world’s population. By 2002 about 1.1 billion additional people or about 83 percent had access to better water.

This vital resource is directly linked to food production, poverty and health. Reduction of poverty is a leading strategy for making individuals active participants in the process of protecting the environment.

PCI-Media Impact programming can be an effective means for changing long-standing behaviors or techniques in rural communities where antiquated farming methods, land clearing techniques or lack of sanitation facilities are affecting water quality or creating potential environmental hazards. Modernization and change can be a slow process. However, informally introducing new concepts to a large audience increases the likelihood of acceptance by a few individuals. Once initial success is witnessed, a larger portion of the population is more likely to accept and practice a new technique. Changing behavior one person at a time creates a ripple effect of progress.

Dripping taps in rich countries lose more water than is available each day to more than 1 billion people.

United Nations Human Development Report 2006

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