शनिवार, 22 मार्च 2008

The Seeds of Weed Control



Advice for suppressing the growth of unwelcome plants।


When is a plant a weed? When its undesirable qualities outweigh its good points, say experts at Penn State University.



A farmer in Washington state burns weeds to prepare for the new growing seasonWeeds can take control of productive land. Crops generally produce several hundred seeds per plant. But each weed plant can produce tens or even hundreds of thousands of seeds. And some buried seeds can survive up to forty years, or even longer.
Eradicating weeds means you have to remove all the seeds and roots so the plants will not grow back. But birds or the wind can reintroduce them to the land.
A more common way to deal with weeds is to control them enough so that the land can be used for planting. Experts advise using two or more control methods.
Chemical weed killers or natural treatments like corn gluten can suppress weed growth. Dense planting of a crop can also act as a natural control. Bill Curran is a professor of weed science at Penn State, in University Park, Pennsylvania. He says dense planting is one of the most common methods for suppressing weeds.
He says a dense, competitive crop that quickly shades the soil will help suppress many weeds. The seeds need light to grow, so blocking the sun will reduce weed growth.
Other controls include turning over the soil, pulling the weeds by hand or covering them with mulch made from wood, garden waste or other material. Mulch is widely used, but even mulch has its limits. Natural resource specialists in the Queensland government in Australia note that weeds can be transported in mulch. This is also true of soil, grain, hay and animals.
Yet animals like sheep or goats can provide a biological control by eating weeds. Insects and other organisms can also act as biological controls.
Preventing the spread of weeds is an important part of weed management. Farm vehicles should be kept out of areas with weeds. If that is not possible, then clean off the equipment and your shoes when leaving.
People in Queensland are advised to take weeds and garden waste to a waste center or burn them, bury them deeply or make them into mulch.
Professor Curran says composting weeds is another way to make use of them. The process of making organically rich compost produces heat. This will kill many, though not all, weed seeds. The same is true of seeds that pass through farm animals that graze on weeds.
And that’s the VOA Special English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson। For more information about weed control, go to oaspecialenglish।com.


http://www.voanews.com/specialenglish/2008-03-17-voa5.cfm


Bageecha Bachao Mumbai Bachao

Open Spaces are not a luxury but a necessity for the physical, mental and social health of a metropolis says Naina Kathpalia
Mumbai's aspirations for becoming a global city are intrinsically linked to maintaining certain international standards. These international guidelines clearly state that there should be four acres for green open spaces in an urban environment per 1000 people - a figure, which most mega cities like Delhi, London and New York exceed. Mumbai, at an abysmal 0.03 acres per 1000 people, is one of the poorest. It is ironical that while Mumbai's policy makers and corporate leaders are exchanging notes and ideas with the Mayor of London and his team towards developing Mumbai as a global city, the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (MCGM) seems to be working tangentially.
On 21 November 2007, it passed a regressive Caretaker Policy, which if implemented, will deprive the common man access to "Reserved Public Open Spaces". Internationally, parks and gardens are the generic names for public open spaces. They are a bench mark for all good development and considered essential for ensuring a good quality of life. This does not seem to be the case in Mumbai. Money is being poured into Mumbai for developmental needs, but the city is deteriorating. In a marked contrast to cities like Delhi and Hyderabad, Mumbaikars are furiously building with little thought to their environment. If one were to search for the reasons behind this move, one does not have to look very far. Mumbai's sky rocketing land prices, paucity of land and coalition politics leading to insecure politicians looking at making quick gains are some of the reasons why the state government and the MCGM are pursuing policies blatantly anti the common man, making him, with his scant resources and lack of access to places of recreation, the greatest casualty.
Apart from the irreparable loss to the citizens, the physical safety of our city is also at high risk. During the floods of 26 July 2005, over 500 lost their lives, and there was a loss of hundreds of crores worth of property. There have been a number of expert reports holding forth on this issue. Each one, including the Government's Chitale report, stresses the need for open, un-surfaced spaces to act as sponges to absorb excess water in the eventuality of heavy rainfall. Climate change is an undisputed reality. Given that several such catastrophic events have been scientifically foretold, how can Mumbai in all its conscience, actually destroy its own defenses?
Mumbai suffered a body blow last year when the Supreme Court, inexplicably, overturned the Bombay High Court ruling in the mill lands case, and the city lost its chance to have a sizeable green lung. The more recent casualty is the much awaited Eastern Waterfront Project, with its inclusion of promenades, parks, gardens and other public amenities, which seems to have sunk before it started.

Citizen Action
CitiSpace (Citizens' Forum for Protection of Public Spaces) has been working since 1999 to save recreation grounds, playgrounds, parks and gardens, which are designated as "Reserved Open Spaces" in the development plan of greater Mumbai. Established in June 1998, the NGO networks with over 500 resident associations, Community Based Organisations (CBOs), NGOs, trade/commercial establishments and individuals in most of Mumbai's 24 wards. Its creed is the protection of all public and open spaces (footpaths, playgrounds, recreation grounds, beaches and mangroves) and advocacy of their rightful use.
In 2006 the Government of Maharashtra and MCGM came forth with a regressive and anti-citizen policy wherein the attractions of the lucrative "caretaker" route doom the city-friendly "adoption" policy to failure. CitiSpace, was shocked to see this and in response spearheaded the recent movement against it. An open letter addressing the Chief Minister and signed by eminent citizens was published in a leading daily drawing his attention to this bad policy. The resulting public pressure led to the State government directing the MCGM to stay the 2006 RG/PG policy. However, it is early days yet and it is essential to ensure that the Caretaker concept is completely repealed.

The Caretaker Policy
The Caretaker Policy was geared towards handing over large chunks of open space - reserved plots of 5000 sq. meters and over and 15000 sq. meters - for development of private clubs, which include facilities such as sports, restaurants, bars, and so on. These open spaces are held in public trust by the government and are to be looked after by them with public money - taxes.
Since clubs, by their very nature, have restricted membership and thereby closed to the general public, however 'correctly' the contractual agreement between the MCGM and the private party may read, the undeniable fact is that on the ground it has been proved beyond doubt that implementation and enforcement of any such agreement by the MCGM is virtually non-existent, allowing the club authorities to run their facility as a personal fiefdom. Thus to hand over public land in this fashion is immoral.
The oft repeated excuse 'lack of funds' does not hold water. The MCGM has allocated 400 crores in the 2007-20008 Budget, for public open spaces. There are currently 940 acres (information received under Right To Information Act) of such reserved open spaces available for adoption/ caretaker in Greater Mumbai. Looking at the budgets of Oval Maidan (22 acres) and Kridangan Sangopan Samiti Garden (1.35 acres) both public open spaces, one finds that the average capital costs plus maintenance budget for one year comes to an approximate 11 lakhs per acre. This does not account for the skating rink at the Kridangan Garden, as it would not apply to most grounds. Both Oval Maidan and Kridangan Garden are maintained in prime condition under the adoption scheme. At 11 Lakhs an acre, 940 acres would cost the MCGM 103.4 Crores leaving 296.6 Crore for additional facilities!

Defining Adoption and Caretaker Concepts
Adoption
- Reserved land given for 5 years.
- For restoring and maintaining.
- No construction/ building allowed except a 10' x 10' gardener's hut. That is 100 sq. ft. built up.
- Only fencing, landscaping, lighting & security.

Caretaker
- Reserved land given for minimum 10 years, which can extend indefinitely.
- Restricted entry into the facility for members only.
- For restoring and maintaining.
- Construction and building allowed, including bars, gymkhanas, restaurants, and so on.
- 25 percent to 33 percent of the area of the ground allowed for construction and buildings.
- 10 percent of plot area as plinth - 15 percent of the total plot as FSI.
- 25 percent of plot to be used for ancillary structures, that is, 1000 sq. ft. built up on a designated open space is reserved as per D.P Rules!

The Desired Road Map
To remedy this faulty policy in public interest, MCGM must take certain steps supported by the State Government. This should be followed by a public debate.

- The budgeted amount of Rs. 400 crore should be used first to secure all MCGM reserved grounds with fencing and a security arrangement.
- There should be no blanket policy based entirely on the size of the reserved open spaces
- A ward-wise survey of plots of 5000 sq m and above and 15000 sq m and above should be undertaken to assess the requirement of each municipal ward, with regard to the needs of the community for a sports facility.
- Ward-wise suggestion/objection should be conducted in a transparent manner after the survey results are disseminated to the public.
- The sports facility must be such that it serves all members of the community with no restricted membership. There are several models available for this. A hybrid model where the MCGM develops the facility with its own funds and the stakeholders manage it with funds from corporations is one such option.
- Private clubs cannot be built on reserved open spaces. They must be built on land purchased by the promoters.

The conclusion drawn from this discussion is obvious. MCGM must not hand over public land to private interest as land is finite - it cannot be recovered! If it wants its citizens to add their bit and assist them, then they should follow the 'Adoption' Policy. This differs from the Caretaker module in that it is more citizen-friendly, allows neighborhood committees to come forward in the maintenance and upkeep of their open spaces and is more environment sensitive as it does not allow any construction on the adopted space other than a small mali chowky (gardener's hut).
For this policy to succeed, the MCGM must first make the public aware that such a policy exists, and where to find the information. In order to do so, It should use the print media, like major English, Marathi, Hindi and Gujarati newspapers to explain the policy and ensure that a list of all RG/PG Parks and gardens available for adoption are placed simultaneously on the Ward Office Notice Board, at the site, at other public spots in the locality, in the print and electronic media and the MCGM web site. The application system needs to be streamlined. The present time line of 30 days should be extended to enable citizen volunteers who undertake such projects on behalf of MCGM and the city adequate time for funding and planning.
These are some of the best practices that could save Mumbai's open spaces. They need to be laid down by law, and implemented both in letter and spirit by the authorities. Future generations of Mumbaikers will grow up without knowing what it is to run and play in a maidan!
— The author is Co-Convenor, CitiSpace

सोमवार, 17 मार्च 2008

India's climate change policy a hot topic

Carbon footprints trifling, but energy demand is immense

It is Friday night in the center of new Indian ambition. The air is thick with the construction dust of new glass-fronted high-rise buildings. The traffic moves so slowly that commuters can gape all they want at the Burberry advertisement that lights up the facade of a shopping mall. In the din of car horns and cranes, Sucharita Rastogi, 27, a business school graduate, waits wearily for her office van to pull up and take her home; it will be at least a 90-minute crawl. "Mind-wise," she says, "we are exhausted, sitting, waiting."
A beacon of India's red-hot economy, this new suburb on the edge of the capital, New Delhi, is also a symbol of India's fast-growing hunger for energy. By the government's own estimates, energy consumption in this country of 1.1 billion is expected to quadruple over the next 25 years, inevitably expanding India's emissions of greenhouse gases.
At the moment, it is a mixed blessing that Gurgaon remains an island of air-conditioned malls and roaring, round-the-clock office towers, and that behind this brightly lighted boomtown lies a vast nation of darkness and cow-dung-fueled stoves.
Almost half of India's population has no access to the electricity grid, and many more people suffer hours without power. Nearly 700,000 Indians rely on animal waste and firewood as fuel for cooking. As a result, India's per capita carbon footprint remains a small fraction of that of the industrialized world - the average American produces 16 times the emissions of the average Indian - and in turn empowers the central Indian argument for its right to consume more, not less, energy in the future.
India has consistently bucked pressures to set targets for reducing emissions, arguing that it has neither been a significant polluter nor yet able to spread modern energy to millions of its poor. Instead, it has pledged to ensure that its per capita emissions never exceed those of the developed world.
"It's not logical to talk of emissions cuts without reference to per capita emission levels," Montek Singh Ahluwalia, the deputy chairman of India's Planning Commission, said. "It's logical to talk about burden-sharing in terms of per capita emissions entitlements, or some other principle. The main point is that we must first agree on a principle that is felt to be fair."
India points out that it contributes only 4.6 percent of the world's greenhouse gases although its people represent 17 percent of the world's population.
Even so, how India will contend with its expanding carbon footprint is under growing scrutiny from abroad.
The U.N. climate chief, Yvo de Boer, while acknowledging India's resistance to mandatory emissions cuts as "a fair position," said on a recent visit that the ball was in India's court to offer alternatives. "It's clear to me that developing countries don't want binding targets," de Boer said. "Now I want to hear what they do want."
The Indian government has yet to unveil its long-awaited climate change policy.
India's total emissions are the fourth-largest in the world, after the United States, China and Russia, though its per capita footprint remains as low as anywhere in the developing world: 1.2 tons annually, compared with 20 tons in the United States and the world average of 4 tons. The International Energy Agency, a policy and research group in Paris, forecast in November that India's energy demand would more than double by 2030. In turn, if policies remain unchanged, per capita emissions will double, it said, but will remain well below the level of industrialized countries today.
The agency also forecast that the transportation sector was likely to drive up energy demand the fastest, as prosperity brought more cars on the road. Coal imports alone could rise sevenfold, the report added. Construction is also hugely energy intensive.
Gurgaon illustrates the peculiar asymmetry of the Indian energy pie and the difficult challenge that it creates: how to balance the cravings of India's citizens with its obligations to the environment.
As it happens, cravings run deep in the India of darkness and dung. You can hear it in the talk at the tea shop in Chakai Haat, an unremarkable village in eastern Bihar state, from which armies of working men travel to boomtowns like Gurgaon. Chakai Haat has no access to the electricity grid, cooking stoves are fueled by animal waste and bicycles are the main mode of transportation on rutted country roads. Three diesel-powered generators hum a few hours each night so the village bazaar can be lighted and cell phones recharged.
For the most part, the people of Chakai Haat live in the dark.
Lakhan Lal Biswas minds his provisions shop by the dim light of a kerosene lamp. Gita Devi buys enough twigs and straw to cook one meal a day; on a recent night it was rice, with eggplant and potato, and it would have to last through the next morning.
Shamshuddin Sadiruddin Shah, who lives in Mumbai most of the year running a private telephone booth, misses the hot showers he grew accustomed to there; no one has water heaters in Chakai Haat.
The men of this village straddle the two Indias. In the New India, they watch television after a day's work and sleep under fans on hot nights. In the Old India, they while away evenings at the tea shop until the generator goes down for the night, and then they walk home with flashlights.
Muhammad Mumtaz Alam, who works in a garment factory in Gurgaon, put it bluntly. "There, we live in light," he said. "Here, we live in darkness."
Chakai Haat once had power at least a few hours each day, and it changed the rhythm of life. Petty thefts dropped because the village was lighted up. The government installed wells to irrigate the fields. Rice mills opened, offering jobs.
The boon did not last long. Strong rains knocked down the power lines. The rice mills closed. Darkness swathed the village once more.
The Planning Commission estimates Bihar to have India's lowest rates of energy use, in contrast with the National Capital Region, which includes Gurgaon.
Power generation across India has been stepped up, with the government promising to extend electricity across rural India over the next five years, but that, too, is a mixed blessing. India's old-fashioned coal-fired power plants are among the country's biggest polluters, according to a survey released recently by an American environmental group, Carbon Monitoring for Action.
In India's growth story, many environmentalists see opportunity for energy efficiency. The Center for Science and Environment, an advocacy group in New Delhi, has called on the government to remove excise duties on buses and increase them on diesel cars. It has had mixed success: On Friday the government announced tax cuts on buses, as well as on small cars and motorcycles.
Others have called for stepped-up government investment in urban rail lines and for tighter energy-saving building codes in new construction. India, they argue, cannot fritter away energy as the West has done all these years.
"It causes me deep anguish," said Rajendra K। Pachauri, the chairman of the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a U.N. group. "India cannot emulate developed countries. We have to find a path that is distinctly different."

Somini Sengupta, New York Times

मंगलवार, 4 मार्च 2008

Effects of Climate change

"Imagine a world where the water that runs from your tap is no longer safe to drink, and recreational areas like beaches are swallowed by rising sea levels. Visualise a period where electricity bills of over hundreds of dollars each month is used to run air-conditioners to battle the searing heat from the Sun. These are in fact, spine-chilling thoughts. The threat of climate change is becoming reality, and world leaders are now scrambling for solutions to tackle this petrifying phenomenon, and avoid feeling the wrath of nature.Globalisation is blamed by environmental activists for being the main cause of climate change through global warming. Natural resources are being used up at a faster rate like never before, and many countries are far more concerned with economic growth than protecting the environment. Rainforests in places like the Amazon Basin are being cleared to make way for economic activities such as mining and cattle ranching. Indeed, deforestation would lead to more economic growth, but at the expense of allowing global temperatures to rise, and the loss of flora and fauna which may be beneficial in medical science?Climate change is eminently driven by the increasing rate of global warming, which may lead to more natural disasters. With global warming, global temperature is expected to increase by about 5 degrees Celsius by the end of the twenty-first century. Polar ice shelves in the arctic and antarctic regions will melt off, and increase in global temperatures would also result in thermal expansion of sea waters, resulting in escalating sea levels. This may eventually lead to more wide-scale catastrophes, such as floods, hurricanes or even severe droughts in dryer regions. The result of this devastation is definitely beyond words, as millions of people eventually become homeless and forced into poverty with destruction of their property and belongings.At present, we are already lamenting about the sizzling heat from the Sun. The effects of global warming can be felt all around us.
Take for an example, restaurants all over the world are now equipped with air conditioners, which seem to be losing the battle against the blistering heat. The city of Tokyo in Japan has recently experienced almost a snow-free winter as well. Can we imagine developing countries like India, where people die of dehydration and intense sunburn as they have no access to water and even basic electrical equipment such as fans? The impact of climate change is calamitous, and the quality of life all across the globe will be greatly diminished, without facilities such as ski resorts to cater to our wants during the winter vacation.The effects of climate change not only affects people, but wildlife as well. Some plants and animals may die as they are unable to adapt to the change in temperatures quickly. This affects other organisms down food chains, and threaten their survival. Eventually, man will be affected as well, as we depend on nature for our food. Food prices will be likely to increase, as the demand for food surpasses the food supply. Lower income groups of people all over the world will be badly affected by the inflation, as they can no longer afford basic necessities like bread. Middle income groups will be hit as well, as inflation causes them to see their savings wiped out and becoming valueless.Animals are able to adapt to changes in global temperature by migrating to cooler regions of this planet, although this has major side effects. For example, sharks move south to Antarctica allow themselves to adapt to the surrounding water temperatures, but at the expense of seals and crabs who become prey of these sharks. This causes wildlife to be endangered and eventually extinct, due to long term effects of human activity. These animals are unblemished, but yet we are indirectly taking their lives just to make our life more convenient and comfortable.
Have we ever stopped to think of the aftermath resulting from switching on the air-conditioner whenever we go to bed on a tepid night?Environmentalists already have the scientific proof of our ailing Earth. Why not we start now and begin in our campaign to save the earth? Saving the earth is a pressing matter that should not be disregarded. Fortunately, we still have some time before the effects of climate change become totally unalterable.Firstly, more needs to be done to generate public awareness on the global problem, and that everyone can play a part to put a stop to this. For a start, we can help to save electricity at home. Simple steps such as setting the temperature of an air-conditioner at 25 degrees Celsius when in use, switching off household appliances instead of leaving them on standby mode, and even watching less television can help conserve resources. Less usage of electricity means less requirement of power stations to burn fossil fuels, and hence lower emissions of carbon dioxide gas into our atmosphere. If everyone can play a part to do these simple things, we can go a long way to help reverse climate change.
Secondly, the authorities can also promote the use of public transport, over owning a vehicle. As people become more well to do, they are more inclined to get a car of their own to show that they are of greater financial status. This leads to more vehicles on the road, contributing to more traffic congestions, and hence the burning of petrol in a stationary car, which releases unnecessary amounts of greenhouse gases. Taking public transport not only promotes ease of traffic on the roads, but also goes a long way to help prevent the Earth from “eventual overheating” and help to conserve the environment for many generations to come.
Thirdly, we could encourage the use of renewable energy. Although this has been seen as expensive to maintain and be used widely, more people and governments are beginning to invest in 'green' energy, such as solar energy, nuclear energy and hydroelectric energy. We are already able to convert energy from the sun to electrical energy to heat up water for our daily baths. Hence, by doing so, we are able to reduce our carbon footprint and release less greenhouse gases during the course of our daily activity.Fourthly, we can further advocate the recycling of materials and reducing the use of raw materials. Materials such as steel and plastic have to go through prolonged periods of refining and mining, which releases exorbitant amounts of carbon dioxide into our atmosphere. If we can do simple things like saying no to plastic bags whenever we shop for grocery items, it would mean less demand for it, and less need for factories to produce them. In a year, the average human would be able to cut back on two hundred plastic bags, and a small country like Singapore would be able to make use of 1 billion plastic bags less if every one plays his part to save the environment!Climate change is not something new to us. After all, in recent months, newspapers across the globe report on the danger the world is headed to. It is imperative that each and every individual knows that he has a part to play to protect the environment, and not only their governments.
We need to spread the word through the media and education that saving the environment begins with each and every person. Hence, in conclusion, it is paramount that we now begin to do our part to save the environment, lest we want future generations suffer the result of our folly."
Kenneth

रविवार, 2 मार्च 2008

The Recession's Human And Environmental Impacts

By Emily Spence/ Countercurrents.org
Too often news coverage focuses on discreet current events at the expense of a more synthetic approach to notable happenings. While it is important that the public learns of major incidents in the world as they take place, sometimes this can lead to some observers "not seeing the forest for the trees."On account, it might be easy to miss the connection between the global recession (and possible future depression) with the ongoing decline of environmental well-being and increase in human population. All the same, these three areas are deeply intertwined. Here are a few details concerning the relationship.Let's start with the present economic decline: Part of the reasons that there are global jitters involving the weakening of the $ USD is that it provides a means to assess worth of other holdings. In short, many countries and individuals, directly and indirectly, assign their own fiscal strength based on the dollar's standard. This is especially the case when they are carrying the US public debt, which is currently well over $9 Trillion dollars. In addition, practically all of the US national debt owned by foreigners is held by private investors except for central banks, which hold 64%. Further, the size of the foreign-owned portion of this amount owed is practically three times the total amount of currency in circulation! Indeed, the numbers given by the Federal Reserve for June 2007 put its amount at US $755 billion. In tandem, the average US family's credit card balance is now almost 5% of its annual income (with a median U.S. household income presently at $43,200), more that 40 % of American families spend more than they earn, personal bankruptcies in US have doubled in the last decade and the overall consumer debt has reached $2.46 Trillion as of June 2007 (excluding the $440 billion of revolving home equity loans, $600 Billion owed for second mortgages and an overall $9 Trillion in mortgage debt).
As such, the total US consumer revolving debt grew to $904 Billion last summer. Why has this happened? In part, it is because real wages of most workers languished or declined since 1975. So, many Americans reacted by taking on loans to maintain or raise their living standards. As Polonius, Shakespeare character in Hamlet cautioned, "neither a borrower, nor a lender be" and, certainly, there is trouble with being either. However, everyone, even an individual with neither role, can be in trouble when the value of the currency that he maintains plummets.

So, why is the American money losing clout? The answer is partly dependent upon the way that it gained worth in the first place and, indeed, its relative merit is created by any number of factors. These include the country issuing it having a robust economy (a trade surplus rather than being a debtor nation), having something of universal worth tied to it for which it stands, such as precious metal from which the $ USD was effectively severed in 1971 when the US government refused to exchange a relative small sum of dollars held by several other governments for gold, or some other coveted resource for which the currency alone must be traded, something like OPEC petroleum.
(The latter contingency is the reason that some dollar holders find the Iran Bourse, with its plans to reject the $ USD as payment for oil, threatening and suspect that the recent cable failures were a deliberate attempt to postpone its arrangements being set in place.) In short, without a monetary standard having it’s worth assigned by being attached to something deemed of unquestionable worth, it tends to have uncertain value.Meanwhile, the US economy, itself, can't grow. Partly, this is due to globalization of industry, which has created jobs in second and third world countries by taking many of them away from Americans, who cannot continue their high rates of consumption of products due to the increasing deficit of employment opportunities, diminished fiscal returns, raising prices for goods (including staples) and advancing inflation. So, it is no wonder that, while oil and food prices are rising, so are the number of home foreclosures while home worth, in general, is depreciating across the board. Simultaneously, it is no surprise that US wages are kept depressed by the existence of a proliferation of out-of-work laborers relative to the smaller amount of jobs in existence. At the same time, the already huge homeless population, as would be expected, is skyrocketing. In fact, the number of persistently homeless Americans, ones with repeated episodes or who have been homeless for long periods, involves between 847,000 to 3,470,000 individuals, many of whom are children and unemployed veterans. Posed another way, close to 3.5 million people, of whom roughly 1.35 million are minors, are likely to experience homelessness in any given year in the US (National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, 2007).At the same time, further outsourcing of labor guarantees that more jobs will be cut with the outcome that US citizens will possess even less money to buy either locally manufactured or imported goods. In relation, economic growth in other countries is, also, due to slow down, as exports are no longer quickly snapped up in the US. However, this consequence was long set to develop, given that, since 2000, a total of 3.2 million — one in six factory jobs — have disappeared from the American shores and the lowest rate of US job growth in four years occurred as recently as December 2007 when, simultaneously, the unemployment rate shot up 0.3 percentage points to almost 5 %. By factoring in huge losses in other work positions -- such as the ones related to construction, fiscal services and retail sales -- it is easy to see that American spending, even for relatively inexpensive foreign made goods, was bound to take a nosedive. How could it not do so when adequate job provision and reasonable salaries have, in effect, largely disappeared? All the same, this overall arrangement has not been bad for those in the top economic tier as their capacity to pay meager second and third world wages, coupled with receipt of high income from finished products acquired by first world customers, has created an economic boon. Indeed, by mechanisms such as these, the ranks of millionaires and billionaires, during the past few years, has greatly expanded. (The number of millionaires in the world swelled to 8.7 million and the number of billionaires around the world rose to a record 793, the latter of which hold $2.6 trillion in assets and personally garner an extraordinary amount of resources.) So have the overall profit margins of many transnational companies, such as the pharmaceutical, oil and other industrial giants. All considered, there is no way that many Americans, even with the minimum wage set at a measly $5.85/ hour, can compete with overseas $1/ day wages, nor subsume the fundamental costs associated with their rents, mortgages, the increase in food and oil prices, rising medical insurance payments and other basic expenses. On account, an overall decline in purchases has, recently, taken place in the US and, while this is not good for suppliers, it does give the environment a break.The reason that it does is that the slow down in business, while ominous from an economic standpoint, is good for the environment, that cannot continue to be assaulted at an ever higher level in order to make an ever higher financial gain off of its largely finite resources. As it is, ecologists anticipate that, if present rates of deforestation continue, rainforests will disappear from the planet within this century, which would kill off an inordinate amount of the world's animal and plant species while effecting global climate in unpredictable ways. (Presently, the global annual rate of deforestation is .8 percent.)
The outlook for the ocean life is just as grim with currently 71-78 % of it being 'fully exploited', 'over exploited' or 'significantly depleted' according to the United Nations. In addition, many types of aquatic plants and animals are on the verge of total extermination and 90 % of all big fish are already gone.

Add to this that, according to recent UN studies, arid lands prone to desertification cover more than one third of the planet's landmass, which supports more than twenty percent of the human population. While requirements from these delicate environments grow, they increasingly become incapable of supporting life. As such, the global rate of desertification is rapidly escalating, although the actual rates vary by locality.All of this in mind, we cannot keep expecting ever greater economic growth, nor an ever enlarging human population. Instead, we collectively need to drastically cut back on personal resource use, curtail manufacturing (due to stresses on the environment caused by global warming and other industrial impingements) and face a world that is likely to provide a dwindling supply of jobs. In actuality, we cannot even endure a 5.5 to 7 degree F. (3 to four degree C.) rise in temperature due to carbon loading from industry and transportation of goods. This is because our doing so would all but ensure that human life would be unsupportable over much of the globe and likely prevent pollination for many major crops. Along with the resultant changed rainfall patterns, the lack of pollination would prompt a tremendous decrease in food production.Regardless of whether this extreme heat occurs or not, the global population, according to the International Data Base, is expected to increase from 6 billion in 1999 to 9 billion by 2042, an increase of 50 percent that will require a mere 43 years. This, of course, has alarming implications for the maxed out natural world (including its water supplies), the labor market, food availability, product price and ever higher global warming.So, just how are we to cope with these assorted dismal factors? First, we need to recognize the absolute need to stymie growth of GDP in every country, proactively delimit population and reduce general consumption. Put another way, we cannot have any positive outcomes from expecting myriad environments to yield up an unlimited cornucopia of goods, especially as our very lives depend on our severely lowering greenhouse gases and maintaining a large diversity of healthy intact natural environments. Second, we must, quickly, develop a wide array of "green jobs" to make up for the scarcity of ones that will come to pass on account of policies mandating deliberate curtailment of energy intensive manufacturing. Third, we need to quickly create business capable of providing, on an extensive basis, electricity derived from benign alternatives to fossil fuels. Further, it would be helpful for people to form into small scale, self-sustaining communities to ride through the recession. Indeed, their establishment would, without doubt, help with the transition away from transnational sweatshops, provide regional employment and curb reliance on oil as less goods, including necessities, would require extensive transportation if produced locally.The coalescence of a recession, mounting population, peak oil, mass extinction, urgent water shortages, climate change and other disastrous environmental impacts challenge us to take immediate action. Our doing so need not be disastrous if we collectively begin to make the essential changes on the scale needed. If we do not, the results could likely be catastrophic on a scope barely imagined by any of us. With firm resolve, let us all begin to undertake the critical modifications at once.
Emily Spence is a progressive living in Massachusetts. She has spent many years involved with assorted types of human rights, environmental and social service efforts.

The Global Water Crisis And The Coming Battle For The Right To Water

By Maude Barlow
Fpif.org
The following is an excerpt of Chapter 5 in Maude Barlow's latest book, Blue Covenant
The Future of Water
The three water crises – dwindling freshwater supplies, inequitable access to water and the corporate control of water – pose the greatest threat of our time to the planet and to our survival. Together with impending climate change from fossil fuel emissions, the water crises impose some life-or-death decisions on us all. Unless we collectively change our behavior, we are heading toward a world of deepening conflict and potential wars over the dwindling supplies of freshwater – between nations, between rich and poor, between the public and the private interest, between rural and urban populations, and between the competing needs of the natural world and industrialized humans.
Water Is Becoming a Growing Source of Conflict Between Countries
Around the world, more that 215 major rivers and 300 groundwater basins and aquifers are shared by two or more countries, creating tensions over ownership and use of the precious waters they contain. Growing shortages and unequal distribution of water are causing disagreements, sometimes violent, and becoming a security risk in many regions. Britain’s former defense secretary, John Reid, warns of coming “water wars.” In a public statement on the eve of a 2006 summit on climate change, Reid predicted that violence and political conflict would become more likely as watersheds turn to deserts, glaciers melt and water supplies are poisoned. He went so far as to say that the global water crisis was becoming a global security issue and that Britain’s armed forces should be prepared to tackle conflicts, including warfare, over dwindling water sources. “Such changes make the emergence of violent conflict more, rather than less, likely,” former British prime minister Tony Blair told The Independent. “The blunt truth is that the lack of water and agricultural land is a significant contributory factor to the tragic conflict we see unfolding in Darfur. We should see this as a warning sign.”

The Independent gave several other examples of regions of potential conflict. These include Israel, Jordan and Palestine, who all rely on the Jordan River, which is controlled by Israel; Turkey and Syria, where Turkish plans to build dams on the Euphrates River brought the country to the brink of war with Syria in 1998, and where Syria now accuses Turkey of deliberately meddling with its water supply; China and India, where the Brahmaputra River has caused tension between the two countries in the past, and where China’s proposal to divert the river is re-igniting the divisions; Angola, Botswana and Namibia, where disputes over the Okavango water basin that have flared in the past are now threatening to re-ignite as Namibia is proposing to build a threehundred- kilometer pipeline that will drain the delta; Ethiopia and Egypt, where population growth is threatening conflict along the Nile; and Bangladesh and India, where flooding in the Ganges caused by melting glaciers in the Himalayas is wreaking havoc in Bangladesh, leading to a rise in illegal, and unpopular, migration to India.

While not likely to lead to armed conflict, stresses are growing along the U.S.-Canadian border over shared boundary waters. In particular, concerns are growing over the future of the Great Lakes, whose waters are becoming increasingly polluted and whose water tables are being steadily drawn down by the huge buildup of population and industry around the basin. A joint commission set up to oversee these waters was recently bypassed by the governors of the American states bordering the Great Lakes, who passed an amendment to the treaty governing the lakes that allows for water diversions to new communities off the basin on the American side. Canadian protests fell on deaf ears in Washington. In 2006, the U.S. government announced plans to have the U.S. coast guard patrol the Great Lakes using machine guns mounted on their vessels and revealed that it had created thirty-four permanent live-fire training zones along the Great Lakes from where it had already conducted a number of automatic weapons drills due to fierce opposition, firing three thousand lead bullets each time into the lakes. The Bush administration has temporarily called off these drills but is clearly asserting U.S. authority over what has in the past been considered joint waters.

Similar trouble is brewing on the U.S.-Mexican border, where a private group of U.S.–based water rights holders is using the North American Free Trade Agreement to challenge the long-term practice by Mexican farmers to divert water from the Rio Grande before it reaches the United States.

Water Is Becoming a Global Security Issue:
The United States
Water has recently (and suddenly) become a key strategic security and foreign policy priority for the United States. In the wake of the terrorist attacks of 9-11, protection of U.S. waterways and drinking water supplies from terrorist attack became vitally important to the White House. When Congress created the Department of Homeland Security in 2002, it gave the department responsibility for securing the nation’s water infrastructure and allocated us$548 million in appropriations for security of water infrastructure facilities, funding that was increased in subsequent years. The Environmental Protection Agency created a National Homeland Security Research Center to develop the scientific foundations and tools to be used in the event of an attack on the nation’s water systems, and a Water Security Division was established to train water utility personnel on security issues. It also created a Water Information Sharing and Analysis Center for dissemination of alerts about potential threats to drinking water and, with the American Water Works Association, a rapid e-mail notification system for professionals called the Water Security Channel. Ever true to market economy ideology, the Department of Homeland Security’s mandate includes promoting publicprivate partnerships in protecting the nation’s water security.

But the interest in water did not stop there. Water is becoming as important a strategic issue as energy in Washington. In an August 2004 briefing note for the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, a think tank that focuses on the link between energy and security, Dr. Allan R. Hoffman, a senior analyst for the U.S. Department of Energy, declared that the energy security of the United States actually depends on the state of its water resources and warns of a growing water-security crisis worldwide. “Just as energy security became a national priority in the period following the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973–74, water security is destined to become a national and global priority in the decades ahead,” says Hoffman. He notes that central to addressing water security issues is finding the energy to extract water from underground aquifers, transport water through pipelines and canals, manage and treat water for reuse and desalinate brackish and sea water – all technologies now being promoted by U.S. government partnerships with American companies. He also points out that the U.S. energy interests in the Middle East could be threatened by water conflicts in the region: “Water conflicts add to the instability of a region on which the U.S. depends heavily for oil.

Continuation or inflammation of these conflicts could subject U.S. energy supplies to blackmail again, as occurred in the 1970s.” Water shortages and global warning pose a “serious threat” to America’s national security, top retired military leaders told the president in an April 2007 report published by the national security think tank cna Corporation. Six retired admirals and five retired generals warned of a future of rampant water wars into which the United States will be dragged. Erik Peterson, director of the Global Strategy Institute of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a research organization in Washington that calls itself a “strategic planning partner for the government,” says that the United States must make water a top priority in foreign policy. “There is a very, very critical dimension to all these global water problems here at home,” he told Voice of America News. “The first is that it’s in our national interest to see stability and security and economic development in key areas of the world, and water is a big factor with that whole set of challenges.” His center has joined forces with itt Industries, the giant water technology company; Proctor & Gamble, which has created a home water purifier called pur and is working with the un in a joint publicprivate venture in developing countries; Coca-Cola; and Sandia National Laboratories to launch a joint-research institute called Global Water Futures (gwf). Sandia, whose motto is “securing a peaceful and free world through technology” and that works to “maintain U.S. military and nuclear superiority,” is contracted out to weapons manufacturer Lockheed Martin by the U.S. government, to operate, thus linking water security to military security in a direct way.

The mandate of Global Water Futures is twofold: to affect U.S. strategy and policy regarding the global water crisis and to develop the technology necessary to advance the solution. In a September 2005 report, Global Water Futures warned that the global water crisis is driving the world toward “a tipping point in human history,” and elaborated on the need for the United States to start taking water security more seriously: “In light of the global trends in water, it is clear that water quality and water management will affect almost every major U.S. strategic priority in every key region of the world. Addressing the world’s water needs will go well beyond humanitarian and economic development interests. . . . Policies focused on water in regions across the planet must be regarded as a critical element in U.S. national security strategy. Such policies should be part of a broader, comprehensive, and integrated U.S. strategy toward the global water challenges.”
Innovations in policy and technology must be tightly linked, says the report, no doubt music to the ears of the corporations that sponsored it. gwf calls for closer innovation and cooperation between governments and the private sector and “redoubled” efforts to mobilize public-private partnerships in the development of technological solutions. And, in language that will be familiar to critics of the Bush administration who argue that the United States is not in Iraq to promote democracy, but rather to secure oil resources and make huge profits for American companies in the “rebuilding” effort, the report links upholding American values of democracy with the profit to be gained in the process: “Water issues are critical to U.S. national security and integral to upholding American values of humanitarianism and democratic development. Moreover, engagement with international water issues guarantees business opportunity for the U.S. private sector, which is well positioned to contribute to development and reap economic reward.” Listed among the U.S. government agencies engaged in water issues in the report is the Department of Commerce, which “facilitates U.S. water businesses and market research, and improves U.S. competitiveness in the international water market.”

Blue Covenant: The Alternative Water Future
Humanity still has a chance to head off these scenarios of conflict and war. We could start with a global covenant on water. The Blue Covenant should have three components: a water conservation covenant from people and their governments that recognizes the right of the Earth and of other species to clean water, and pledges to protect and conserve the world’s water supplies; a water justice covenant between those in the global North who have water and resources and those in the global South who do not, to work in solidarity for water justice, water for all and local control of water; and a water democracy covenant among all governments acknowledging that water is a fundamental human right for all. Therefore, governments are required not only to provide clean water to their citizens as a public service, but they must also recognize that citizens of other countries have the right to water as well and to find peaceful solutions to water disputes between states.
A good example of this is the Good Water Makes Good Neighbors project of Friends of the Earth Middle East, which seeks to use shared water and the notion of water justice to negotiate a wider peace accord in the region. Another example is the successful restoration of the beautiful Lake Constance by Germany, Austria, Lichtenstein and Switzerland, the four countries that share it.

The Blue Covenant should also form the heart of a new covenant on the right to water to be adopted both in nation-state constitutions and in international law at the United Nations. To create the conditions for this covenant will require a concerted and collective international collaboration and will have to tackle all three water crises together with the alternatives: Water Conservation, Water Justice, and Water Democracy.
(For more on these concepts, order Barlow's latest book, Blue Covenant.)
Maude Barlow is the national chairperson of the Council of Canadians, chairperson of Food and Water Watch in the U.S., and co-founder of the Blue Planet Project, which is instrumental in the international community in working for the right to water for all people.