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- <text id=89TT3333>
- <link 93TG0019>
- <title>
- Dec. 18, 1989: Get Going, Mr. Bush
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Endangered Earth Updates
- Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 60
- Get Going, Mr. Bush
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> A new American role in world affairs, that of bystander,
- has been defined by the Bush Administration's reaction to two
- epochal events. But while it may be wise for the U.S. to refrain
- from meddling too much in Eastern Europe's current upheaval, the
- global environmental crisis cries out for presidential
- leadership. Michael Deland, chairman of the White House Council
- on Environmental Quality, admits that "this country is the most
- wasteful on the face of this earth."
- </p>
- <p> Candidate Bush produced fine environmental rhetoric, but
- this commitment has gradually given way to mixed signals and
- throat clearing. Lack of federal leadership has led to
- regulatory chaos as states and municipalities, going it alone,
- have passed scores of differing environmental statutes. Other
- nations now find it easy to dismiss American calls for action.
- If the Bush Administration is to assert its promised
- international leadership, it must take action to reassure the
- world that it is serious about dealing with environmental
- threats.
- </p>
- <p> A small but symbolically important first step would be to
- halt deforestation of ancient forests in the Pacific Northwest
- and Alaska. Incredibly, the Government spends $40 million
- yearly building logging roads and subsidizing the destruction
- of virgin forests on public lands. If the U.S. protected its
- last old-growth woodlands, American officials would have more
- credibility when asking tropical nations to stop the relentless
- cutting of their rain forests.
- </p>
- <p> Another simple but vitally important move would be to
- reinvigorate the U.S. commitment to family planning at home and
- abroad. Peter Raven, director of the Missouri Botanical Garden,
- points out that humanity consumes or wastes 40% of the total
- amount of energy stored by photosynthesis in terrestrial
- vegetation. No one knows how much more people can devour before
- they begin to exhaust resources and crowd out vital ecosystems.
- Lester Brown of the Worldwatch Institute argues that global
- annual food production already falls short of human consumption
- and that environmental degradation reduces yields 1% annually
- at a time when world population is growing 2%.
- </p>
- <p> Despite this trend, the Reagan Administration slashed aid
- to international family-planning programs, and President Bush
- has not restored it. He recently vetoed a $15 billion foreign
- aid package because he feared that a tiny $15 million targeted
- for the U.N. Population Fund might help support abortion
- services in China. Getting birth-control information and devices
- to the 2.5 billion people beyond the present reach of
- family-planning programs will require $8 billion annually, a $5
- billion rise from current levels. In 1989 the U.S. contributed
- $245 million to such programs, less in real terms than in 1979.
- Unless America reverses its present policy, it sends a message
- to the world that the U.S. considers mass starvation preferable
- to the termination of unwanted pregnancies.
- </p>
- <p> Similarly, the U.S. needs to revamp its technical
- assistance to poorer nations. In the past, development agencies
- have tended to promote pell-mell progress, leading many nations
- to conclude that environmental destruction is an integral part
- of economic advance. Senator Albert Gore, a Tennessee Democrat,
- advocates that assistance be refocused on "leapfrogging"
- technologies, like low-emission power plants, so that nations
- may better the lives of their people without repeating the
- mistakes of the industrial world. But to develop better
- technologies, says Harvard atmospheric scientist Michael
- McElroy, the U.S. will have to bolster its faltering science
- education.
- </p>
- <p> Because of its prestige, the U.S. has the potential to do
- enormous good in promoting international treaties to heal the
- planet. Agreements like the 1987 Montreal Protocol, governing
- the release of ozone-damaging gases, serve the important
- function of reassuring nations that protecting the environment
- will not put them at a competitive disadvantage. So far, though,
- the Bush Administration has squandered the momentum generated
- by the Montreal agreement. Administration negotiators outraged
- nations in Africa, a prime dumping ground for hazardous wastes,
- by opposing important safety provisions in an international
- agreement on the shipment of toxic refuse.
- </p>
- <p> Such precedents are not encouraging if the U.S. is to
- grapple with global warming, the climate change that might
- follow from overloading the atmosphere with gases like carbon
- dioxide. To date the Administration has been slow to react to
- the greenhouse threat because scientists are still debating how
- serious the problem is and because taking strong steps against
- it could cause severe economic dislocations. The U.N. is
- sponsoring a major study that could provide the basis for a
- coordinated international approach to global warming. American
- leadership is critical to this effort, just as it was to the
- Montreal Protocol.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, the U.S. should begin to take unilateral
- action. The centerpiece of such a policy should be a
- comprehensive drive to cut gaseous emissions by conserving
- energy. Whether or not global warming is an imminent threat,
- curbing energy use would produce a more breathable atmosphere
- and reduce American dependence on unreliable foreign sources of
- fossil fuels.
- </p>
- <p> The best way to do this is to raise energy prices and let
- free-market forces do the job of stimulating conservation.
- First, the federal gasoline tax should be increased
- substantially--to at least 60 cents per gal., from the current
- 9 cents per gal., over the next four years. At the same time,
- the Government could begin setting up a program to tax the use
- of all fossil fuels. The size of the tax should vary according
- to how much carbon is released into the atmosphere when a
- particular fuel is burned. That would encourage a shift in
- consumption patterns away from high-pollution fuels like coal
- to cleaner ones like natural gas.
- </p>
- <p> Such tax penalties could be broadly applied to all forms of
- pollution. Senator Gore suggests that pollution fees could be
- collected in an Environmental Security Trust Fund, which would
- be used to reward environmentally responsible behavior like the
- insulation of homes. At the moment, most economic incentives
- work in a perverse direction. J. Gustave Speth, president of the
- World Resources Institute, notes that consumers have to pay
- extra for additional pollution gear if they want a cleaner
- vehicle--exactly the opposite of what should be the case.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, the U.S. needs a whole new way of evaluating
- economic growth. Gross national product and other standard
- measures of progress merely look at increases in output. They
- do not take into account the loss of irreplaceable natural
- resources and the damage that pollution from higher production
- does to the environment. For instance, ozone pollution, largely
- from auto emissions, reduces crop yields 5% to 10%, in effect
- making farmers subsidizers of commuters. The U.S. should lead
- the world in promoting "resource accounting," a process that
- adjusts economic measures to reflect environmental costs of
- industrial activity.
- </p>
- <p> To meet environmental threats effectively, the Government
- will have to reorganize its efforts. The Bush Administration
- inherited a structure designed to deal with problems in a
- fragmentary manner, but by their very nature environmental
- problems require an integrated, holistic approach. The
- Environmental Protection Agency proposed revisions of the Clean
- Air Act without input from the departments of Energy or
- Transportation. Such lack of communication will continue until
- the President designates one agency to coordinate policy on the
- environment throughout the Government. Kathryn Fuller, president
- of the World Wildlife Fund, goes further and argues that the
- environment should be at the foundation of policy review in all
- departments.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, there is the question of who will pay for cleaning
- up the environment, particularly with the budget deficit
- looming large. Increased penalties for polluters could help
- raise money, but the Government will still have to reallocate
- its scarce resources. In view of the reduced tension between
- East and West, there is a growing consensus that the defense
- budget can be cut. While it would be naive to think that much
- of the military-industrial complex can be quickly dismantled or
- that there will not be fierce competition for any savings,
- protecting the environment certainly has a strong claim to a
- larger share of the budget.
- </p>
- <p> This is a timely idea. The West has spent trillions over
- the years in anticipation of a threatened invasion of Western
- Europe. When it came, it involved East German day trippers and
- shoppers rather than armies. It is time to recognize that
- environmental degradation has become perhaps a greater threat
- to security than the possibility of military conflict. </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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