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- <text id=90TT3474>
- <title>
- Dec. 24, 1990: Is The Planet On The Back Burner?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 24, 1990 What Is Kuwait?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 48
- ENDANGERED EARTH UPDATE
- Is The Planet On The Back Burner?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>War and recession may be grabbing the headlines, but the
- relentless trashing of the world's air, land and seas continues
- apace
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> This could be the winter of discontent for
- environmentalists. As the threat of war rumbles in the Middle
- East and the U.S. economy tumbles into recession, preserving
- the planet's air, land and water is in danger of losing its
- place among the most pressing issues of the day. It's not that
- last April's Earth Day has been forgotten already: more and
- more people are recycling household waste, toting reusable
- shopping bags to stores and planting trees in their backyards.
- And after more than a decade of debate, Congress finally
- overhauled the Clean Air Act this fall. But these encouraging
- steps hardly begin to attack the most ominous threats to the
- environment, such as deforestation and global warming. For the
- most part, the populist fervor for preservation has not
- generated effective government action at a national or
- international level. Both the people and their leaders seem
- totally bewildered about how to tackle global problems. Too
- often they mistakenly see a conflict between a healthy
- environment and healthy economies. As a result, the ecology
- movement has entered a twilight zone in which everybody claims
- to be an environmentalist, but few people know what to do about
- it.
- </p>
- <p> That uncertainty showed up clearly in a poll of U.S.
- households taken for TIME late last month by Yankelovich Clancy
- Shulman. Fully 94% of those surveyed considered protecting the
- environment a very important issue, and 63% supported stronger
- laws and regulations to get the job done. But when it comes to
- financing preservation, the public is sharply divided. Of the
- people polled, 48% were willing to "go full speed ahead" in
- "spending money to clean up the environment," but 47% said
- that, given other national problems, it would be better to "go
- slow." Despite their desire for a cleaner environment, 64%
- admitted that they personally "should be doing more" to achieve
- that goal. Perhaps the most revealing finding in the survey was
- that 80% agreed with the statement "There are so many
- contradictory things said about the environment that it is
- sometimes confusing to know what to do."
- </p>
- <p> Amid the confusion, the U.S. environmental movement is
- stumbling badly. In November voters turned down a passel of
- overly ambitious environmental initiatives at the state level,
- throwing the responsibility for policy back to elected
- officials, with whom it belongs. There is little hope, however,
- that either Congress or the White House will offer an
- environmental agenda in the near future. Exhausted by debate
- over the Clean Air Act and distracted by the twin threats of
- recession and war, Congress has no major environmental
- initiatives pending. The Bush Administration, all but
- abandoning the President's promise to be an "environmentalist"
- in the Oval Office, has not followed up on its decision to
- elevate the Environmental Protection Agency to Cabinet-level
- status, nor has it come through with an adequate plan to
- protect the threatened spotted owl. Regarding global issues,
- the Administration temporizes on threats to the atmosphere and
- lags in, rather than leads, efforts to deal with dangers to the
- land and oceans. Says Senator Albert Gore of Tennessee: "1990
- was a year of decision for the environment, but no decisions
- were made."
- </p>
- <p> The story is no better outside the U.S. Efforts to come to
- grips with global climate change amount to a desultory drift
- from conference to conference, without international leadership
- or any agreement about what should be done. The destruction of
- tropical rain forests continues unabated. All around the world,
- the expectations of Earth Day have given way to enervating
- debate and procrastination.
- </p>
- <p> Environmentalists must share part of the blame: they have
- not offered a coherent plan of action either domestically or
- internationally. Admits Lester Brown, president of the
- Washington-based Worldwatch Institute: "The agenda is fairly
- confused. A number of environmental groups have grown up
- independently, with their own memberships, their own budgets
- and their own objectives." Thomas Lovejoy of the Smithsonian
- Institution is worried that the cacophony of environmental
- lobbying is beginning to be counterproductive. Says he: "I
- sense a real frustration among the more concerned and active
- members of Congress about enough being enough. If you wear out
- your best friends, you've got a problem."
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, ecological ills do not go into remission
- simply because environmentalists cannot get their act together
- or because congressional attention is focused elsewhere. As
- time passes without meaningful action, options disappear, and
- the costs to present and future generations continue to rise.
- The urgency of the problems is too easily forgotten. "To some
- people, the whole concept [of environmentalism] is a luxury,"
- says Madeline Albright, professor of international relations
- at Georgetown University. "In the future, as the economy
- tightens up, it is conceivable that people will think we can't
- afford environmental improvements."
- </p>
- <p> But failing to protect the environment is ultimately more
- costly than preserving it. Consider the case of Eastern Europe.
- For decades, the communist-bloc countries stoked their
- industrial production without regard for the environmental
- consequences. Only this year was the scope of the resulting
- ecocatastrophe revealed to the world. Zoltan Illes, Hungary's
- Deputy State Secretary for Environment and Nature Protection,
- estimates that health problems and loss of production because
- of air and water pollution reduce his nation's gross domestic
- product more than 6%.
- </p>
- <p> The fall of the Iron Curtain could spur a cleanup. West
- Europeans lead the world in environmental consciousness because
- they have suffered egregious homegrown pollution as well as
- grime floating in from the east. Expenditures on environmental
- protection in Western Europe have increased from $46 billion
- in 1987 to $73 billion this year, and are expected to rise 75%
- more by the year 2000. Additional funds and technology will
- undoubtedly go to help neighbors to the east modernize their
- industries and fight pollution. Both Sweden and the
- Netherlands, for example, have offered to help Poland cleanse
- its air. Klaus Matthiesen, environment minister of the German
- state North Rhine-Westphalia, notes that spending on
- environmental preservation "must be regarded as an important
- motor of economic change."
- </p>
- <p> Financial pressures have led many developing nations to
- continue shortsighted policies that squander natural resources.
- In Brazil the appointment by President Fernando Collor de Mello
- of outspoken conservationist Jose Lutzenberger as Secretary of
- the Environment raised hopes that the burning of the Amazon
- rain forest would be halted. But environmentalists are still
- waiting for Collor to prove that his commitment to saving the
- Amazon is more than public relations. "Lutzenberger has not
- presented one significant change in internal policy," says
- Fabio Feldmann, the only Brazilian congressman elected on a
- green platform.
- </p>
- <p> Throughout the world, environmentalists look to America to
- provide leadership, but instead the nation sits on its hands
- like a perplexed giant. Both individually and at the policy
- level, Americans seem to be all for environmental protection,
- so long as it does not disrupt business as usual. Though the
- U.S. is the world's biggest contributor to the industrial and
- automobile emissions that threaten to wreak havoc with the
- global climate, none of the past three Administrations have
- delivered a national energy policy.
- </p>
- <p> Attempts by several states to fill the policy vacuum
- floundered this year, and the tactics of the environmental
- lobby were at least partly responsible. The contest over
- California's "Big Green," Proposition 128, for instance, was
- marked by overstatement on both sides of the issue. Prominent
- environmentalists, including EPA Administrator William Reilly,
- were troubled by the sweep of some of Big Green's provisions,
- like the pesticide curbs that would have banned any chemical
- found to cause cancer in any rat. Given the legitimate debate
- over many of the provisions in the proposition's 16,000 words,
- it was entirely possible for a Californian to vote against the
- measure and still feel that he or she was an environmentalist.
- </p>
- <p> People have long distrusted industry assertions, but they
- expect better from environmentalists, who have enjoyed great
- credibility. The debate over Big Green's pesticide provisions
- left many voters wondering whether environmental interest
- groups exaggerate for effect. Congressman Al Swift of
- Washington State says the environmental lobby in Congress has
- grown from a David into a Goliath without exercising the
- restraint that should come with its greatly expanded influence.
- </p>
- <p> The defeat of the environmental ballot initiatives provides
- an opportunity for interest groups to rethink their approach
- to environmental issues. Many citizens are tired of being asked
- to become lawmakers when they enter voting booths and decide
- on the merits of intricate policy questions that are supposed
- to be the province of Congress and state legislatures.
- Environmentalists might also reconsider their tendency to favor
- more government regulation as the answer to most ecological
- problems. In Washington State voters rejected a ballot
- initiative that would have put curbs on development, partly
- because they feared it would mean new government intrusions
- into their lives. Regulations that lead to the creation of new
- bureaucracies are not attractive to citizens who are fed up
- with the inefficiency of government red tape. "People want to
- be more certain and careful about how their money is spent to
- clean up the environment," says Sheldon Kamieniecki, an
- associate professor at the University of Southern California.
- </p>
- <p> Adjustments of the tax codes are usually better than
- regulations as a way to discourage polluting or wasteful
- practices and to reward efficiency. If a person wants to drive
- a gas guzzler, it makes sense for him to pay higher gas and
- sales taxes. Farmers would quickly look for alternatives to
- chemical pesticides if they were taxed according to the cost
- of cleaning them out of the environment. Regulations are most
- useful as a last resort for dealing with problems, such as
- nuclear waste, that are too dangerous to be left to the
- marketplace.
- </p>
- <p> If environmentalists must accept part of the blame for the
- present policy paralysis, they also deserve credit for some
- noteworthy victories this year. In a remarkably swift
- turnabout, Japan agreed to phase out its large-scale drift-net
- operations in the Pacific. Under pressure, Taiwan and South
- Korea have also agreed to curb the use of the giant nets, which
- indiscriminately trap turtles and marine mammals along with
- fish. In the U.S. the Interior Department banned offshore
- drilling in a number of sensitive areas for 10 years, buying
- time to understand better the interaction of oil and delicate
- marine ecosystems.
- </p>
- <p> Among the most significant developments has been a major
- shift in attitude by several international corporations.
- Companies that in the past had an adversative relationship with
- conservation groups have begun to take actions that are more
- than public relations. Following the lead of H.J. Heinz's
- StarKist Seafood Co., major American tuna canners voluntarily
- decided to stop buying fish from fleets that carelessly kill
- dolphins and other marine mammals. McDonald's addressed a major
- solid-waste problem by switching from polystyrene to paper
- wrappings for its fast foods. Conoco decided to use
- double-hulled tankers in an effort to reduce the risk of oil
- spills, and it has made a commitment to lessen the impact of
- its exploration operations on rain forests and other sensitive
- ecosystems. The Houston-based oil company made the happy
- discovery in Gabon that shrinking the size of drilling areas
- and roads to minimize damage to forests saved money as well as
- trees.
- </p>
- <p> The realization that preserving the biosphere can also save
- money might be the salvation of the environmental movement if
- the industrial world should enter a deep recession. It is true
- that war or an economic downturn might divert resources that
- could otherwise be used for such projects as restoring wetlands
- and rivers. But Denis Hayes, the leading organizer of Earth
- Day, argues that hard times might have the positive benefit of
- causing people and businesses to change their throwaway
- mentalities and adopt a more conserving approach.
- </p>
- <p> The global environmental awakening has been a true populist
- movement, a broad-based eruption of concern noteworthy for the
- absence of charismatic leaders. Ordinary citizens have begun
- to see the connection between environmental issues and their
- own welfare. Now it is time for political leaders to translate
- public concern into effective global action. Eventually deeds
- must catch up with environmental rhetoric, or humanity will
- learn the hard way that a healthy planet is not a luxury but a
- necessity.
- </p>
- <p>1990 SCORECARD
- </p>
- <p> WINNERS
- </p>
- <p> THE U.S. LANDSCAPE: Decisions by Coca-Cola, Pepsi and
- McDonald's to switch to recycled or degradable packaging will
- help reduce litter and ease the burden on landfills.
- </p>
- <p> MARINE MAMMALS: Japan agreed to stop its South Pacific
- fishing vessels from using deadly drift nets. U.S. tuna canners
- will no longer buy tuna caught by methods that endanger
- dolphins.
- </p>
- <p> EASTERN EUROPE: Now that the communist bloc's dirty laundry
- has been exposed, West European nations are beginning to offer
- financial and technological assistance to begin the cleanup.
- </p>
- <p> LOSERS
- </p>
- <p> ENVIRONMENTAL PROPOSITIONS: U.S. voters said no in November
- to a series of unwieldy ballot initiatives that tried to do
- everything from preserve forests to curb pesticide use.
- </p>
- <p> RAIN FORESTS: As yet, no international efforts have
- succeeded in dealing with deforestation. New studies show that
- the rate of tropical-forest destruction has accelerated 80% in
- the past decade.
- </p>
- <p> CORAL REEFS: Under assault by development, tourism and
- fishing, coral reefs worldwide are also being hurt, some
- scientists believe, by the unusually warm temperatures of
- recent years.
- </p>
- <p> SPLIT DECISIONS
- </p>
- <p> THE ATMOSPHERE: The U.S. Congress toughened the Clean Air
- Act, but whether the legislation will clean up America's air
- or merely slow the rate of decline is anybody's guess. Work on
- a treaty to counter the threat of global warming is proceeding
- at a dangerously slow pace.
- </p>
- <p> THE SPOTTED OWL: It was put on the threatened-species list,
- but the Bush Administration has not come through with an
- adequate plan to save the ancient Northwestern forests that are
- home to the bird.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-