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- <text id=93HT0881>
- <title>
- 1988:The Greening Of The USSR
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 2, 1989
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 68
- The Greening of the U.S.S.R.
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As his public cries out for a cleanup, Gorbachev fights a pall of
- pollution
- </p>
- <p>By Dick Thompson
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet Union is an environmentalist's nightmare. The
- industrial city of Nizhni Tagil, some 700 miles east of Moscow, is
- sometimes wrapped in clouds of gaseous wastes so thick and toxic
- that drivers must turn on their headlights at noon and children
- walking home from school get skin rashes. Every year 700,000 tons
- of toxic substances are spewed into the city's air. Not only Nizhni
- Tagil but more than 100 other major cities, including Moscow, also
- have air-pollution levels ten times as high as the acceptable
- standards set by the Soviets.
- </p>
- <p> The land and water are not in any better shape. The riverbed
- of the Neva, which meanders beside the magnificent Hermitage in
- Leningrad, is covered with a thick layer of oil. Ill-advised dam
- construction and inappropriate irrigation projects have caused the
- level of the Aral Sea to drop 40 ft. It is possible that this body
- of water, the world's sixth largest sea, will not exist in 20
- years. Siberia, once pristine, is laced with wastes from steel,
- chemical and coal industries. Worrisome numbers of dead sturgeon
- are floating atop the polluted Volga River, threatening the
- Soviets' prestigious caviar supply. Resorts along the Black Sea
- have banned swimming after the government's warning that the waters
- are contaminated with dysentery and typhoid germs.
- </p>
- <p> For decades the Soviet people accepted the situation in
- silence. But glasnost has made them less afraid to speak out.
- Citizens worried about the environment are demonstrating by the
- thousands and contributing to political unrest in the Baltic
- States. Elsewhere, budding environmental groups have even sponsored
- candidates for city elections.
- </p>
- <p> Amid the turmoil the Soviet government has finally begun to
- move. The Kremlin has reorganized a number of departments into the
- new State Committee for the Protection of the Environment,
- Goskompriroda, and given it an impressive range of powers. "In this
- restructuring," said Nicholas Robinson, a Pace University professor
- and an expert on the Soviet environment, "the Communist Party
- Central Committee has decided that, after disarmament,
- environmental protection is the No. 1 world issue." An aggressive
- cleanup program has already begun. Projects are being re-evaluated
- in light of their environmental impact. Fines have been levied on
- some polluters, and criminal proceedings have been started against
- others.
- </p>
- <p> Internationally, the Soviets are pushing for stronger accords
- to protect the environment and are seeking ways to integrate their
- atmospheric-research efforts with those under way elsewhere. For
- the first time since World War II, the Soviet Union and the U.S.
- may have found a common enemy: global climate change. Said
- President Mikhail Gorbachev in his speech this month to the U.N.
- General Assembly: "International economic security is inconceivable
- unless related not only to disarmament but also to the elimination
- of the threat to the world's environment."
- </p>
- <p> One sign of the Soviets' willingness to join international
- environmental efforts was their presence at the TIME conference in
- Boulder. Fyodor Morgun, the recently appointed head of
- Goskompriroda, made his first trip to the U.S. (and only his second
- journey outside the Soviet Union) to attend the meeting. And he was
- startlingly frank about the situation in his country. "We have
- started too late," Morgun told the group. "Our air is not up to the
- proper mark, our soil is polluted, and our forests are affected.
- Drastic measures were taken in the West 15 to 20 years ago to
- improve the environment. Now my country must get to work on this
- as well."
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet environmental disaster has been a long time in the
- making. Beginning in the days of Stalin, ecological concerns were
- shunted aside in the rush toward industrialization. Valovaya
- produktsiya, a phrase that translates into "gross output" and is
- abbreviated as val, was at the heart of the problem. Industry
- bureaucrats have long been evaluated--and rewarded--only in
- terms of gross output. Rivers were fouled and forests stripped in
- the rush to transform raw materials into material wealth. No
- premium was placed on efficiency, and no environmental concerns
- restrained val. Trucks in Siberia, for example, are still left
- running every hour of every day throughout the winter because the
- vehicles are very difficult to start in the cold, and diesel fuel
- is plentiful.
- </p>
- <p> Nowhere are the consequences of unchecked industrialization
- more obvious than in Siberia's Lake Baikal basin. Nearly 30 years
- ago, Minlesbumprom (the Ministry of Timber, Pulp and Paper, and
- Wood Processing Industry) erected the Baikalsh pulp factory on the
- shores of this majestic body of crystal-clear water. The
- crescent-shaped lake holds 80% of the country's fresh water and 20%
- of the world's supply. Three-fourths of the lake's 2,500 fish and
- plant species, including the Baikal nerpa, a fresh-water seal, are
- unknown anywhere else in the world.
- </p>
- <p> All that is under assault. Currently, the pulp factory produces
- 200,000 tons of cellulose fibers a year, and its effluent,
- discharged directed into the lake, has created a polluted zone 23
- miles wide. Clouds of yellowish smoke belching from the factory's
- smokestacks have settled over 770 sq. mi. of Siberian wilderness
- and have killed an estimated 86,000 fir trees.
- </p>
- <p> The environmental offenses at Baikal and elsewhere revived the
- deep relationship that the Soviets have with nature. "Please
- believe me," said Morgun, "the people have awakened." From Armenia
- to Zaporozhye, hundreds of thousands have taken to the streets to
- protest everything from air pollution to nuclear-power plants. In
- April 10,000 people demonstrated against the conditions in Nizhni
- Tagil. Protesters in Priozyorsk were successful in closing a major
- paper plant that had been dumping waste into Lake Ladoga, the
- source of drinking water for 6 million people. Many of the
- political demonstrations in the Baltic States are linked to the
- environment. Said Marshall Goldman, associate director of the
- Russian Research Center at Harvard University: "In almost every
- republic in which there is a movement for independence or the
- assertion of political rights, it has been led by an environmental
- movement."
- </p>
- <p> Gorbachev, whose background is in agriculture, has shown a
- special concern for the environment from the beginning of his
- reign. Early on, he toured the country and took care to detour from
- the carefully prepared showcase routes to inspect firsthand the
- polluted rivers and devastated forests. Funds for environmental
- protection, about $24 billion this year, are projected to reach
- $46.4 billion annually in the first half of the 1990s. At the same
- time, Gorbachev's regime has cracked down on polluters. Around Lake
- Baikal, about two dozen violations of ecological standards have
- been referred to prosecutors. In Nizhni Tagil the government has
- closed ten factories for failing to control toxic emissions and has
- begun criminal investigations against more than ten other plants.
- </p>
- <p> But the Soviet leader may face a potential conflict between
- his desire for a cleaner environment and his hopes of rapidly
- raising the living standards and consumption levels of his people.
- Without careful pollution control, boosting production will befoul
- the environment even more. And money that goes into antipollution
- equipment cannot be used for industrial expansion. In Boulder,
- Morgun emphasized that the Kremlin wanted to get around this
- dilemma by redirecting money from military spending into the
- civilian economy. That, he said, depended on continued progress in
- arms-control talks with the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> From an international perspective, the most disturbing aspect
- of the Soviet economy is the enormous quantity of carbon dioxide
- it puts into the air. Because the machines in many Soviet factories
- are obsolete and inefficient, they consume an inordinate amount of
- energy, making the country one of the largest contributors to the
- greenhouse effect. The Soviets are aware of this problem and hope
- to solve it by importing technology designed to improve energy
- efficiency and pollution control. They hope that much of that
- technology will come from the U.S. Said Morgun: "We will go
- anyplace, over any mountain, over an ocean to get the technology.
- And if you offer some kind of technology, we will be glad to accept
- it. We would be most grateful."
- </p>
- <p> That is a plea the U.S. should take seriously, by easing
- restrictions on the export of industrial technology to the Soviets.
- Unfortunately, the biggest barrier to such shipments is not export
- controls but the lack of hard currency. The U.S. cannot finance the
- Soviet drive to conserve energy and control pollution, but America
- should offer as much technical assistance as possible. The Soviets
- seem to be sincerely determined to clean up their act, and the U.S.
- should help out.
- </p>
- <p>-- Ann Blackman/Moscow and Richard Hornik/Washington
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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