Send us articles for publishing in Newsletters.
Newsletters are mainly published on the Internet.
We are delighted to receive articles for the Newsletters from our readers.
We have received many books and articles from readers and members around the world but the authors did not give us specific permission to print part of their work in the Newsletter, and therefore we cannot do so.
It is imperative that, if you give us permission to re-print, all or in part, you include all copyright verification of permission to quote. We do not have a copyright research expert to do this work.
Your articles should also follow the same Guidelines used for
the preparation of Papers
(see Criteria in Call for Papers on the website or see Letter
sent June99.
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Reduction of fees
NEWSLETTER
The World
Congress
on Managing and
Measuring Sustainable
Development
the Global
Community
WebNet
Newsletter Volume 1, Issue 01, March 1999
World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development
17-A Quebec Street, Guelph, Ontario Canada N1H 2T1 email: gdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
The Society for World Sustainable Development
Executive Commitee
Joseph-Germain Dufour, President
Kenneth M. Campbell, Treasurer
Felicity Caron, Communication Officer
President's Message
Year 1998 has been a very successfull year for the Society.
One of the most important factors in our lives is the inter-connection
we have to others, to other countries. Through these connections we will
be able to create changes for good on a global scale. We must now all become
linked to others in faraway places on a much deeper level if we are to
work together to keep our planet healthy, productive and hospitable
for all people and living things.
As your awareness of this global need deepens you will want to join
with others to see that good changes happen.
We have promoted several of the objectives defined in our Constitution.
Promoting SWSD objectives and charitable services including:
1. Research and development of indicators and scale
of values for assessment.
2. Preparation, design of brochures and letters.
3. Assistance to people in need.
4. Creation of a worldwide network: the Global
Community WebNet.
5. Activities to help relieve poverty.
6. The promotion of sustainable development.
7. The organizion of the World Congress on Managing
and Measuring Sustainable Development
to be held in
August 17-22, 2000.
We are very proud to say that our Financial Statements show no
losses. We were diligent.
Year 1999 is a challenge we accept through the World Congress. It is
a new,
unique Global Dialogue on the measurement and
management of global changes and sustainable development with respect
to four levels of concern: environment, people, economic development,
and
availability
of resources for the benefit of the Global Community. A sound working
balance amongst the interactions has to be found to ensure a sustainable
future for Earth.
The World Congress is also unique because it will
provide sound management policy solutions to the Global Community.
It is a grassroots process involving everyone as part of
the Global Community.
New standards, goals and objectives have to be defined. Firm universal
guidelines are essential for keeping the world healthy. Already we notice
new ways of thinking being embraced, new behaviors and attitudes adopted.
Sound solutions to all our problems will have to be researched, developed
and made available to everyone on the Internet. This is la raison
d’être of our Society.
To establish the scale of values (as explained in the Invitation
previously sent to you), your abstracts and Papers should indicate what
is very important to ensure a sound future for Earth, what is important,
what
is not so important, and
what should be let go. An easily workable
scale of values is needed to evaluate indicators and sustainable development,
and to establish a universal benchmark, which people may employ everywhere.
Your field of interest will have been thought through on four (4) levels
(see file previously sent on ISSUES):
1. How does it affect the lives of people?
2. How does it impact upon the availability of resources?
3. What will it do to the environment?
4. How will economic development be affected?
We must be ready to abandon traditional ways of dealing with things
to achieve a sustainable future. Getting rich at the expense of
everything else is no longer the acceptable way to go. Over the decades,
projects which ignored everything except their own interests have a history
of failure and human misery. If possible try to show how your field
of interest influences all four areas and could develop positive policies
(workable sound solutions) to submit to the Global Community. Your Paper
will likely be followed by discussion as delegates seek ideas they can
use in their own countries.
Germain Dufour
President and Chairman
Our Board of Directors voted
SOME FEE REDUCTIONS POSSIBLE NOW
When our Board of Directors made the initial plans for a World Congress
they had no idea world response would be so welcoming. Once we started
emailing, replies began to pour in from Russia, Moldova, The Ukraine, Latvia,
Sweden, Germany, Brussels, Italy, China, India, Africa, The United Kingdom,
the United States, as well as Canadian universities. The record was
683 letters in one day!
Because of the positive response, of so many people hard at work on
Papers, the Board of Directors has passed a motion to ease the cost
of attendance for contributors of Papers, and for students.
They have agreed all persons who present a Paper at the World Congress
will not have to pay a registration fee; only the items listed under The
Estimate of Cost (see file previously sent to you). In addition, once
their Papers have been received, they will be granted Life Memberships
in S.W.S.D. and to the Global Community WebNet which gives them voting
privileges (via Internet) and if they wish, the right to start their
own Chapters in their own country to instigate and encourage sustainable
development practices where they see fit.
Those ones who prepare Papers and are unable to attend in person, but
will allow us to select someone to read their Papers at the Congress, will
also receive Life Memberships.
All of those who send us a Paper will have these Papers mentioned in
the Proceedings of the World Congress afterwards.
Many people plan on coming by camper with their families to enjoy Alberta's
well-managed natural parks. Since they will be responsible for their own
meals, a reduction of costs will be taken off the Estimate of Cost at the
Kananaskis
Inn. More information will come later about it.
This will also apply for the people who will camp with tents in the
various campgrounds in the area, unless they prefer to eat at The Inn
with
the others.
I wish to express a special thank you to the people who have sent us
additional scientific research papers from their earlier work, along with
permission to print. These papers are unusually thoughtfull and we are
glad to have them to print in future newsletter issues.
FREE LIFE MEMBERSHIP
Upon sending an abstract and a Paper(s), or a video, you will be given
a Free Life Membership in S.W.S.D. and the Global
Community WebNet. If you do not come to the Congress to present
your Paper(s), someone here will read it for you at no cost; it will be
included in the Proceedings of the World Congress afterwards. Fill
in and send us a Paper Submission Form (s) for each Paper or video submitted.
Include your abstract(s) with each form submitted at that time.
If received by September 21, 1999, your abstract(s) will be included
in our February 2000, Newsletters and Preliminary Program.
If you come to the World Congress and present your Paper(s) or video
in person,
you will not have to pay the registration fees to the
World Congress.
FREE REGISTRATION
Students of all levels (school, college, technical, university) are not
required to pay the registration fee to the World Congress. Students
presenting a creative work (see Criteria and Guidelines) about their visions
of what Global Community Action 1 can accomplish
with respect to the ISSUES (see file listing all issues) will also be
given each Free Life Membership in S.W.S.D. and the Global
Community WebNet, after it has been established.
DEADLINE
The deadline for submission of abstracts to be included in the Preliminary
Program and February 2000 Newsletters is September 21st, 1999.
Only 35% of the space in the Final Program will be reserved past this deadline.
The final deadline for submission of individual abstracts and papers,
videos, presentations, panel discussions and workshop proposals, facilitated
groups, and of photographic, poster and dramatic displays dealing with
pertinent themes,and students'creative work is March 24, year
2000.
SWSD ANNUAL MEETING
April 20th, 1999, 7:00 pm, SWSD's office.
SPONSORSHIP
Global Community WebNet Ltd. , a federally incorporated firm with
head office in Calgary, WorldNet for Sustainable Development Ltd.,
and Property Environmental Services Ltd. are sponsoring the preparation
and emailing of this package.
More sponsors are needed. Donations may be sent to the Organizing Committee
at the address shown above.
PAPER OR VIDEO SUBMISSION FORM
Submission Cover Sheet
World Congress on Managing and Measuring
Sustainable Development
Thursday-Tuesday, August 17-22, year 2000
The Society for World Sustainable Development
Signature: ___________________________________
Name: ________________________________________
Organization: _____________
Position: ____________________________________
Address: ____________________________________
_______________________________
City/Town: __________________________
Province: ___________________________________
Postal Code: ________________________________
Telephone: ___________________________________
E-mail: ________________________________
My Areas of Interest/Research Include:__
________________________________________
_________________________________
__________________________________________
Instructions: Fill out this sheet completely, attach it
to your submission or abstract, and send the materials at the address given
here:
Call for Papers
The Society for World Sustainable Development
World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development
17-A Quebec Street, Guelph, Ontario, Canada N1H 2T1
Paper submissions should include the cover sheet and a one-page topic
summary or abstract.
Submission Category(check one): _____Paper
_____Discussion Topic
_____Poster or Computer Demo
Submission Title:__________________
___________________________________________
____________________________________________
Name/Address: Include name, mailing address, and telephone number(and
electronic mail address if available) for each author/co-author/presenter
affiliated with this submission.
First Author:____________________________
_________________________________________
_______________________________________
Telephone:_________________E-mail:_______
Second Author:____________________________
______________________________________
_______________________________________
Telephone:___________________E-mail:_______
Third
Author:_____________________________
___________________________________
____________________________________
Telephone:___________________E-mail:___
Fourth Author:_________________________
__________________________________
______________________________________
Telephone:_______________E-mail:________
Use extra sheet for additional authors/presenters.
Dual Submission: A paper may be sent to no more than two sessions,
only one of which may be a Regular Session. Show the organizers the order
of priority of this submission.
Environment Economic Development
Availability of Resources People
1st priority: __________ ___________________
____________________ _______
2nd priority: __________ ___________________
____________________ _______
Presentation Preference: Organizers may forward papers to the
Open Referred Roundtable organizers or the Poster Presentation organizers
if they are unable to place them in their sessions. Indicate below whether
you wish your paper forwarded, and if so, which presentation option you
prefer.
Paper or video may be forwarded: _______NO _______YES
Select one: _____Roundtables _____Posters
Those submitting videos should describe their topics as for Papers.
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On the Issue of Sustainable Development for Children
NEWSLETTER
The Global
Community
WebNet
Newsletter Volume 1
Issue 02, July 1999
World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable
Development
August 17-22, 2000
The theme of the World Congress is:
Global Community Action 1 :
Ensuring a Sound Future for Earth;
and
Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development
|
The Society for World Sustainable Development
17-A Quebec Street, Guelph, Ontario, Canada N1H 2T1
Executive Commitee
Joseph-Germain Dufour, President
Kenneth M. Campbell, Treasurer
Felicity Caron, Communication Officer
|
email
Germain Dufour: gdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
Website of The Global
Community
http://members.home.net/global2000
Table of Contents
1. President's Message.
2. The Global Community website.
3. Editor's comments: send us articles for
publishing in Newsletters and making them
available on the Internet.
4. Articles:
a. Arsenic
contamination in groundwater and its effect on human health in
Bangladesh by Md. Hasibur Rahman, Executive Director,
Environment and
Agricultural Development Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
b. The
Global Community concepts
1. The Glass-bubble concept
2. Ricochet responses to family trauma
3. TIMSHEL - The right to make choices
Personal Sustainable Development for Children
4. The need to change the "who cares?" attitude in children
5. Humanistic research needed on the subject of children
c. Summer
call for abstracts to be published in February 2000 Preliminary
Program
of the World Congress.
d.
Criteria for Student Submissions to the World Congress Contest.
e. Money
crunch and hanging in there.
f. Volunteering
for The Global Community and the World Congress.
5. Letter sent June99
6. Summer holiday wishes
1. President's Message
Papers and abstracts for the World Congress on Managing
and Measuring Sustainable Development have been flooding
in.
In the upset of moving our office (note our new address above) we wonder
if everyone
has received an acknowledgement of receipt. Please let us know if you
did not get one,
so we can double check our files.
If you did not get a reply ( by email ) from us within a month of sending
your abstract through the post office mail, please resend it at the new
address given here.
If received by September 21, 1999, your abstract(s) will be included
in the February 2000 Newsletters and Preliminary Program for the
World
Congress.
Three roundtable sessions have been suggested by groups of people
and are now in the process of being organized:
a) On well-being, the healthy
family and the community
b) Measurement of indicators of
Sustainable
Development
c) The Global Community:
its objectives, the grassroots process and the organization
Details will be given in another Newsletter.
If someone is interested in being part of one or all of the above rountable
discussions let us know. Groups are welcome to join in on any topic
or issue described under ISSUES in the
website. Other rountable sessions may be organized. Let us know
this summer if your group
is planning to do so.
We hope you have decided to join all the others who are preparing abstracts
and papers.
Remember, if you cannot attend in person, your paper will still be
accepted and published in the Proceedings of the World Congress
if it meets with our scientific requirements.
The theme for this Newsletter is children's education. There
is a need to train the next
generation in the skills of collaborating in the future management
of global change, which will
be vital to survival.
Students of all levels (school, college, technical, university)
are invited to participate in
The Global Communnity. They are asked to produce any creative
work of their vision of what Global Community Action 1 can accomplish
~ in the fields of zoology, biology, on history, on geography, on social
and political sciences, on agriculture, energy, earth sciences, communications,
wilderness, pollution, on the water supplies of the world, poverty, employment,
social justice,
human rights, business and economy, availability of resources and so
on.
The Editor of this Newsletter is now accepting articles (not
papers for Congress) for publication.
The Newsletter is a way to communicate "workable sound solutions" to
problems arising in the
world. Let us share our problems and workable sound solutions. Sharing
information is vital to
survival.
The Global Community organization offers a link for sharing this
information. The Global
Community Assessment Centre (GCAC) will also publish its own
results and findings in the
Newsletters or in the form of formal reports.
Just to illustrate how The Global Community organization can
help you, in the important
goals you aim for, in the past years we have contacted over 16 thousands
scientists, officials
from all levels of government, economists, statisticians, environmentalists,
ecologists,
renewable and non-renewable resources specialists, business leaders,
non-governmental
organizations, educators, health and social experts, Aboriginals and
Natives, home and
community planners, policy analysts, and international law specialists.
We have now over
two thousand on our very active list.
If you want to contact people around the world interested in your field,
willing to communicate,
and/or work with you, we have been thinking we could arrange a service
whereby a person
could file an "interest card file" with us and we could help
our members contact the right
people they need to know for the furtherment of their work.
Already people are asking "Could you put me in touch with somebody interested
in flood
control or improving the lives of rural women" for example. We could
do that. All we need
is fill the following information: name, field of expertise, comments
and suggestions,
address, phone, fax, and email it.
2. The Global Community website
The Global Community organization, SWSD and the
World
Congress now have a website and can be visited. The webpage
of The Global Community, the homepage of the The Society for
World Sustainable Development is found at:
http://members.home.net/global2000
The website contains information about:
* The Global Community organization
* The World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development
to
be held in
August 17-22 year 2000
* The Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC) for discussion
and joint action on
issues of local and global concerns
* The Society for World Sustainable Development (SWSD)
* Proceedings of the World Congress
* Sponsorship Opportunity and Professional Qualifications
* Lesson Plans for Schools
* Newsletters
3. Editor's comments: send
us articles for publishing in Newsletters
and making
them available on the Internet.
We are delighted to receive articles for the Newsletters from our readers.
We have received many books and articles from readers and members around
the world but
the authors did not give us specific permission to print part of their
work in the Newsletter,
and therefore we cannot do so.
It is imperative that, if you give us permission to re-print, all or
in part, you include all copyright
verification of permission to quote. We do not have a copyright research
expert to do this
work.
Your articles should also follow the same Guidelines used for
the preparation of Papers
(see Criteria in Call for Papers on the website or see Letter
sent June99 in part 5 of this
Newsletter ). The following article by Md. Hasibur Rahman is
shown here as an example
of what we expect. All articles will be classified, organized and
edited if too long and made
available on the Internet.
Md. Hasibur Rahman is Executive Director, Environment and Agricultural
Development
Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
We thank Md. Hasibur Rahman and EADSC for so gracioustly
sharing information
with The Global Community. More articles will follow I understand.
Thank you again Sir.
In the words of Md. Hasibur Rahman, Bangladesh is suffering from
various environmental
and agricultural constraints such as air, water and soil pollution,
frequent flooding,
desertification, poor sanitation, malnutrition, health and over population
problem.
For the betterment of environment and sustainable agricultural development
EADSC envisaged
to conduct different research oriented activities on different urgent
issues of environment which
might be solved for the survival of the country and the coming generation
in the next century.
The article 4.a is not a Paper to be presented at the
World
Congress as it has been previously
published. If it had not been published at an earlier time, it
would have certainly satisfy the
criteria for the World Congress.
Those who wish a copy of the complete article send us a stamped, self-addressed
8.5 x 11
envelope and we'll see you get one.
The Editor.
Articles
4.a) Arsenic contamination
in groundwater and its effect on human
health
in Bangladesh by Md. Hasibur Rahman, Executive
Director,
Environment
and Agricultural Development Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka,
Bangladesh.
Arsenic contamination in groundwater is already creating alarming
on social-health
problem in Bangladesh, one of the most densely populated country
in the world.
Preventive and mitigative measure is being implemented through research,
coordination of work, dissemination of research activities, particularly
in the grassroots level in the disaster areas. Scientific method and public
awareness already been adopting in different areas, sectors and under consideration
for future application to avoiding further serious health problems.
Background:
Bangladesh occupies an area of 14.40 million ha of which 13.46 million
ha are land surface and
only 0.94 million ha are rivers and other inland water bodies. The
country is bounded to the west,
north and east by India and to the extreme south-east Myanmar and Bay
of Bengal lies to the
south. The precious fresh water resources are very scarce. Water, the
synonym of life, but when
this water become the cause of increasing death and diseases of people
then it is a matter of
great sorrow. Bangladesh is a country of highly populous, density is
800 people per sq. km, about
95% of the people of the country of urban or rural, are dependent on
water supply from the
groundwater sources. More than fifty years both public and private
sectors have been introducing
tube-wells for safe drinking water and domestic purpose. From early
1980's Bangladesh is
facing a real catastrophe due to arsenic contamination in groundwater
and effected people are
suffering from chronic arsenic toxicity and a serious public health
problem. After identified
of arsenic contamination in drinking water in India by Professor Deepankar
Chakraborty, a
study was jointly carried out by Dhaka Community Hospital Trust, Bangladesh
and School of
Environment Studies of Jadobpur University in Calcutta, India in October
1996.
What is Arsenic:
Arsenic is a soft, solid substance, its atomic number is 33, atomic
weight is 74.922 and chemical
symbol is As. It bears metal and non-metallic properties so it is classified
as metalloid element,
which is brittle in nature and gray or tin-white in color. It sublimes
at 623 C at 1 atmosphere
pressure. Its melting point is 817 C and density is 5.72 gm/cc. Arsenic
occasionally occurs
naturally in all environmental media air, soil and water and is usually
present in the form of
compounds with sulfur and many metals (Copper, Cobalt, Lead, Zinc,
etc.). Among 150 species
of Arsenic bearing mineral, of which the most common are arsenopyrite
(FeAs2, FeS2)
energite (3Cu2As2S5) realgar (As4S4) and orpiment (As2S2). Chemically
Arsenic is mainly
two types (i) Inorganic (ii) Organic. Generally Arsenic found in the
form of Arsenic (-3),
Arsenic (0), arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5) in nature. In water, it
occurs predominantly
inorganic form and which are usually tri and pentavalent forms. But
it becomes toxic in
presence of air by oxidizing of these forms.
Source of Arsenic Pollution:
From an analysis, it is found that every year from natural source
(8x10 MT) of arsenic and from man made sources around (24x10 MT) of
arsenic is released
all over the world. Firstly, a very few arsenic contamination
in fresh drinking water can be
happen by using chemical fertilizer and pesticides which contain arsenite
molecule.
Secondly, moderately arsenic contamination is happening by many
induatrial processes, in
the manufacture of glass, ceramic, battery, and bearings. It is used
as an alloying agent
commercially in the manufacture of transistors, laser, semiconductors,
also in the processing
of glass pigments, ceramic, textiles, paper, metal adhesives, wood
preservatives and
ammunition. In taxidermiy, arsenic trioxide is used as preservatives
of hide and skin. To a
limited extent it is used in pesticides and pharmaceuticals. Arsenics
are sometimes used as
feed additives for poultry and other livestock to promote growth. In
some cases homeopaths
medicine are also using as drug.
Thirdly, the reason of arsenic poisoning in nature has discovered
that present or acient volcanic
activity and usually with metaliferous mining. Arsenic is distributor
in the earth's crust in
abundance (about 2 ppm). The most common arsenic minerals is arsenopyrite
which often
occurs as impurity in ore deposits, but is rarely an important mineral
in alluvium.
A part from the hills in the eastern parts of the country and most of
areas of Bangladesh is
formed of a vast thickness of alluvial and deltaic sediments, which
can be divided into two
main parts; the recent floodplain and the terrace areas. The floodplain
and the sediments
beneath them are only a few thousandyears old and can be classified
according to which
of the river systems (Ganges, Brahmaputra, Tista and Meghan etc.) deposited
them. The
terrace areas are better known as the Madhupur and Barind Tracts, and
the sediments that
underline them are much older than the adjacent floodplain. Most of
the arsenic occurs in the
young sediments derived from the Ganges Basin. Arsenic occurs in alluvial
sediments, the
outcrops of hard rocks higher up the Ganges catchment that were eroded
in the redeposited
in West Bengal and Bangladesh by ancient course of the Ganges are ultimate
origin source
of arsenic.
Also due to thousands of bore whole the underground aquifers is aerated
causes transformation
of anaerobic condition to aerobic condition. Thus the presence of oxygen
decomposes
arsenopyrate (PCAs2PCS2) releasing free arsenic and acid. At low pH
this arsenic dissolve in
water.
Affected Districts:
However, reports of WHO, NIPSOM and Dhaka Community Hospital Trust (DCHT)
indicated
that 59 districts, out of 64 districts of Bangladesh are found arsenic
contamination in tubewells
water. Northern districts of Bangladesh are mostly effected. The affected
districts are
Nawabgang, Meherpur, Kushtia, Jessore, Bagerhat, Noakhali, Faridpur,
Rajshahi, Pabna,
Chuadanga, Magura, Sathhira, Khulna, Narayangang, Chandpur, Laxmipur,
Jenaidah,
Rajbari, Munshigang, Narshingdi, Gajipur, Comilla, Narayangong and
Dhaka etc.
Health Effects:
Arsenic is not a physiological constituent of the body. It enters in
the body through ingestion, inhalation and direct contact. Absorption,
execration and retention of arsenic are influenced
by the chemical forms in which it is ingested.
Arsenic is a deadly poison, and prolonged low dose exposure to arsenic
causes cancer in human
beings. As in the forms that ordinarily present in food and the organic
compounds of arsenic
acid, are well absorbed. Following absorption as are distributed rapidly
and widely to all
tissues of the body, e.g. liver, kidney, spleen, heart, jejunum, marrow,
lungs, pancreas, muscles, stomach, thyroid, skin, brain, and spinal cord.
In the body trivalent arsenic oxidized to
pentavalent state and inorganic arsenic methylated to organic form.
The current European and US Environmental Protection Agency "Safe Limit"
for arsenic in
drinking water is 50 mg/l but, further research has led to a revision
of this limit by World
health Organization (WHO) recommended a provisional level of drinking
water is only
10 mg/l. In some areas tube-well's water has been found to contain
arsenic at levels of
100 to 900 times higher than the WHO safe level. The experts of Bangladesh
Council for
Scientific and Industrial Research (BCSIR) found the highest contamination
14 mg/l of
shallow tube well water in Pabna, a norhtern district and 220 mg/kg
of soil in Sylhet district.
Arsenic affects all the organs and systems of the body. The major biochemical
effects of
arsenic are: a) complication with co-enzimes, b) uncoupling of phosphorylation
and c)
coagulation of proteins. Sign and symptoms of chronic arsenicosis shows
different
manifestations in different countries.
Arsenic poisoning may manifest in two forms - (a) acute and (b) chronic.
Acute poisoning
manifests itself through nausea, vomiting and diarrhea, burning sensation
in the mouth and
throat and agonizing abdominal pain. In severe case, circulatory collapse
sets in which may lead
to death. In chronic cases, within a few days, hyper keratotic lesion
develops. Diffuse, scaly
desquamation appears in the skin. Hyper-pigmented areas are seen over
the trunk and the limbs.
Other symptoms include photo-phobia and other symptom of conjunctivitis
and iritating cough.
Continued absorption of arsenic in human body causes ingestion of arsenic
as "black foot
disease." Odema of legs and depigmentation (leuco melanosis), peripheral
neuropathy,
nephropathy (early stage).
Neurophathy sets in non-specific symptoms also appear, which include
fatigue, prostration
muscular weakness, drowsiness, convulsion, tremor etc. White transvers
lines appear in
the nails.
Arsenic is absorbed from the skin, muscus membrane of G-1 tract, and
is deposited in the
liver, spleen, kidney etc. It has a predilection for keratin material.
As such, it is excreted
mainly through urine and faeces and also through skin, hair, nail.
Arsenic can cross-placental membrane and is known to be teratogenic
to animals. Arsenic
is known to be carcinogenic (causing cancer) to lungs in humans. nephropathy
(late stage),
Hepatopathy (late stage), they also lead to skin cancer through the
initial skin lesions. In
Bangladesh majority of the patients are found in the initial and second
stage.
Prevention of Further Exposure and Case Management:
Prevention is the answer, not the treatment. Of course, the government
and NGOs can lauch
programme of diagnosis and treatment of the affected patients. The
preventive measures
should be taken in a vigorous way. People should be advised through
Radio, TV and
other mass media or directly - not to drink water from contaminated
tube-wells. Because,
arsenic toxicity are basically depends on early diagnosis and case
management, detection
of arsenic in water and supply of arsenic free water. At present the
source of arsenic
contamination in groundwater and its epideomology is not clear. Attempts
have been made to
identify the source of contamination to combat this major public health
problem in Bangladesh.
There is no specific treatment of chronic arsenicosis. Mild cases however,
improve by
withdrawing further intake of contaminated water and symptoms improve
by good diet and
vitamins. Vitamins A, E and C are found to be effective at the initial
stage of toxicity. Chelating
treatment is said to have improved Melanosis but no controlled trails
have been done. Kerafosis
is some what improved by urea salicylate ointment. As a chelating agent
penicillamine has been
used in a few selected cases in Bangladesh with some success. The use
of these agents for
chronic arsenicosis is still under debate.
Supply of safe drinking water as an immediate measure deep and shallow
tube-wells are being installed. People were advised to use surface water
by boiling or to use domestic arsenic
purification methods like adding alum into water whenever possible.
People are encouraged to
use the shallow tube-wells which were not found to be contaminated
with arsenic. Long term
water supply schemes are being actively considered by the Government.
Arsenic contaminated water must be considered as the most dreaded environmental
health
hazards. We have to think, and work immediately on the basis of latest
scientific information
and technology available, to address this problem, in order to actualize
this we should educate
our people with adequate knowledge and mobilizing the information
through community
participation in the problems areas.
Recommendations:
1. It is important to stop unplanned and excessive
drilling of new deep tube-well in urban
and rural areas.
2. Urgently needed to create "water reservoir"
through digging of canal, lakes, pond and river
dragging to hold the rain and flood water.
From this reservoir groundwater table would be
re-charged by percolation process and
recharged water will increase surface water
table. This recycling process could
minimizes arsenic contamination in tuve-well water.
3. It is needed to increase use of surface water
in industrial and irrigation purpose instead
of groundwater uses.
4. Increases of surface water for daily life is very
important to decrease the press of
groundwater table.
5. From Health Point of View
i). Declare arsenic poisoning as a public health emergency.
ii). Identify patients - population at risk.
iii). Stop exposure of population to arsenic contaminated
water.
iv). Provide safe drinking water in affected areas.
v). Train doctors and primary health care workers.
vi). Provide medical facilities for serious patients
at health centres.
vii). Strenghten existing diagnostic facilities at
local and regional level.
viii). Document the extent of the problems.
ix). Need to monitor the cases and identify any ongoing
exposure integrating with drinking water
quality surveillance programme.
x) Assess exposure to arsenic in environment
and food chain.
xi). Conduct research works and
xii). Ensure mass communication and awareness etc.
Conclusion
Assuming based on geologic criteria it is estimated that about 59 districts
of Bangladesh might
be at risk of arsenic pollution and more than 50 million people might
have been exposed to
threat of arsenic contamination. There are only about 2.5% of world
water are available as
fresh water. This scarce resource is being polluted by industrial
and sewage discharge.
Unsustainable use has dried up many international rivers of the Asia-Pacific
region. Integrated
water resource management is only solution to resolve such conflicts
arising out of water use.
If this state of affairs continues and new sources of arsenic free water
are not found out
through investigations then Bangladesh will face an unprecedented environmental
and health
disaster. All possible sources internal and external, have to be mobilised
to address this
problem. Fortunately external development partners have expressed considerable
interest
in supporting programmes in this field. Investigation for arsenic problem
with groundwater
and detection of arsenic affected patients in Bangladesh are still
continuing. We have to
motivate the mass peoples not to take arsenic contaminated water, rather
drink water river,
pond or dugwell water after boiling, if there is no arsenic water.
To overcome this situation
country is in need of immediately identify the actual figure of arsenic
contaminated areas and
strong public awareness campaign about its adverse effect.
Note to the reader: A complete copy of the above article is available
by request. People
who wish to contact Md. Hasibur Rahman may email him at icms@bdcom.com
4.b) The Global Community
concepts
4.b.1) The Glass-bubble concept
A sample-mini lesson plan to assist Elementary School Teachers to demonstrate
the concept
of Global Community to children.
To experience the concept of "global community" walk outdoors in a location
with as many natural elements as possible - city, park, river, mountains
- be prepared
to really look, to really see whatever surrounds you.
Look up, look down, to the right, to the left, in front and behind you.
Imagine all this space is inside a giant clear glass bubble.
This is "a global community."
Wherever you go, you are inside a "global" community. Every thing, every
living creature there,
interacts one upon the other. Influences inter-weave and are responsible
for causes and effects.
Worlds within worlds orbiting in and out of one another's space, having
their being.
Your presence has influence on everything else inside your immediate
global community.
Learn to be aware of that and act accordingly, to create good or destroy,
to help or to hurt.
Your choice.
Now let us explore this Global Community that we have visited
and discover why each
member is important ~ each bird, each tree, each little animal, each
insect, plant and
human being ~ and how all work together to create a good place to live.
You walk like a giant in this Global Community. To all the tiny
members you are so big, so
powerful, even scary…
You can make or break their world. But by knowing their needs, and taking
care,
you can help your whole Global Community be a good one.
Why are you important to this "Global Community"?
Why is it important to you?
What do you like about it?
What bothers you about it?
Anything need to be done?
* What is really good there?
* What is very very important?
* What is not so important?
* What is not good?
* What is needed to keep the good things?
* What could make them even better?
* What do they do to keep the good things good?
* Could they help get rid of bad things?
* What unimportant things need to go?
* How could they help get rid of these things?
Let each child be aware he either grows up to be a person who helps
or a person who destorys.
Each child makes his own choice. He creates his own future in this
way.
This may or may not inspire some sort of creative project, of what "could
be" to aid this Global
Community to remain healthy.
There are many environmental projects for children to help create. For
examples:
1. A POOCH-PARK where apartment-dwelling pets
can go to do all sorts of doggy things,
unleashed; and a doggy-walk service.
2. A SKATE-BOARD RUN that is free of pedestrians
and traffic.
3. ADOPT-A-PARK to over-see to curb bullying
of small children. To act as protectors for
birds, frogs, and other wildlife.
4. ESCORT SERVICE to take small children safely
to school and back.
5. DE-LITTER A LOT for baseball, soccer, outdoor
rink in winter. Create your own play
field.
4.b.2) Ricochet responses to family
trauma
Suggested ideas for discussion in Junior High School Classes,
from which an imaginative creative
teacher can form deep learning experiences.
An important issue for our age, and one we should consider. We question
"Is it possible
to impose behaviour responses so there is less stress damage when
a family suffers
trauma."
Death
Fire
Divorce
Job loss
Over-population
Epidemic
War and invasion
Missing child
Amputation
Poverty
|
Children suffer from panic attacks,
stress syndrome anxiety disorders, and compulsive behaviour.
How does age contribute?
Is this an emotional or a physical re-action?
What social interactions cause these
conditions?
What hinders healing?
What helps?
Do children from all countries suffer in the
same way? |
Flood
Tornado
Forest fire
Land-slide
Volcano eruption
Tsunami
Drought
Famine
Murder
Forced moving |
We invite your input on Ricochet responses to family trauma.
4.b.3) TIMSHEL - The
right to make choices:
Personal
Sustainable Development for Children
Suggested ideas upon which a creative teacher may build a program
in Personal
Sustainable Development for Children, which develops
their ability to make decisions.
Most of us have been brought up with the knowledge adults make their
own choices ~ and
pay the price. Could children not be made aware of this as well?
Even a child could see if he acts in certain ways, things can backfire
and cause harm. And also
that he can act in ways that attracts good things ~ even over a period
of time.
If a child has the habit of reacting to unpleasant life events in knee-jerk
revenge or angry
responses, sparks fly and nasty side-effects flare up all around him.
Such action causes
memories that rankle for years.
It is very important for children to have experience in choosing
to react well, even in little
things.
It is not so important that one agree with other children all
the time. One obeys parents and
teachers. But a child has to be taught it is not required of him to
be somebody's victim; that
is o.k. to disagree with a course of action.
What must be let go is the uncontrolled way some children react
to the troubles of their lives.
Let us teach them making unproductive choices attracts even more trouble
and frustration.
Reacting in inappropriate ways in time of conflict must stop.
Teaching a child how to sustain the development of his own life toward
happy solutions calls
for a series of small victories, each one easily achieved.
Perhaps the best place to start is care and management of the child's
own room at home,
and his own personal care. Once the child feels he has his personal
space just the way he
wants it, he can advance to dealing one by one with family members,
later on, school-mates.
Older children could be encouraged to keep a journal about incidents,
and how things happened
and were worked out.
Referring back to these records, a child gains a sense of mastery, and
quickly builds up finesse
with successful ways and means, good phrases to use and so on.
It won't take long before a child has solid evidence that bad luck and
tough breaks were only
wrong moves that could have been avoided.
He'll get the conviction it is not people or "things" that makes him
happy. He is making himself
happy ~ it is a state of mind he has created for himself.
This self-improvement journey will sustain him for as long as
he uses it, the results to be
enjoyed for ever.
4.b.4) The need to change the "who cares?"
attitude in children.
Human beings and other life species need oxygen to live. Trees, plants
and growing things
provide oxygen. Therefore we destroy the source of oxygen at our peril.
The above is a vitally important fact. It is very important
to have many areas of healthy
green growth. It is not so important that every person owns
his own green area.
But what has to go is the "who cares?" attitude which stems from ignorance
about the
importance of green growing areas.
Everyone who wants a life has to take responsibility for it.
Just an idea
Russia, particularly, is working on environmental education which
is so much fun because
children actually get to conduct experiments on their own, in the wild,
that I would like to
collect a body of unusual environmental lesson plans. Interested?
4.b.5) Humanistic research needed
on the subject of children.
As a former teacher I am convinced children, going into a classroom
filled with too
many other children, frantically do whatever they can to attract the
adult re-assurance
they crave.
Since they have not yet developed a sense of who they are, what they
are, what they
want out of life, they seek personal attention for re-assurance, hugs,
verbal "stroking"
in the form of compliments, and concentrated adult individual help
with things they
do not understand. Adult company is vital to children. (Even household
pets left alone
go a little crazy. Pets need the company of their own species.)
Ignoring these natural needs will cost us dearly, not only in this generation,
but in the ones
which follow.
4.c) Summer call for abstracts
to be published in February 2000
Preliminary Program of the World Congress
Three roundtable sessions have been suggested by groups of people
and are now in the process of being organized:
a) On well-being, the healthy
family and the community
b) Measurement of indicators of
Sustainable
Development
c) The Global Community:
its objectives, the grassroots process and the organization
Details will be given in the late Summer Newsletter.
If someone is interested in being part of one or all of the above rountable
discussions let us know. Groups are welcome to join in on any topic
or issue or to help create other rountable discussions described under
ISSUES in the website.
We hope you have decided to join all the others who are preparing abstracts
and papers.
Remember, if you cannot attend in person, someone will read
it for you, and your paper will
still be accepted and published in the Proceedings of the World
Congress if it meets with our scientific requirements (see Call for
Papers and part 5. Letter sent June 99).
4.d) Criteria for Student Submissions
to the World Congress Contest.
Students of all levels (school, college,
technical, university) are invited to participate in the World Congress.
Students presenting a creative work (see Criteria and Guidelines) about
their visions of what Global Community Action 1 can accomplish with
respect to the ISSUES
(see file
listing all issues) will not have to pay a registration fee and also
will be given each Free Life Membership in S.W.S.D.and the
Global
Community WebNet. They are asked to produce any creative work of their
vision of what Global Community Action 1 can
accomplish ~ in the fields of zoology, biology, on history, on geography,
on social and political sciences, on agriculture, energy, earth sciences,
communications, wilderness, pollution, on the water supplies of the world,
poverty, employment, social justice, human rights, business and economy,
availability of resources and so on. Read the file on ISSUES to
obtain the complete listing of topics. Prizes will be presented at the
World
Congress Friday, August 18, 2000 during the Awards Ceremony and the
Chairman’s Address.
The special factor in their work is that all are evaluating impacts
with respect to four interacting
concerns (people's lives, resources, business and the environment)
based on a new scale of
values. The scale of values is about establishing what is
very important to ensure a sound future for
earth, and to keep our planet healthy, productive and hospitable for
all people and living things,
what is important, what is not so important,
and what should be let go.
Criteria are:
ORIGINAL
Your idea. No "help" from adults. NO COPYING the work of others.
WORKMANSHIP
Make it strong enough to be moved out to Kananaskis without things
falling off.
SENSIBLE
Be serious! It must work. It must really help.
BEFORE AND AFTER
For science projects only…
Try to prove it helps, or works. You can do this with photographs if
need be.
Prizes to students for making the best art work or project or program
that would represent what they think a Global Community would include
or be like will be awarded during the Friday, August 18, 2000, during the
Awards Ceremony.
Different categories:
A) Junior School
B) Junior High School
C) High School
D) College
E) Technical
F) University
4.e) Money Crunch and Hanging in there
The World Congress is all about little people with no money taking
a stand, ready to do what
they can with what is available to help change the force of the tide
of self-interest,
materialism, and waste. We are not interested in upsetting governments
or creating revolutions.
Just people quietly working to do what people need and want.
It is a constant struggle with money to put on this Congress. We, ourselves,
have given
everything we have to promote it. There are no sponsors. But that is
how it appears it has
to be. A group of people so committed to changing behaviour patterns
and attitudes that
they accept sacrifice and uncertainty as just part of the winning game.
Comme ca!
If you know what you have to say is right, and you feel it ought to
have the respect of others,
press on, for when you say "I WILL do this," ways and means become
apparent to you. Just
believe in your message, keep on, step by step, one at a time, and
you certainly will
achieve your goal!
4.f) Volunteering for The
Global Community and the World Congress
Several have come forward and offered to volunteer at the World Congress
and
for The
Global Community.
There is still an urgent need for more volunteers.
See our website for criteria to become a volunteer. There is work you
can do wherever you are!
5. Letter sent June99
World Congress and The Global Community now
have a website
The World Congress
and
The Global Community
now have a website
SWSD and the World Congress now have a website
and can be visited. The webpage of The Global Community, the
homepage of the The Society for World Sustainable Development is
found at:
http://members.home.net/global2000
The website contains information about:
* The Global Community organization
* The World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development
to
be held in
August 17-22 year 2000
* The Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC) for discussion
and joint action on
issues of local and global concerns
* The Society for World Sustainable Development (SWSD)
* Proceedings of the World Congress
* Sponsorship Opportunity and Professional Qualifications
* Lesson Plans for Schools
* Newsletters
To get acquainted with the latest news, read June 1999 Newsletter
to
be published later on this month. Each Newsletter will contain articles
written by interested people and members of SWSD. Send your article to
the Editor at the address given below.
All activities related to SWSD and the World Congress
are conducted on a volunteer basis.
Volunteering can be a challenging and rewarding experience in many
ways. Let us know if you do wish to volunteer and be part of the Organizing
Committee for the World Congress. The Global Committee
organization also needs volunteers.
Three roundtable sessions have been suggested by groups of people
and are now in the process of being organized:
a) On well-being, the healthy family
and the community
b) Measurement of indicators of
Sustainable
Development
c) The Global Community:
its objectives, the grassroots process and the organization
Details will be given in the Summer Newsletter.
If someone is interested in being part of one or all of the above rountable
discussions let us know. Groups are welcome to join in on any topic
or issue described under ISSUES in the
website.
We hope you have decided to join all the others who are preparing abstracts
and papers.
Remember, if you cannot attend in person, your paper will still be
accepted and published in the Proceedings of the World Congress
if it meets with our scientific requirements ~ as follows.
Criteria for a Scientific Record of Original Research
1. The research work includes an introduction.
2. It includes an hypothesis followed by a record
of original scientific research and
observational activities over
a period of time as well as relevant references which led to
the development of the work.
3. A summary.
4. A clear conclusion which should have a positive
effect on life on Earth.
5. Three professional references verifying the work
is valid.
If received by September 21, 1999, your abstract(s) will be included
in the February 2000 Newsletters and Preliminary Program for the
World
Congress.
If you come to the World Congress and present your Paper(s) or
video in person, or creative work prepared with students, you will not
have to pay the registration fees to the World Congress.
The final deadline for submission of individual abstracts and
papers, videos, presentations, panel discussions and workshop proposals,
facilitated groups, and of photographic, poster and dramatic displays dealing
with pertinent themes,and students'creative work is March 24,
year 2000.
It is important for all of us to make available sound workable solutions
to The Global Community.
Make sure you include recommendations, policies or workable sound solutions
in your abstract and Paper. Read the criteria for submission in the Call
for Paper and the Guidelines.
To establish the scale of values (as explained in the Invitation
previously sent to you), your abstract and Paper should indicate what
is very important to ensure a sound future for Earth, what is important,
what
is not so important, and
what should be let go. The scale of
values is needed to evaluate indicators and sustainable development, and
to establish a universal benchmark.
Your field of interest will have been thought through on four (4) levels
(see the file on ISSUES):
1. How does it affect the lives of people?
2. How does it impact upon the availability of resources?
3. What will it do to the environment?
4. How will economic development be affected?
The reason for these statements lies in the fact we must be ready to
abandon traditional ways of dealing with things to achieve a sustainable
future. Getting rich at the expense of everything else is no longer
the acceptable way to go. Over the decades, projects and actions
which ignored everything except their own interests have a history of failure
and human misery. If possible try to show how your field of interest
influences all four areas and develop policies (workable sound solutions)
to submit to The Global Community. Your Paper will likely be followed
by discussion as delegates seek ideas they can use in their own countries.
Please note below the new address of SWSD and the World
Congress. The email addresses are the same:
Germain Dufour, Chaurman: gdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
Virginie Dufour, Secretary General: vdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
If you did not get a reply ( by email ) from us within a month of sending
your abstract through the post office mail, please resend it at the new
address given here.
Cordially,
Germain Dufour, Chairman and
Organizing Committee
The Society for World Sustainable Development
World Congress on Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development
17-A Quebec Street, Guelph,Ontario, Canada N1H 2T1
6. Summer holiday wishes
We heartily wish all our abstract and paper contributors and S.W.S.D.
members a most happy
and enjoyable summer holiday.
Back to top of page
NewsletterAugust99
On the Issues of the Scale of Values and Personal Sustainable
Development
within
The Global Community
NEWSLETTER
Newsletter Volume 1
Issue 03, August 1999
The Society for World Sustainable Development
17-A Quebec Street,Guelph, Ontario Canada N1H 2T1
Executive Commitee
Joseph-Germain Dufour, President
Kenneth M. Campbell, Treasurer
Felicity Caron, Communication Officer
|
email
gdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
Website of The Global
Community
http://members.home.net/global2000
Table of Contents
1. President's Message.
2. Proposed Roundtable Sessions so far.
3. Procedure for the transfer of payments into SWSD
bank account: here is your chance to sponsor the World Congress.
4. Articles:
a. Personal
Sustainable Development pathway
by Germain Dufour
1. Introduction
2. The appalling dilemma of decision-making
3. What is personal sustainable development?
4. What to decide?
5. Spiritual values and survival
6. Old rules to deal with old fears
7. Human conscience
8. What are the universal needs of a family, a community
9. Governments self-serving politics
10. Do laws serve more governments and selected groups than
the overall population?
11. Creating a universal code of conduct acceptable to all?
12. The Universal Scale of Values
13. The Glass Bubble Concept of a Global Community and Evolution
14. Teaching children to become self-confident thinkers
15. Is the human race becoming more intuitive or instinctive?
16. Personal sustainable development for children
17. In sustaining the development of your own life
b.
Impacts of air pollution on human health in Bangladesh
by Md. Hasibur Rahman, Executive Director, Environment and
Agricultural Development Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
5. Summer call for abstracts to be published
in February 2000 Preliminary Program
of the World Congress:
deadline September 21st.
6. Editor's comments: send us articles
for publishing in Newsletters and making them
available on the Internet.
7. Global assessment contracts: send your CV and
abstract/paper.
1. President's Message
The World Congress is well on its way. We are receiving a significant
number of excellent abstracts of papers being submitted to the World
Congress. Original papers cover most of the important issues listed
on our website. Several Roundtables have in the process of being
organized. Everyone is brainstorming at home and their own research centre.
That is what we want. Brainstorming on all the issues! New ideas! New ways!
The right ones for our times!
In this Newsletter I have myself done a lot of brainstorming on the
two issues of
1.1 The Scale of Values
1.2 Personal Sustainable Development
as applied within The Global Community.
The Scale of Values is a scale to be used for the actual measurement
of sustainable development. You may wish to read again on the local/global
indicators GESDI and GSDP. Without a scale of values measurements
of indicators have no basic support, no sense of direction, no goal, no
meaning, no soul. They become numbers in a table.
With a scale of values the measurement of indicators become alive with
meaning, a sense of direction, a goal, a support centre, an education centre,
a global assessment centre (GCAC), people who really understand
and care. The scale is really the soul of our work. The scale is about
people saying what is important, what we want, and what we are willing
to do to save the earth and ourselves. The scale is about behaviours,
attitudes, new ways of doing things. It is about being responsible and
taking charge. It is about managing the earth. It is about saying what
is right and what is wrong. It is about living in a world of quality, security,
safety and meaning. It is also about survival.
To obtain such a scale we must conduct a brainstorming exercise on every
issue listed on our website. There is a tremendous amount of work to do.
The World Congress will see that it will be all done.
The issue of Personal Sustainable Development discussed here
will help a lot in changing behaviours and attitudes, and in bringing home
a concept that has been for too long left on a shelf by the business sector.
Sustainable development is not just about a corporation making a decision
that includes the environmental aspects. It is about all of us. If we want
a life on this earth we are all responsible. We all have "a Global Community"
and we are all part of The Global Community. As such we all have
a say on things. We take control of our lives and of our future on this
planet. Control has for too long in the hands of those who dont care, who
want wars and destroy everything and everyone, who want power for themselves.
Control is given back to us all where it should have always been in the
first place.
A lot of very good people nowadays talk about globalization.
Globalization they say is about trade on a global scale. It is about a
large corporation becoming larger and getting more power and control into
the hands of a few people. We will not accept this concept as it is
based on greed. It is another way of keeping control on our lives in
the hands of a few people. With globalization, we have no control
and no say in our future. The world will become a game played by a few
people just as it has alway been in our history. No sense of direction
and meaning. No security. Just a few people getting richer and controlling
us all.
The concept of "a Global Community" gives back control on our
lives to each one of us. We all have a say on what we want. We feel alive
and responsible. We are individuals but we also belong to The Global
Community. We have an identity, a meaning.
The Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC) is now seeking
global assessment contracts. Those submitting papers to the World
Congress are invited to send their CVs. So far they are the only ones
qualified to conduct such assessments. They took time to understand
the Guidelines and Criteria of our work and conduct their
research based on these new concepts. We will have to insist that each
global assessment contract be done with respect to findings obtained during
the World Congress.
Germain Dufour
2. Proposed Roundtable Sessions so
far
a) On well-being, the healthy family
and the community
b) Measurement of indicators of
Sustainable
Development
c) The Global Community:
its objectives, the Charter, the grassroots process and the organization
d) On Youth's education
e) Land Degradation
f) Quality of Life
g) Institutions for Environmental Governance:
issues of Community Participation and Sustainable Development
h) Health
i) The Scale of Values
Interested? Interested in preparing abstracts and papers? Let us know.
You cannot attend in person? Your paper will be read and published in
the Proceedings of the World Congress.
To establish a universal scale of values, a universal benchmark,
your abstract and Paper should indicate what is very important to
ensure a sound future for Earth, what is important,
what is not
so
important, and
what should be let go.
3. Procedure for the transfer of
payments into SWSD bank account: here is your chance to sponsor the World
Congress.
Those making payments (membership, registration, sponsorship, etc.)
to SWSD please send us an email about the reason of your payment, who you
are, your address, the exact time and date you made that payment, where
you made it, how much it was, and which one of the three ways listed here
you have used.
This is very important as we must be able to track down the information
related to each payment.
Payments maybe made as follows.
The Society for World Sustainable Development has an account
with the Bank of Montreal.
There are three ways to make payments.
In each way you must include the following information:
1. Bank of Montreal 001
2. Transit number 001D9
3. SWSD account number
1218-199
Address:
Bank of Montreal
First Canadian Centre
340-7th Avenue SW
Calgary, Alberta
Canada T2P 0X4
The three ways to make payments are:
1. Wire transfer
This means you transfer money electronically from
your bank to the Bank of Montreal in your city.
2. Deposit at branches
You go to a Bank of Montreal in your city and you
make a deposit
3. You go to your bank and you sent a draft to
the Bank of Montreal
4. Articles:
a. Personal Sustainable Development
pathway
by Germain
Dufour
1. Introduction
What do we want from the World Congress?
To plant a seed of conscience: an idea which will sprout and bear fruit.
Seed thought:
Improvement based on conscience is self-improvement which requires
discipline to get rid of things that have to go and be replaced by actions
that succeed.
Conscience in the minds of children is needed for they will inherit
the earth.
The seed planted in the mind of a child will grow along with his children
and will see it was good.
Conscience in the mind of an adult:
He realizes his personal life needs changes. He needs self-empowerment...free
thought upon which his creativity for a better life will grow.
He will face, and reject all that must go.
He will replace bad habits.
He will meet his needs with self-empowerment.
No one else's.
To empower himself is the first step.
The ultimate war of independence is to decide for yourself
to know what you want
to "own" your life quest outright free and clear of imaginary obligation
or laid-on guilt.
A man (a woman) has the right to decide what he will become and must
go through his personal clean-up with the aim of becoming: a better person,
a better neighbour, a better citizen, and more useful member of his global
community.
Every man (woman) must make a personal decision about;
What is most important to me?
What about me deserves to be nurtured?
What is holding me back?
What requires serious attention?
What about me needs "starving out" so good qualities can grow?
Each and everyone of us is part of "a Global Community" wherever
we go throughout our life. Personal sustainable development has to do with
our behavior within this global community, what we do or dont, cause and
effect, and how we interact with someone else global community and, on
the planetary scale, with The Global Community. We are constantly
required to re-evaluate our values and make decisions. The following is
meant to question our ways and behaviors and start a discussion amongst
us all about a universal scale of values. A Roundtable Discussion on a
Scale of Values has been proposed.
2. The appalling dilemma of decision-making
Life's major problems make us react ~ and there are myriad possible
reactions ~ but to be of a mind-set that allows one to calmly face the
problem detached from emotion in order to pick the best solution, may quite
possibly be the most powerful tool of any person interested in personal
development.
Human desires, vanities, attachments to family mores, influence these
decisions and so they tend to be accurate expressions of each individual's
character at that particular time.
Our choice, in the end, is what we want because of what we feel.
This particular assessment of any given situation appears to express
our level of development as a human being devoted to building strong character.
One feels the most honest thing to do is face exactly what is presented
on the horns of our dilemma for our choice:~
One solution will satisfy old values . The other will be in accord
with new.
As a human, one is challenged - go forward, or not (just yet).
We are endlessly faced with the same choice hidden in endless guises
unitl we "get it right."
3. What is personal sustainable development?
Personal sustainable development has to do with each and everyone of
us:
3.1 being
with self-control; eating to accommodate your body's needs and holding
hereditary ills in check; maintaining a well working physical vehicle(your
body); balancing our life with work, play and rest; feeding our mind and
being constantly learning; communicating with others
3.2 living with
the empowerment of free-thought, creativity
3.3 taking charge
of our lives
3.4 planning
for our own future
Everyone has to decide this by himself. Knowing our weaknesses we can
work eliminating them or at least making sure they would not affect significantly
our decision-making process. It is a struggle that spans our lifetime.
4. What to decide?
Once an individual is in control of his own being then he can extend
his empowerment out to his global community and The Global Community.
This way each person has to decide what:
4.1 are the things
holding us back and requiring serious attention and how can they be starved-out
so good things may grow
4.2 is
most important
4.3 deserves
to be nurtured
At the end each and everyone of us decides what sort of person we want
to become. After going through this personal clean-up we become a better
citizen, a more sensitive neighbour, a moral responsible father, and a
more useful and respected member of The Global Community.
5. Spiritual values and survival
What conduct is correct if survival is the issue?
In Nature:
Predators are involved in eating other life forms, young of any other
species sometimes their own.
In our History:
We have seen cannibalism, murders, wars. Wars have been and are still
the most unsustainable action of our species. Wars destroy everything and
everyone. Wars satisfy self-interest of a small group of people. Wars keep
gun, ship, plane, computer manufacturers and people working with them happy
and well fed and give them security for the rest of their lives. Wars are
often taken or created in another country by a superpower for the purpose
of creating wealth and a healthy economic development in the country of
the superpower but completely destroy the country(ies) submitted to the
war machine.
Having said that what are spiritual values to sustain life?
6. Old rules to deal with old fears
Many rules are made to empower the rule-maker only learn to recognize
those kind of rules! For they are seldom good for the person who obeys
such rules.
Old fears have sometimes to do with family feud over several generations.
Old fears could be:
6.1 a traditional hatred of people
based on religious differences, skin colour, life styles, language differences,
inter-marriage
6.2 suspicious of strangers
6.3 supertitions
6.4 inaccurate beliefs due to
ignorance
6.5 inaccurate knowledge and interpretation
of a religion
Things to go:
6.6 Living in the past with old
traditions, old wives'wisdom
6.7 Family beliefs(racism)
6.8 Old-age values
6.9 Archaic mores
6.10 Ghetto-ism
6.11 Class systems
6.12 Slavery
6.13 Cast systems
6.14 Sweatshops
6.15 Perversions: child prostitution,
child selling, etc.
7. Human conscience
Conscience means human have the knowledge to keep the planet healthy;
it is the science of determining right and wrong. In case of the human
conscience towards the planet's survival it is:
7.1 Saving the planet from becoming
an uninhabitable place
7.2 Stopping the planet from becoming
an uninhabitable place
Human conscience should prevent the planet from becoming uninhabitable.
How much of what we have in spiritual values do we have to leave behind?
Old ideas and thoughts, traditions, laws, ways of doing things must be
re-evaluated and some left behind.
Human conscience will insist all possible measures be taken to prevent
the planet from becoming uninhabitable.
Education is necessary to awaken all people in all countries to the
frightening fact that unless we all take responsibility for plant life
it will soon become uninhabitable. It will no longer be able to support
human life.
The most important factor in human existence is survival. To survive
we need oxygen and we need food and shelter. Oxygen is provided by green
plants. Therefore, we'd darn well better see we have lots of green growing
plants.
Most people nowadays are urban dwellers. Urban people do not know the
source of their food. Therefore people have to be taught to protect their
food supply.
Things we do in our country can affect people on the other side of the
planet. We exchange food with one another; there is a constant exchange
of goods, services, manufactured products, basic products, energy, etc.
If our manufactured plants produce pollution into theair this will affect
food produced South of us.
Self-interest, self-preservation as a species, as peoples and inhabitants
of this planet, instinct, are all driving forces of global human consciousness.
Global consciousness is about a chain of dependence; everything depends
on another form of life for survival like a symbiosis: lifeforms who contribute
to the food or well-being of another species.
8. What are the universal needs of
a family, a community
What are real needs? Of whose survival do they depend on? Of what interest?
What is working?
What is missing?
Are there over-supplies of unnecessary things (cars, ...); too
many products?
Is over-automation a cure or is it creating unemployment, human misery,
and a new class of people?
There are families all over the world (a few examples here):
8.1 Canadian family in a small
town
8.2 Nomad family on the Gobe desert
8.3 New York executive family
8.4 Aboriginal family in Australia
8.5 Chinese farmer's family
8.6 Japanese patters'family
8.7 English farmer's family
8.8 Prairie farmer's family
8.9 African tribes mans'family
8.10 City peoples'families
All families need shelter, food, parents, children, language, body of
knowledge, certain skills, a source of income, etc.
There are interacting universal responsibilities. In terms of parenthood,
parents must raised their children mentally and physically healthy. It
is a responsibility to do so. Which also means each must have an educational
program (parents to children type, school, college, university, etc.).
It is important to have a home-base (for a sense of security), a house,
a campsite in the bushes (for nomades).
9. Governments self-serving politics
Governments self-serving politics should be investigated with respect
to:
9.1 Over-government(too many rulers)
9.2 Over-taxing
9.3 Over-paid politicians
9.4 Too much power given to rulers
and/or dictators of all kinds
10. Do laws serve more governments and
selected groups than the overall population?
The criminal system needs investigating to be in step with the times,
and it should be based on needs of people rather than dictate through laws.
Could we create a universal law system to work and be applicable in
all countries?
11. Creating a universal code of conduct
acceptable to all?
Such code would include many aspects: intermarriages, colour barriers,
language barriers, respect between one another; etc.
12. The Universal Scale of Values
We have no intention of imposing a scale of values. It has to be developed
by us all.
The special factor in the work of those submitting papers to the World
Congress is that all are evaluating impacts with respect to four interacting
concerns (people's lives, resources, economic development and the environment)
based on a new scale of values. The scale of values is about establishingwhat
is very important to ensure a sound future for Earth, and to
keep our planet healthy, productive and hospitable for all people
and living things, what is important,
what
is not so important, and what should be let go.
From this scale, agreed upon by all members of TheGlobal Community,
the assessment of sustainable development can be conducted. The benchmark
is the scale established in year 2000 along with the first evaluation of
sustainable development conducted with respect to the four levels.
Their work will show how their field of interest influences all
four interacting areas of concerns and they will develop policies (workable
sound solutions) to submit to The Global Community.
The material sent so far is remarkable and original. All abstracts will
appear in the Preliminary Program to be published in February 2000.
The effects of climate changes will certainly be a major issue. New
ideas about energy and environmental accounting will also be discussed.
However, your creative thinking is paramount. We do not dictate what to
do. It's new ways of thinking that is important at the World Congress.
New standards, goals and objectives have to be defined. Firm universal
guidelines are essentials in keeping the world healthy. Already we notice
throughout the world new ways of thinking being embraced, new behaviors
and attitudes adopted. Sound workable solutions to all our problems will
have to be researched and developed and made available to everyone on the
Internet. This is la raison d’être of The
Global Community organization.
The aim of The Global Community is to give people an opportunity
to meet, encourage and advise one another about original ways to best harmonize
impacts upon
· the lives of people
· natural resources
· environment
· economic development
We must abandon ideas and old ways which have not worked well,
including traditional ways that have simply become habits. Getting rich
at the expense of everyone else is no longer acceptable. Over the decades,
history has proven projects and actions which ignored everything except
a special interest have resulted in ultimate failure and human misery.
The Global Community aims to establish a UNIVERSAL BENCHMARK
for the 21st Century made up of a Scale of Values for sustainable
development based on universal indicators.
All members will assess and agree upon this scale.
Your input is vital. We need to hear your voice in these matters.
Every country must be heard from to arrive at a workable universal scale
of values.
In this Newsletter we are exploring the issue of Personal Sustainable
Development and, of course, all other issues have to be explored in
a similar fashion.
For example:
Human beings and other life species need oxygen to live. Trees, plants
and growing things
provide oxygen. Therefore we destroy the source of oxygen at our peril.
The above is a vitally important fact. It is very important
to have many areas of healthy
green growth. It is not so important that every person owns
his own green area.
But what has to go is the "who cares?" attitude which stems from ignorance
about the
importance of green growing areas.
In other words, everyone who wants a life has to take responsibility
for it.
13. The Glass Bubble Concept of a Global
Community and Evolution
This is an exercise in creative thinking designed to occur over a period
of weeks.
Aim: To explore how vital is the food we eat
to survival as a species and wherein lies a great danger in climate change,
which we are unable to control.
* Climate influences food supply
* Lack of food leads to dietary changes
* Food influences the bodies'development
* Over time the kind of food affects the evolution
of a species
* Climate is a contributing factor in evolution
Area of Exploration (pick one): Wild horses,
Bears, Apes.
Experiencing Exercise
Using evolution-of-species charts, maps of continental drift and records
of climate over the ages examine the evolutionary changes in your chosen
species, imagining the glass bubbles, or global communities in which they
lived at each stage of development.
Consider climate, food supply, possible life hazards.
Think!
Pretend you are there.
Use your imagination to pretend you are actually inside that glass bubble,
that global community, with your selected species. Feel the situation.
Respond to the need of your species. Understand what makes things happen.
Oral Presentations
or
Papers
* Describe why major physical changes came to the
body of your chosen species over time, even causing sub-species.
* Clarify how climate changes caused the need for
a different kind of food, and illustrate how the body adapted and changed
in certain areas to accommodate the new food, new location, new climate.
Document how life-styles changed and sub-species developed over the ages.
* Record the special skills in survival, collection
of food, dealing with danger, of the various sub-species as evolution occured
in its different branches of the family tree.
Follow-up
Bringing the new knowledge home to see how it fits in our lives as well.
Imagine
You are in your private glass bubble, the global community in which
you live every day.
Changes have come to your environment:
- Temperatures have shot up 10% and stayed there.
- There is no place for the water to drain off, and
the rain falls every day.
How does this influence your daily life?
How do you dress?
How do you get to school?
Where do you play?
Where does your food come from now?
What is there around that you could eat?
What new skills do you need to develop?
How are the adults in your life coping with this?
What happened to their jobs?
Where would they move?
Suppose the climate change in our imaginary scenario persisted.
How might the human species evolve over the next 10,000 years?
Create a class project
Make a panoramic model of a global community with evolved humans, who
have survived the heat and the water. Show all the likely adaptations they
would make. Record other life-style changes including food.
Students taking part in such a study are quite likely to internalize
the following basic truths:
* what we put into our bodies matters
* nature's laws must be respected and adapted to
* climate can be dealt with once we understand its
causes
* there is still time for us to "clean up our act"
as humans, and co-operate with nature to keep this planet healthy and comfortable
for all life forms
* every species relies heavily for survival on the
co-operation and support of its global community
* every single thing in a global community is an
important part of the whole
14. Teaching children to become self-confident
thinkers
Could this be the subject of a Roundtable Discussion during the World
Congress?
What makes children unable to think for themselves?
Rules?
Bossy parents?
Fear of adults?
Electronic media?
15. Is the human race becoming more intuitive
or instinctive?
Being intuitive means we know things without knowing "how we know."
How much information children/grown-ups pass information intuitively?
Examine this:
posture, body language, kind of movement made (a happy walk,shoulder
back, eye expression, etc.), a mood is set and seen; we get a feeling from
that person (that person is sending off vibrations, energy, waves, and
we perceive this mood or wave).
Children in a school yard are much more intuitive than grown-ups.
16. Personal sustainable development for
children
"The body is the horse the soul rides on ~ you dont get far on a sick
horse."
There are a number of ideas to keep a child's development sustainable:
16.1 Eating for power: combinations
of foods that create vitality and health.
16.2 Making good things to eat:
simple meals children can make for themselves.
16.3 Where good food comes from:
individual garden plots at school growing food that keeps them strong and
healthy. Community effort is necessary to make this work ~ gardens grow
during summer holidays. They need constant care.
16.4 Developing the perfectly
healthy body: games and exercises, activities that develop a great body(swimming,
skating, skiing, roller-blading, etc.)
16.5 Developing an open mind:
ideas, concepts, attitudes that have proven to work well in foreign societies
as well as our own.
16.6 How learning works:
how to study, how to memorize, how to think, logic. Finding "best ways"
to do things, workable sound solutions.
16.7 Children have to learn to
become problem solvers as they will be facing global problems on a daily
basis.
16.8 How kindness works: how people
react; cause and effect of action; living smoothly.
16.9 What is happiness: LOVE is
a verb; one does nice things for others.
Suggested ideas upon which a creative teacher may build a program
in Personal
Sustainable Development for Children, which develops
their ability to make decisions.
Most of us have been brought up with the knowledge adults make their
own choices ~ and
pay the price. Could children not be made aware of this as well?
Even a child could see if he acts in certain ways, things can backfire
and cause harm. And also
that he can act in ways that attracts good things ~ even over a period
of time.
If a child has the habit of reacting to unpleasant life events in knee-jerk
revenge or angry
responses, sparks fly and nasty side-effects flare up all around him.
Such action causes
memories that rankle for years.
It is very important for children to have experience in choosing
to react well, even in little
things.
It is not so important that one agree with other children all
the time. One obeys parents and
teachers. But a child has to be taught it is not required of him to
be somebody's victim; that
is o.k. to disagree with a course of action.
What must be let go is the uncontrolled way some children react
to the troubles of their lives.
Let us teach them making unproductive choices attracts even more trouble
and frustration.
Reacting in inappropriate ways in time of conflict must stop.
Teaching a child how to sustain the development of his own life toward
happy solutions calls
for a series of small victories, each one easily achieved.
Perhaps the best place to start is care and management of the child's
own room at home,
and his own personal care. Once the child feels he has his personal
space just the way he
wants it, he can advance to dealing one by one with family members,
later on, school-mates.
Older children could be encouraged to keep a journal about incidents,
and how things happened
and were worked out.
Referring back to these records, a child gains a sense of mastery, and
quickly builds up finesse
with successful ways and means, good phrases to use and so on.
It won't take long before a child has solid evidence that bad luck and
tough breaks were only
wrong moves that could have been avoided.
He'll get the conviction it is not people or "things" that makes him
happy. He is making himself
happy ~ it is a state of mind he has created for himself.
This self-improvement journey will sustain him for as long as
he uses it, the results to be
enjoyed for ever.
17. In sustaining the development
of your own life
If making these ideas on personal sustainable development a natural
pattern for your life, you may quickly internalize them by starting to
practice them
17.1 in your own room
17.2 in your own family
17.3 with your own friends
17.4 in your own Global Community
Try them out. Keep a journal and refer back to the results occasionally.
Record whose welfare you were considering as well as your own when you
came to a decision how to act. Soon you will find ways to "finesse" your
behaviour, phrases that work. Actions that pays off in a good way.
You will realize what you had formerly considered "back luck", or "tough
breaks" now has an entirely new explanation and, best of all, YOU are in
control of you. Besides, others like you better. You like yourself better
too.
Worth a try?
b. Impacts of air pollution
on human health in Bangladesh
by Md. Hasibur
Rahman, Executive Director, Environment and
Agricultural
Development Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
IMPACTS OF AIR POLLUTION ON HUMAN HEALTH IN BANGLADESH
Md. Hasibur Rahman *
Bangladesh is one of the most densely populated country of the world.
Industrial and vehicular toxic gaseous emission impacts on environment
and causing human health problem in densely polluted urban area. Mitigative
measure is being implementing through air pollution monitoring, research,
dissemination of research activities, particularly phasing out of two-stroke
engine smoke belching auto-rickshaws the most polluting vehicles and finally
government has decided to import lead (Pb) free fuel and encouraging to
use Compressed Natural Gas (CNG). Public awareness already been adopting
in urban area by the government and different non-government agencies to
prevent serious health problems causing by air pollution.
Background:
In common sense people thinks air pollution means vehicular smokes and
industrial gaseous emission. But air pollution means any solid, liquid
or gaseous substances present in the atmosphere in such concentrations
that impact on human health or other living creature as a whole creates
environmental pollution. Composition of fresh dry air contents 78.09% Nitrogen
and 20.94% Oxygen by volume. The rest of 0.97% is composed of different
gaseous mixture elements (i.e. carbon dioxide, helium, argon, nitrous oxides
and xenon) and very negligible amount of some other organic and inorganic
gases. If these compositions found different in any atmospheric air then
the air would be called polluted. Air pollution could be happen by two
ways i.e. by naturally and artificially. Naturally, air pollution
caused by volcanic eruption, dust bearing cyclone, natural-fog, pollen
grains, bacteria etc. Significantly, air is polluting by artificially i.e.
man-made vehicular and industrial gaseous emission and also by house holds
municipal wastes odors.
Human beings cannot survive without taking atmospheric oxygen through
respiration system in a suitable mixture of oxygen, nitrogen and other
inert gases. It is an assumption that an adult man takes 16-18 kg air through
respiration system in his day life. Fresh air is a basic demand of human
beings.
It is recognized that civilization of mankind was started with the invention
of fire. Fire creates smokes, so air pollution was started from the primitive
period of cave man. At that time air pollution was very negligible in ratio
with the density of population. Air pollution increasing rapidly due to
technological development, creation of engines, industrialization, power
plant set-up, burning coal & crude oil, steam locomotives use of railway,
steamer, motor vehicles, transport and internal combustion engines burning
petrol, diesel, kerosene and also by households vegetable oils burning,
fire-wood, paraffin's & kerosene burning. Including all above, use
of aerosol and pesticides are mostly polluting the atmospheric air very
seriously.
Developments of the metallurgical and chemical industries are creating
smog as air pollutants impacting environment. Emission of chlorocompounds
of solvents, dioxins and related compounds (chlorodibenzofurances, etc.)
emitting from the chemical industry. One of serous problems is the ozone
layer depleting substances by chloroflorocarbons (CFC), helon, methane
etc. Brick burning industries in Bangladesh are using fire-wood, coal are
increasing air pollution seriously. It is really difficult to completely
eradicate of air pollution with use of vehicles, transportation and development
of industries but it can be checked and minimize to a certain point.
Industrial emission and fossil fuel combustion in vehicles equipment
accounted for large amount of carbon dioxides emission are increasing global
air pollution that creating acid rain and greenhouse effect causing global
warming and climate change.
Sources of Air pollution in Bangladesh:
Urban air quality in Bangladesh is inferior compared to the rural areas,
due to more densely population and traffic congestion. Increasing population,
urbanization, transportation and industries are creating uncontrolled
emission sources related to air pollution that reflecting as negative impacts
on environment as well as human health.
- Major industrial sources in Bangladesh are industrial plants of Cement,
Pulp & Paper, Fertilizer, Textiles, Leather Tanning, Pharmaceuticals,
Pesticides, Ceramic, Paints, Chemicals, Metal Coating, Plastic, Foundry,
Soaps, Detergents, Power plants, Open burning of fuel-wood, Brisk burning
industries, Solid waste disposal sites etc.
The most general gaseous emissions from industries are odor compounds,
such as H2S and NH3, SO2, NOx, CO, carbohydrates, fluorides, acid mists,
Cl2, volatile organic compounds and Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM).
- Major vehicular sources in Bangladesh are Mechanized vehicles, Car,
Bus, Jeep, Taxi, Truck, Micro & Minibus, two-stroke engine vehicles,
motor cycles, Water engines vessels, Railway engine, Air crafts etc.
Major vehicular air pollutants are Suspended Particular Matter (SPM),
Carbon dioxides, Sulfur Dioxides, Carbon Monoxides, Hydrocarbons, Nitrogen
oxides and particulate of lead compounds and un-burn fuel particles etc.
The emission from diesel engines is black smoke, CO, un-barn hydrocarbons,
nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide. Two stroke petrol engines which are
used in motor cycles, scooters and three wheelers are less fuel burning
efficient and release larger amount un-burn fuel and more CO than four-stroke
or diesel engines.
Most of the brick burning industry established near the city for the
better marketing of their products. These brick- fields are degrading the
environment in two ways, i.e. use of fuel wood as a energy source causing
deforestation and emission of pollutants contains suspended particular
matters, carbon monoxides, sulfur dioxides, fluorine etc. are degrading
ambient air quality. The pollutants discharged may cause respiratory problem
of human and ashes including other SPM fallen on the crops and plants,
often close the pores of the leaves and hamper photosynthesis and respiration
of plants. Long term impacts of these pollutants any cause of death of
plants and degrading environment as a whole.
House holds pollution causing by burning of coal, diesel, firewood,
dry cattle dung, vegetable waste products, refuse burning emit carbon monoxide,
sulfur dioxides, hydrocarbon and dust particles. Municipal solid waste
and sewage are dumping near the city area, from the decomposition of these
waste procedures bad odor and blowing air carries that bad odor to the
residential areas causing unusual situation of city life.
With the increasing population and urbanization number of vehicles are
introducing rapidly in urban area are causing serious air pollution. Narrow
roads, congestion, formation of long queues at intersections, very low
speed specially near shopping and commercial areas. Recondition i.e. poor
condition of vehicles, low quality of fuel/lead containing fuel and poor
traffic management aggravates the air pollution in city area. According
to the Department of Environment there are 70-80 percent of vehicles are
very poor condition and creating major air pollution in urban area of Bangladesh.
In urban area the ambient air quality is dependent on many factors whereby
air movement, traffic volume, congestion, gaseous emission from industries
and vehicles are the most important. The traffic emission relates directly
to speed to travel, level and quality of vehicles engine maintenance. Suspended
Particulate Matter and un-burn fuel causing serious problem in maintaining
diesel and two stroke engines.
Environmental Legislation:
With a view to protecting the environment of the country, the government
of Bangladesh promulgated Bangladesh Environment Conservation Act, 1995
and Environment Rules, 1997. This Act and Rules empowers the government’s
implementing agency the Department of Environment to prevent, control and
abate environmental pollution and conservation of environment in the country.
Under the Environment Conservation Rules’97 Department of Environment is
being provided environmental clearance, categorized various industries
and projects into four categories on the basis of their expected pollution
loads and proposed location. Rules include standards for air, water, noise
and odor, vehicular emission, domestic and industrial waste effluents etc.
Other related environmental legislation are Factories Act 1965, the Factory
Rules, 1979, Shops and Establishments Act, 1965, Radiation Protection Act,
1993.
Ambient Air Quality Scenario:
Department of Environmental has given Standard Limit of SPM-500, SO2-120,
CO-5000 and Nox-100 (concentration in micrograms per cubic meter) in industrial
area, SPM-400, SO2-100, CO-5000 and Nox-100 in Commercial and mixed use
area, SPM-200, SO2-80, CO-2000 and Nox-80 in residential and rural area
and SPM-100, SO2-30, CO-1000 and Nox-30 for the sensitive area.
One report of Department of Environment views the investigative monitoring
(December, 1996- September-1997) in different points of Dhaka City. The
average monthly results of investigative monitoring as shown in December'96
is SPM-602.02, SO2-128.76, NOx-65.50 (in Tejgaon industrial area) in December'96
- SPM-1797.80, SO2-71.53, NOx-24.90 (in Farmgate commercial area).
Atomic Energy Commission showed in a report that at least 50 tones of
lead are deposited annually in the air in Dhaka City. It also showed that
at certain points with traffic congestion the air contains 463 nanograms
of lead. Studies by Dhaka Shishu (Children) Hospital revealed that lead
found in blood was eight times higher than the acceptable level, forming
lead lines in the bone, mostly among under privileged children living in
congested slums near transport hubs in the city.
Health Effects:
Air pollution with the lead is seriously effecting physiological constituent
of the human body. It enters in the body through respiration system. Lead
is a deadly poisonous metal and prolonged low does exposure causes cancer
in human beings.
Air pollution impacts on human health through polluting agents and suspended
particular matters such as municipal wastes, decomposed air-borne gases,
vapors, fumes, mist, dust, industrial emission and vehicular emissions.
These pollutants effect on human health on contact by skin, exposed membranes
and by respiratory system. Immediate and long term impacts on human health
are furnished below:
1. Eye Irritation, Nose and throat irritation, Irritation of the respiratory
tract
2. Head aches, nausea and suffocation
3. A variety of SPM, particulate like pollens, initiate asthmatic attacks
4. Chronic pulmonary diseases like bronchitis and asthma are aggravated
by a high concentration of SO2, NOx particulate matter and photochemical
smog.
5. Hydrogen fluoride causes disease of the bone (fluorsis) and mottling
of teeth
6. Carcinogenic agents such as exhaust of un-burn fuel causes cancer
7. Dust particles cause respiratory diseases. Diseases like silicosis,
asbestosis, etc., result from specific dusts
8. Certain heavy metals like lead (Pb) may enter the body through the
lungs and cause poisoning.
Recommendation:
i) It is need to ban new registration of two stroke engines and smoke
emitted vehicles as well as phase out of these vehicles.
ii) Need to ensure import of lead free and low sulfur containing fuel.
iii) Proper monitoring and maintenance of all types of vehicles
iv) All vehicles need strict fitness tests and smoke emission test
with heavy penalty of defaulters
v) Strictly ban sales of loose lubricating oils for vehicles
vi) Alternative transport fuels like Compressed Natural Gas (CNG),
ethanol, methanol and electricity need to introduce in place of traditional
fuel.
vii) Better traffic management with construction of fly-over, one way
streets, multi-stored parking facilities and foot overpass would be most
effective.
viii) Industries must not be set-up in any residential area and these
must be set-up in a specific industrial zone (area) with proper effluent
treatment plant.
Conclusion:
Air pollution must be considered as the most vulnerable environmental
health hazards. It is important to take immediate initiative to protect
air pollution on the basis of latest scientific information and technology
available. To address this problems environmental education and mobilizing
through community participation in the urban area is essential. To
reduce air pollution, every one of the society can play an important role
by taking right decision of consumer choice and maintaining their own vehicles
and also participating in tree plantation. Tree and green vegetation can
reduce air pollution by absorbing carbon dioxide and inhibit travelling
of dust and chemical elements that causes positive impact on human health.
On the other hand, air pollution stimulated greenhouse effects, global
warming and sea level rising. Sea level rising would be most worsen environmental
disastrous for the low-lying country Bangladesh. It is important to raise
awareness campaign and mitigative measures for air pollution to control
global warming.
5. Summer call for abstracts
to be published in February 2000 Preliminary Program of the World Congress
: deadline September 21st.
Once we have received your abstract, it will be printed in the
Preliminary
Program which is due to be
published February 2000. The deadline is September 21st.
After the Paper has been presented at the Congress, it will appear in
the Proceedings to be published shortly after the World
Congress. All authors will also be given a Life Membership in S.W.S.D.
and The Global Community WebNet, and presented with a Certificate
to this effect at the Awards
Ceremony of the Congress.
If you do come in person to present your Paper, the registration fee
will be waived.
If you cannot attend in person, someone will be chosen to read your
Paper, and your Life Membership will be sent to you by regular post.
For more information, read March and July Newsletters posted on our
website. The webpage of The Global Community, the homepage of the
The
Society for World Sustainable Development is found at:
http://members.home.net/global2000
6. Editor's comments:
send us articles for publishing in Newsletters and making them available
on the Internet.
We are delighted to receive more articles for the Newsletters from our
readers.
We have received many books and articles from readers and members around
the world but the authors did not give us specific permission to print
part of their work in the Newsletter, and therefore we cannot do so.
It is imperative that, if you give us permission to re-print, all or
in part, you include all copyright verification of permission to quote.
We do not have a copyright research expert to do this
work.
Your articles should also follow the same Guidelines used for
the preparation of Papers (see Criteria in Call for Papers on the
website or see Letter sent June99 in part 5 of this Newsletter ).
We thank Md. Hasibur Rahman and EADSC for so gracioustly
sharing information with The Global Community. Thank you again
Sir. We would appreciate more articles.
In the words of Md. Hasibur Rahman, Bangladesh is suffering from
various environmental
and agricultural constraints such as air, water and soil pollution,
frequent flooding, desertification, poor sanitation, malnutrition, health
and over population problem.
For the betterment of environment and sustainable agricultural development
EADSC envisaged
to conduct different research oriented activities on different urgent
issues of environment which
might be solved for the survival of the country and the coming generation
in the next century.
Those who wish a copy of the complete article send us a stamped, self-addressed
8.5 x 11 envelope and we'll see you get one. People who wish to contact
Md. Hasibur Rahman may email him at
icms@bdcom.com
The Editor.
7. Global assessment contracts: send
your CV and abstract/paper.
We are at the moment seeking global assessment contracts which
can be handled by the Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC).
GCAC is compiling a list of people who wish to be involved in such challenge.
Should a contract be accepted, will shall first consider our members in
that area, providing they wish such employment and they have the necessary
expertise and/or experience for the job at hand.
Those who submit papers to the World Congress are invited
to send applications with their CVs if they wish to be considered for contract
work, here or abroad. The application package is found under Services/Job
possibilities.
Our sponsor GlobalCommunityWebNet Ltd. has a website found
at:
http://members.home.net/gdufour99
Send your application and CV to the business as well (the package is
found under Reaching us).
It is important you realize our proposals benefit only the people who
are involved with the World Congress and S.W.S.D. If you are
prepared to comply with those requirements, let us know. Study carefully
our websites for full information.
As soon as a global assessment contract comes up requiring your expertise
you will be notified. Only those who submit papers to the World Congress
can be considered.
Back to top of page
On the Issue of
Globalization
within
The Global Community
NEWSLETTER
Newsletter Volume 1
Issue 04, November 1999
The Society for World Sustainable Development
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Executive Committee
Joseph-Germain Dufour, President
Kenneth M. Campbell, Treasurer
Felicity Caron, Communication Officer
Virginia Dufour, Secretary-General
|
Change of Mailing Address and Website Address
Mailing address
The Society for World Sustainable Development
17A Quebec Street
Guelph, Ontario
Canada N1H 2T1
email
gdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
vdufour@globalcommunitywebnet.com
Phone
(519) 829-3629
Website of The Global
Community organization
http://members.home.net/global2000
Table of Contents
1. President's Message.
2. The Global Community organization.
3. Call for proposals for new Board of Directors.
4. International Ozone Day.
5. Share your Vision of Earth for Year 2024.
6. Abstracts and Papers submitted.
7. Proposed Roundtable Sessions.
8. Procedure for the transfer of payments into SWSD
bank account.
9. Abstracts to be published in February 2000
Preliminary
Program
of the World Congress.
10. Editor's comments: sending us articles
for publishing in Newsletters and making them
available on the Internet.
11. Global assessment contracts: including your CV
along with your abstract/paper.
12. Articles
a. To-day's
children evoke a VISION of new millennium,
by Virginia Dufour, retired teacher
b.
The Personal Sustainable Development pathway for children,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
c. The
Personal Sustainable Development pathway for an adult,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
d. Globalization
vs The Global Community Concepts and its Organization,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
e. Ozone
Layer Depletion and its Adverse Effects,
by Md. Hasibur Rahman, Executive Director, Environment and
Agricultural Development Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
f. The
Ozone Depleting Substances: a Sustainable Development Issue,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
1. President's Message
Announcement: major change
The World Congress
to be conducted
on the Internet
August 17-22, 2000
Due to the difficulty of making travel arrangements from far countries
we were obliged to find new ways to bring the work being done by
our participants to the world.
The "Hotel Special Deal" at the Kananaskis Inn had to be cancelled.
The World Congress will not be held at the Kananaskis Village as
previously planned but will be conducted on the Internet, same date. Everything
else stays the same except the Congress will be held by email and
through the Internet.
When, at the last count, we learned over 9,000 people visit our
Website every month it became clear it was much to the advantage of the
people writing papers that the entire world be made aware of their work
as their research is of vital importance. The
Call for Papers from
around the world has been a great success.
One of the main purposes of the World Congress is to find new
ways to do things, so why not use the Internet for our Congress? We are
now preparing a World-wide Congress available on Internet. Watch
the Newsletters as plans develop.
Through the use of the Internet it becomes possible to hold a Roundtable
Discussion on each issue. Brainstorming on all issues will also become
easier to handle. More sucessful results will be obtained. Many more researchers
throughout the world will have an opportunity to send their bodies of work.
Perhaps your University or organization would see the value of hosting
the World Congress presentation on the Internet and the posting
of the Proceedings afterwards?
Should sufficient members wish to see the Papers published in book form,
sponsors will have to be found such as a University Press willing to donate
the service.
The success of The Global Community organization is very much
apparent now from the number of participants in the World Congress.
Section 6(Abstracts and Papers submitted) shows that over
119
abstracts have been submitted so far and were sent from researchers
in 59 different countries, another 109 may be sent in the next few
weeks, and another 35% more papers may be submitted before the final
deadline of March 24, 2000. The actual count of scientific research Papers
may possibly be over 300 by the deadline. The variety and the quality
of the original work submitted so far has made our common quest a success.
In order to facilitate Virginie returning to her duties with The
Global Community organization, we have moved our operation to Guelph,
Ontario, so that she can be close to her family.
2. The Global Community organization.
The Global Community organization was envisioned in 1990 as an
entity having a new home every five years. Its present home has been Canada
since then. Its new home and headquaters will be established in year 2000
during the General Annual Meeting scheduled to occur during the
World
Congress.
Headquarters should move periodically anywhere on Earth to keep the
organization free from connection to any specific country and cultural
environment. Each new place would bring in fresh, stimulating input to
the organization, giving it new life.
More information on the organization can be found on our website (see
Main Index).
3. Call for proposals for new Board
of Directors.
Note that we are now accepting proposals for a new Board of Directors
and a new host country for The Global Community organization.
A new Board of Directors officers will have to be selected and they
will be required to work as a team. Those interested please submit their
applications. A new Board of Directors is made up of at least four officers:
a President, a Vice-president, a Treasurer, and a Secretary-general. For
now, the constitution of The Society for World Sustainable Development
(SWSD) is being used to govern The Global Community organization
but a Charter will have to be developed and proposed during the World
Congress. Those interested in developing a Charter are invited to submit
their proposals as a Paper during the World Congress. Those interested
in taking over the task of taking The Global Community organization
into the coming millennium submit their proposal by March 24, 2000.
In deciding where Headquarters of The Global Community organization
will move next, several criteria will be taken into account: qualifications
of the candidates for leadership (submit your CV if not already sent),
the communications infra-structure of the host country, support systems,
and financial support by the Board of Directors or sponsors as the organization
has no outside funds at all.
Candidates work strictly on a volunteer basis and find what support
they need for the organization. SWSD will see that the transfer of The
Global Community organization to its new home proceeds smoothly.
The new team must be capable of the successful continuation of global
projects and also the initiation of new projects in the host country and
other parts of the world.
4. International Ozone Day.
Mr. Md. Hasibur Rahman has proposed that September 16 be the "International
Ozone Day." He has also published an article on the issue in this Newsletter
(see sections 8 and 10). We have been invited to participate by letting
everyone know through our Newsletter. We should have held an awareness
seminar on it and invited school and college and university students to
raise awareness on Adverse Effects of Ozone Layer Depletion on Human
Health and Environment. We could not do it in September but we want
to let you know your suggestion was brought to The Global Community
organization.
We understand the "International Ozone Day" was held in Bangail
as planned. The school systems are different from country to country. For
instance in Canada, it would probably be better to have the "International
Ozone Day" later on during the year. It is something to think about. We
propose to ask everyone to suggest a day or a period of time when it would
be best for them to hold it. We will discuss this again during the World
Congress and make it official throughout the world.
5. Share your Vision of Earth for
Year 2024.
We are asking The Global Community to participate in local
public consultation processes to offer views taken toward creating
a sustainable future for Earth over the next 24 years. We want everyone
worldwide to feel free to participate in developing a common Vision
of Earth for Year 2024. We want you to feel involved in shaping the
future.
Would you care to send us your Vision of Earth for Year 2024? Your Vision should be accompanied by several draft recommendations which will form the basis of the common Vision. If these recommendations were followed what would be Earth
like in year 2024? We invited you to send us your idea The Global Community
should take in the future. Try to be as realistic as possible.
Everyone will have the opportunity to comment on the draft recommendations.
Results obtained during the World Congress will be added to the
Vision and we will also have a session on creating the Vision. Draft recommendations
will be presented to The Global Community organization for considerations.
Results will be added to the proceedings to be published afterwards.
It is very important that everyone conducts his/her own brainstorming
exercise on every issue listed on this website(see August 99 Newsletter
as an example whereby a brainstorming exercise was conducted on the Scale
of Values and Personal Sustainable Development) . Everything
you will come up with will be added to everyone else brainstorming ideas.
We will compile all thoughts on every issue. Common grounds and trends
will appear at the end, and lay the groundwork for conclusions.
What direction should The Global Community take over the next
24 years? Tell us the goals and values that are very important to you and
which you feel will help create a sustainable future for Earth. The management
of our affairs on the planet has become of vital importance and we want
you to see your share of participation can help to sustain life.
From the experience in your local community
Tell us
What is most important?
What is very important?
Not so important?
Not important at all?
to sustain Earth.
Because globalization affects us all, your Vision of Earth for Year
2024 should include that topic as well.
Global problems call for:
a Global Community ethics
Global Community values
Global Community way of conducting business
Global Community Code of Ethics
More brainstorming exercises on globalization are required here. Keep
in mind the concepts of "a Global Community" and of "The Global
Community", follow the same Guidelines and Criteria develop for
the Call for Papers for the World Congress, and conduct brainstorming
exercises on globalization. This is the only way to find sound solutions
to global problems. Globalization is directly related to sustainable development
and the management of Earth. We want you to submit more Papers on the issue
of globalization as it affects all the other issues in significant ways.
We ask everyone who considers him(or her)self a member of The Global
Community, to take part in all local consultation processes, and to
make known his idea for a sustainable solution to the community issue at
hand. Such action will have positive results for Earth.
It is everybody's privilege to participate in developing a common Vision
of Earth for Year 2024. Take your place by getting involved in shaping
the future.
6. Abstracts and Papers submitted.
A list of Paper presenters and the titles of their Papers is included
here in alphabetical order. A separate list of the 59 countries where they
originated is also included. The actual abstracts will be printed on Preliminary
Program to be shown on the Internet on February 2000.
A total of 119 abstracts have been received so far. Many have also sent
final Papers as well. The deadline for the Paper submissions is March
24, 2000.
The scope and variety of topics received has made very exciting reading.
Original insights resulting from individual research will most certainly
influence thought around the world, and should bring the writers the recognition
they deserve beyond their own countries.
Another 109 researchers promised abstracts by September. We are still
awaiting them. If the work is about to be published there may still be
time to include it in the Preliminary Program. It's a chance to have your
work reach the entire world.
As mentioned in the Invitation Letter for Paper Submissions(see
also March 99 Newsletter), 35% of the space in the Final Program of the
World Congress is reserved for participants who will be submitting abstracts/papers
between February 2000 and the final deadline March 24, 2000. You are still
invited to submit abstracts/papers and creative work. No more than two
papers per person is allowed.
The following Table shows the listings. Let us know of any corrections
to be made.
List of countries
|
Abstracts already submitted
and approved
|
Late Abstracts
(please submit soon)
|
1. Africa
2. Armenia
3. Australia
4. Azerbaijan
5. Bahrain
6. Bangladesh
7. Belarus
8. Belgium
9. Botswana
10. Brasil
11. Bulgaria
12. Canada
13. China
14. Columbia
15. Croatia
16. Czech Republic
17. Denmark
18. England
19. Estonia
20. Ethiopia
21. France
22. Georgia
23. Germany
24. Ghana
25. India
26. Israel
27. Italy
28. Japan
29. Jordan
30. Kenya
31. Kyrgyzstan
32. Luxembourg
33. Mexico
34. Morocco
35. Nepal
36. New Zealand
37. Norway
38. Pakistan
39. Portugal
40. Peru
41. Korea
42. Republica Moldova
43. Russia
44. Slovakia
45. Spain
46. Sri Lanka
47. Sweden
48. Switzerland
49. Tajikistan
50. Thailand
51. The Netherlands
52. Turkey
53. Ukraine
54. Uruguay
55. Uganda
56. United States
of America
57. Uzbekistan
58. Venezuala
59. Vietnam |
1.
Vassili A. Agafonov
Rainbow Keepers Rostov Group
Paper title:
World Economic Growth
2. Ahsan
Uddin Ahmed( Dr. )
Head
Environment and Development
Division
Bangladesh Unnayan
Parishad (BUP)
Dhanmondi, Dhaka-1209
BANGLADESH
Paper title: Challenges
to Achieve Sustainable Development in Bangladesh in a Warmer World
3.
Shawkat Ali, Ayesha Akhter and Md. Hasibur Rahman
Environment and Agricultural Development Studies centre
Bangladesh
Paper title:
Urban Slums Impacts on Environment in Bangladesh
4.
Slav Akimov and Ozod Mukhamedjanov
Uzbekistan
Paper title:
Regional Ecological Centre in the Central Asia
5.
Ernest Teye-Topey
Amnesty Ghana
Paper title:
The Role of Human Rights Promotion and Protection in Sustainable
Development
6. & 7.
Mark Anielski
Centre for Performance Measurement & Management
Faculty of Business, University of Alberta
Paper title:
Towards an Inclusive Yardstick of Societal Well-being
Paper title:
How Modified National Accounts, using the Genuine Progress
Indicator or the ISEW, might be used to Manage the Sustainable Well-being
of Societies
8.
Keith Archer and Richard Roberts
Praxis
Paper title: On the Public Consultation Regarding
Recreational Development in K-country
9. MALIK
AMIN ASLAM
Islamabad, Pakistan
Paper title: CDM:
How to ensure Sustainable Development in Developing Countries
10.
Khalid Aziz and Otto N. Miller
Professors at Stanford, California, U.S.A.
Paper title: The Impact of Technology on Oil and Gas
Resources
11.
Jyotsna Bapat
Sociology, University of Mumbai, India
Paper title: Tourism Environment and Social Protest
12.
Faysal Abdel-Gadir Mohamed
UNDP, Manama, Bahrain
Paper title: Impact of Globalization on Small Island
States
13. & 14.
Peter Bartelmus
Department of Economics and Social Information and Policy Analysis
Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy
Germany
Paper title: Towards a Framework for Indicators of
Sustainable Development
Paper title: Greening the National Accounts: Approach
and Policy Use
15.
Allan Barsky
Director of Research, Faculty of Social Work
University of Calgary
Paper title: Public Discussions on Sustainable Development:
Listening to all Voices
16.&17.
Brad Bass, Roger Hansell and Glenda Poole
Adaptation & Impacts Research Group
Institute of Environmental Studies
University of Toronto
Paper title: Adapting Urban Areas to Climate Change
with Vertical Gardens by Brad Bass, Roger Hansell and Glenda Po
Paper title: From Heated Rockpiles to Forest Ecosystems:
Redesigning Cities in a Restorative Economy by Brad Bass and Roger
Hansell
18.& 19.
William Belsey
IEARN Canada
Teacher-Facilitator, The Galileo Professional Development Centre
Bragg Creek, Alberta
Paper title: Igalaaq An Artic Window on the World:
the Creation of the First Community Access Centre for the Inuit People
Paper title: Change the World 101 (an inovative
way to teach global issues to students in schools )
20.
Vincenzo Bentivegna
Professor at the University of Florence, Italy
Dipartimento di Processi e Metodi della Produzione Edilizia
Paper title: Environmental Evaluation in Land Planning:
the New Land Planning Act of the Tuscany Region
21.
Ayalneh Bogale
Alemaya University
Ethiopia
Paper title: Land Degradation: Does it Constitute
a Rational Path for Survival of Resource-poor Farmers of Ethiopa
22.& 23.
Alexander S. Bogolyubov
Ecosystem Association, Moscow Field Studies Centre
Russia
Paper title:
The Main Trends of the Environment Education in Russia
Paper title: Field Studies: its Role and Place in
the Environmental Education of Children in Russia
24.
Jim Christiansen
Sierra Club
Paris, France
Paper title:
How to Influence Business Organizations on Issues Related
to Managing the Earth in the Long Term
25.
Victoria Churikova
Kamchatka
Russia
Paper title: Environmental Education in Kamchatka: a step to the 3rd
Millennium
26. Ronald Colman
Genuine Progress Index Atlantic
Schooner Cove, Nova Scotia
Paper title: Measuring Genuine Progress
27.
Parzival Copes
Department of Economics and Institute of Fisheries Analysis
Simon Fraser University
Burnaby, British Columbia
Paper title:
The Need to Balance Biological, Economic and Social Equity
Considerations in Resource Development
28.
Karine Danielyan
National Expert of UNDP and UNEP
President of Association "For Sustainable Human Development"
Associate Professor of Department of Geography
Yerevan State University
Armenia
Paper title:
The Experience of Transformation of the Human Development
Index (HDI) into the Sustainable Human Development Index (SHDI)
29. Stevan Dedijer
Department of Business Administration
Lund University
Sweden
Paper title:
Global Intelligence for Development of a. Poor and
b. Small
Countries
30.
George L. De Feis
Executive Director
American Management Association-Operation Entreprise
New York
Paper title:
An insight to Managing the Four-Legged Stool of Sustainable
Development
31.
David Del Porto
Sustainable Strategies
Ecological Engineering and Design
Concord, Massachusetts
Paper title:
Coefficient of Sustainability(CDS)
32. John
C. Dernbach
Associate Professor
Widener University School of Law
Harrisburg Campus, PA
Paper title: Sustainable Development as a Framework for National
Governance
33.
Dr. ir. H. Van Langenhove, J. Dewulf, J. Mulder, H.J. van der Kooi and
J. de Swaan Arons
Department of Organic Chemistry of University of Gent (Belgium)
Delft University of Technology (The Netherlands)
Paper title:
The Search for a Parameter Quantifying Technological Sustainability:
Development of a Sustainable Coefficient
34.& 35.
Michele Doncaster
York University
Port Carling, Ontario
Paper title: Environmental Planning and Education for Sustainability
Paper title:
A Photo Display about Interpreting Sustainability
36. Alexey
Drouziaka
Kamchatka
Russia
Paper title:
Study of Bird Population in Kamchatka and Siberia and their
Interconnections with the Environment and Human Beings
37. Valery Drouziaka
Kamchatka
Russia
Paper title:
Ethno-and Biodiversity in Human Dimensions as an Object
for Historical Development in Kamchatka Aboriginal Life
38.to 41. Germain
Dufour
President, SWSD
Canada
Paper title: A Scale of Values for Assessment of the Four Levels of
Concerns: Environment, Economic Development, Availability of Resources,
as part of GESDI and GSDP
Paper title: Measurement of the local/global indicators GESDI
and GSDP
Paper title: A unique, more relevant global dialogue on the Management
of Global Changes
Paper title: The Global Community Assessment Centre is part of a unique
organization created to better link scientific understanding to effective
policy solutions to global changes
42. du
Hamel
Anthropology
Carleton University
Ottawa, Ontario
Paper title: The
ity Theory of Global Enhancement
Paper title: Moving Towards An Environmentally Sympathetic World Structure:
A Strategy To Support Environemental Consciousness In Globalization
43.
Erkin Dzhamanbaev
Asian Development Bureau Ltd.
SITMAR Financial Corporation
Paper title: Reaching the Poorest and Achieving Institutional Sustainability
44. Heather
Eaton
St.Paul University
Ottawa, Ontario
and Lois Ann Lorentzen
Department of Theology
and Religious Studies
University of San
Francisco
California, U.S.A.
Paper title:
Ecofeminism and Globalization
45.
Jose Ferrer
Paper title:
Management of Mature Reservoirs
46.
Karl Froschauer
Assistant Professor
Department of Socilogy and Anthropology
Simon Fraser University
Burnaby, British Columbia
Canada V5A 1S8
Paper title:
Canadian Hydroelectric Development: Adverse Consequences
in their National and Continental Context
47.
Hans W. Gottinger
Professor of Economics
University of Maastricht (RL)
International Institute for Environmental Economics and Management
Schloss, Germany
Paper title: Sustainability: Marco vs Micro
48.
Nikolai Grishin and Olga Grishina(Tokmakova)
Coordinator of Russian Network for Environmental Impact Assessment
Chairman of Centre for Environmental projects(CEP)
Moscow
Russia
Paper title: Public Participation in Environmental Decision Making,
as Tool for Solving Environmental Problems
49. Isabelle
Guinomet
Manager
Sustainability and
Environment Indicators Department
World Systems (Europe)
Ltd.
Luxembourg
Paper title: Testing
of the UN CSD List of Sustainable Development
50.
Min Guo
Attorney at Law
Environmental, Coastal, and Ocean Sciences
University of Massachusetts at Boston
U.S.A.
Paper title:
China's Marine Area Management Program
51.
Manjula V. Guru and James E. Horne
The Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture, Inc.
Poteau, OK
Paper title:
Genetic Engineering and Intellectual Property Rights: Gain
to the Haves and Loss to the Have-Nots
52.
Galina Gutina
Jewish School 1311
Moscow
Russia
Paper title: Learning to Understand, Love and Protect the Environment
53.
Nina Hrycak
RN, MEd, Associate Professor
Faculty of Nursing
University of Calgary
Alberta
Paper title:
Human Rights and Knowledge Development in Caring for Women
Refugees
54.
Mikylas Huba
Institute of Geography
Society for Sustainable Living in the Slovak Republic
Slovak Academy of Sciences
Bratislava, Slovakia
Paper title:
Environmental Indicators for Sustainable Cities in Slovakia
55. Ludmila
Ignatenko
Chief of the National Community "Aleskam"
Kamchatka
Russia
Paper title:
Sustainable Development of National Communities in the
South of Kamchatka
56.
Vladimir Ira
Institute of Geography
Slovak Academy of Sciences
Bratislava, Slovakia
Paper title:
Subjective (Behavioural) Indicators of Sustainable Development
for Decision-Making Process
Dr A.Jagadeesh. Ph.D.
Convener
Nayudamma Centre for Development Alternatives
2/210,First Floor
Nawab Pet
NELLORE - 524 002
Andhra Pradesh
INDIA
Paper title: SOME PLANTS TO PROMOTE AFFORESTATION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
57.
Raghbendra Jha, Professor
Indira Gandhi Insitute of Development Research
Bombay, India
K.V. Bhanu Murthy, Professor
University of Delhi
Delhi, India
Paper title:
Sustainability: Behavior Property Rights and Economic Growth
58.
Tao Jiyi
Professor
Social Sciences Department
Ji Nan University
Guang Dong
China
Paper title:
Underground Work and Life and the World Sustainable Development
59. Gennady
N. Karopa
Sovetskaya
Belarus
Paper title:
Role of Environmental Education for the Sustainable Development
of the World, for Human Beings, Use of Resources, Economic Growth and Environmental
Needs
60.
John Kendall (Dr.)
Department of Computer Science
The University of Calgary, Alberta
Paper title: An Holistic Approach to Technology Transfer in Aid of Sustainable
Development
61.
Tea Kovacevic
Faculty of Electrical Engineering and computing
Department of Power Systems
Zagreb, CROATIA
Paper title:
External Costs of Electricity-Hint of Green in Power System
Planning (Preliminary Results for Croatia)
62. Vera Koveinik
Kamchatka
Russia
Paper title:
Rebirth of Itelmen Traditions on the Example of School
Pimchahk, Kamchatka
63.
Mikhail Krasnyanski
Scientific Private Firm
NEOHIM (Ukraine)
Donetsk
Paper title: International Centre of Practical Ecology and Industrial
Safety for Countries with "Transitional" Economics
64.& 65.
Vladimir Kremsa
Professor of Landscape Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Research Center for Applied and Advanced Technology (CICATA-IPN)
Mexico
Paper title:
Managing and Measuring Sustainable Development on the Landscape
Level
Paper title: Sustainable Rural Development
66.& 67.
Elena Krougikova
Kola Coordinative Environmental Centre
GAIA Apatity
Russia
Paper title:
The Role of Non-governmental Organizations in Environmental
Education (from the experience of GAIA in the Kola peninsula)
Paper title: Social Indicators of Environmental Situation
68. Maria
V. Kryukova, Researcher
The Plant Ecology Laboratory
Institute for Aquatic and Ecological Problems of Far Eastern
Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences
Khabarovsk
Russia
Paper title: Food and Medicinal Plants of the Dzhango Community
Native Forest Problems and Prospects of Use
69.& 70.
Yew-Kwang Ng
Professor
Department of Economics
Monash University
Australia
Paper title:
Why do Economists Overestimate the Costs of Public Spending
on Research and Environmental Protection
Paper title: Overestimation of costs of Public Spending on Research
and Environmental Protection
71.
Elizabeth Lange
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
Paper title: Transforming Working and Living: Adult Education for a
Sustainable Society
72. Tonu
Lausmaa
Renewable Energy Centre TAASEN
Tallinn, Estonia
Paper title:
About a Sustainable Economy Definition
73.
David S. Liebl
University of Wisconsin
Engineering
Solid & Hazardous Waste Education Centre
Madison, WI, U.S.A.
Poster presentation:
Indicators of Sustainable Development in the Context
of Community, Social and Economic Development Programming throughout the
United States
74. Ross
Mallick (Dr.)
Kanata, Ontario
Paper title: Environmentalists and Indigenous Peoples
75.
Sue L.T. McGregor
Professor
Mount Saint Vincent University
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Paper title:
The Role of Families in Sustainable Development (Proposal
for an Open Informal Discussion Roundtable)
76. Marin
R. Mehandjiev (Professor) and Krassimira R. Mehandjieva
Association of Bulgarian
Environmentalists and Ecologists
Sofia, Bulgaria
Paper title:
Quantitative
Indicators of the Sustainable Development
77.
Kulik Mikalai
Senior Lecturer
Gomel State University
Republic of Belarus
Paper title:
Sustainable Development and Human Rights
78.
Faysal Abdel-Gadir Mohamed and
Nimat Abdel-Karim Ahmed
United Nations Development Programme
Bahrain Registry
Manama, Bahrain
Paper title: Impact of Globalization on Small Island States
Jose Moya
Professor
Coordinator de Relaciones Institucionales de "FORJA" de Venezuela
Paper title: Educacion y Organizacion Ciudadana: Retos Para el Desarrollo Ambientalmente Sustentado vs Globalizacion
Paper title: Education and Community Organization: Challenges for Sustainable Environmental Development
79.& 80.
Khatam Murtazaev
Khujand State University
Khujand, Republic of Tajikistan
Paper title:
Radioactive Pollutions of the Populated Areas of the Kuramin
Range Foothills of Northern Tajikistan
Paper title:
Radioactive Monitoring of the Syr-Darya River Basin (Northern
Districts of Tajiskistan)
81.
K.V. Bhanu Murthy (Dr.)
Reader in Economics
University of Delhi
Delhi, India
Dramatic play presentation:
Chetan Awakens (about the Environment and
writen to teach children )
82.
Islam Israfil oglu Mustafaev
Ecological Society "Ruzgar"
Baku
Azerbaijan
Paper title:
The Role of Caspian Sea in the Sustainable Development
of the Region
83. James Mwami
Water Engineer
GIZ Integrated Pastoral
Development project
Mbarara, Uganda
Paper title: Public
Participation in Watershed Development by Settlers
84. Dr. Holger
Nauheimer
Training - Coaching
- Consulting
Berlin
Germany
Paper title: OPEN
SPACE - A Tool for Effective Stakeholder Consultation
85.&86.
Mike Nickerson
Sustainability Project
Merrickville, Ontario
Paper title:
Measuring Well-being
Paper title:
Life-based Pursuits: a Key to Sustainability
87.
Anatoly Nikitin and Sofia Nikitina
NGO "Bionic"
Kamchatka
Russia
Paper title: Ethnoculture as the Basis of Harmonik Interactions Between
Human Beings and Environment
88.
Sue Nobes
Department of Secondary Education
The university of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
Paper title: Disability, Globalization and Sustainable Futures
89.& 90.
Ahto Oja
Estonia 21
Stockholm Environment Institute-Tallinn Centre(SEI-T)
Tallinn, Estonia
Paper title:
Estonia 21: an Estonian Experience in the Implementation
of Sustainable Development
Paper title:
The Key to Sustainable Society is to Move from Anthropocentric
Attitude to Life/naturecentric Attitude in Relations between Human Being
and Nature
91.
Vincent Otto
Maastricht University
Secretariat of Micro-Economics
The Netherlands
Paper title:
Establishing Technology Transfers: Potential Costs &
Benefits (an insight into how companies and public bodies prioritize the
issue)
92.
Mukhamedjanov Ozod, President of the Gyldy
Akimov Slav, Ecological Expert
Regional Ecological Centre of the Central Asia
Tashkent, Republic of Uzbekistan
Paper title:
Concept of the Ecological Doctrine
93.
Beverly A. Paul
King's College
University of Western Ontario
Paper title:
Are Sustainable Communities Possible?
94. Logan Perkins
Director
The Priorities Institute
Paper title: Livable
Cities for the 21st Century
95.& 96.
Md. Hasibur Rahman
Executive Director
Environment and Agricultural Development Studies Centre
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Paper title:
Natural Resource Conservation and Sustainable Development
in Bangladesh
Paper title:
Urban Slums Impacts on Environment in Bangladesh
97.
B. Sudhakara Reddy
Associate Professor
Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research
Mumbai, India
Paper title: Institutions for Environmental Governance: Issues of Community
Participation and Sustainable Development
98.
Richard C. Rich
Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg, VA, U.S.A.
Paper title: Collaborative Environmental Management as an Approach
to Achieving Sustainability
99.
A.S.R.A.S. Sastri,
V.P. Singh and R.K. Singh
Indira Gandhi Agricultural University
Raipur, India
Paper title: Agricultural sustainability - a case study for rainfed rice in eastern
India
Rajasundram Sathiendrakumar (Dr.)
Senior Lecturer in Economics
School of Economics & Commerce
Murdoch University
Murdoch, Western Australia
Paper title:
Economics of Waste Management
100.
Petr Sauer
Head of Department of Environmental Economics
University of Economics Prague
Prague, Czech Republic
Paper title:
Negotiation Solutions to the Problem How to Achieve a Sustainable
Level of Pollution Reduction in a Region
101.
Svetlana D. Schlotgauer
Professor
Head of the Plant Ecology Laboratory
Institute for Aquatic and Ecological Problems of Far Eastern Branch of
Russian Academy of Sciences
Khabarovsk, Russia
Paper title:
Catastrophic Fires Impact on Priamurye Aborigines Bioresources
102.& 103.
Vyacheslav Sharov
Associate Professor
Chair of Diagnostic Imaging
Ural State Medical Academy for Additional Education
Director of Chelyabinsk-Hanford Project
Chelyabinsk, Russia
Paper title: Ecological
Lesson for Children from Radiation Contaminated Territories
Paper title:
Interactive Computerized Ecological Education of the Population
and Specialists
104.
Usha Sekhar
Centre for Science and Environment
India
Paper title:
Globalization, Civil Society and Governance: the Challenges
for the 21st Century
105.
Michal SKAPA
Professor
Spolecnost pro trvale udrzitelny zivot
The (Czech) Society for Sustainable Living (STUZ)
Prague
Czech Republic
Paper title:
The Central & Eastern Europe Partnerships Program:
the Development of Sustainable Models
106.
Yuri Skochilov
Executive Director
Youth EcoCentre
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Paper title:
Youth Ecological Centre of Dushanbe, Tajikistan: Ecological
Ethics and Stable Development
107.
Colin L. Soskolne
Professor and Visiting Scientist
Department of Public Health Sciences
Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
Paper title:
Public Health to Shift Policy towards Sustainable Paradigms
108.
Daniel Sotelsek
Professor of Economic
University of Alcata
Madrid, Spain
Paper title:
Economic Convergence and the Concept of Sustainable Development:
a Redifinition Task
109. Andy Tamas
Paper title: Spirituality
and Sustainable Development: Concepts and Categories
110.
Delia Diez Tejerina
UNESCO Chair University of
Vic-University of La Habana
Vic, Spain
Paper title: Sustainable Human Development
111.
Dirgha N. Tiwari (Dr. Eng.)
Environmental Economist
Kathmandu, Nepal
Paper title:
Environmental Accounting, Sectoral and Economywide Sustainability:
Indicators and Implications of Environmental-economic Policies in Nepal
112.
John Koffi B. Toguefai
Skjern, Denmark
Paper title:
The Native People of Togo and Sustainable Development
113. Douglas Torgerson
Professor
Trent University
Department of Political
Studies
Environmental and
Resources Studies
Peterborough, Ontario
Paper title: The
Promise of Green Politics: Environmentalism and the Public Sphere
114.
I. Turakulov
and Khatam Murtazaev
Khujand State University
Khujand, Republic of Tajikistan
Paper title:
About Some Disappearing and Rare Species of Plants of Northern
Tajikistan
115.
Peter van der Werff (Dr.)
Institute for Environmental Studies
Free University
Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Paper title: Environmental Effects of North-South Interface Dynamics
in Souhtern Countries
116.
Lagutov Vladimir Victorovich
Centre of Coordination and information "Azovbass"
NGO Regional Ecological Movement "Green Don"
Dachnaya, Russia
Paper title:
Ecological Basin Policy of Stability Development in Russia:
its Concepts, Ecological Aspects, Social Aspects, and Expected Outputs
117.
Alexander Wegosky
President of the Association of Ecological Revivify
Tarusa, Kaluga Region
Russia
Paper title:
Nature Reviving Social Systems
Xiaohui Hao (Dr.)
Institute of Special Planning and Regional Economy
The State Development Planning Commission
Beijing, China
Paper title: Policies and Measures for Mitigating GHCs in Chinese Power Sector
118.
Hasida Yasmin and
Shahidul Haque
Member Directors
Environment and Agricultural Development Studies Centre
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Paper title:
Environmental Pollution in Bangladesh
119.
Katalin Zaim
Asst. Professor
Bilkent University
Ankara, Turkey
Paper title:
Pollution Control Priorities Assessment with IPPS: the
Case of Turkey
|
1.
Dr. Abdul-Raheem
General-Secretary of the Global Pan African Movement
2.
John E. Abraham
University of Calgary
3. Mustapha
AKSISSOU
Department of Biology
Faculty of Science
Tetouan, MOROCCO
4. Tito Amarawickrama
Researcher
Agriculture and Environmental
Development Foundation
The Bandaranayake
International Diplomatic Training Institute
Kandy
Sri Lanka
5. Jayanath
Ananda
Colombo
Sri Lanka
6. Dr.
Ben C. Arimah
Department of Environmental
Science
University of Botswana
Gaborone,
BOTSWANA
7.
Sylvie Baumgartner
8.
Roman Bazylevych
Lviv Polytechnic State University
Ukraine
9. Dr.
Aaron Benavot
Department of Sociology
and Anthropology
Hebrew University
of Jerusalem
Mt. Scopus, Jerusalem
ISRAEL
10.
Carol Boyle
University of Auckland
New Zealand
11.
Shirley Bray
AWA, CUSO and Seeds of Diversity
Highfield, Alberta
12.
Stefan Bringezu
Department of Economics and Social Information and Policy Analysis
Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy
Germany
13.
Wil Burns
Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment & Security
Oakland, California
14.
Glenn E. Burress
15.
Pedro Caetano
Portugal
16.
Chad Carpenter
IISD Canada
17.
Dawna Cerney
Faculty of Environmental Design
The University of Calgary
18.
Josef Cihlar
Environmental Monitoring Section
Canada Centre for Remote Sensing
National Research Council of Canada
Ottawa
19. Valentin Ciubotaru
NGO Bios
Republica Moldova
20.
Filipe Costa
Coimbra, Portugal
21.
Stephen Curwell
Director BEQUEST
Research Centre for the Built and Human Environment
University of Salford
United Kingdom
22. Jessie
Davies
Director of the Environment and Sustainable Development Research Centre
University of New Brunswick
Fredericton, NB
23.
Stevan Dedijer
Department of Business Administration
Lund University
Sweden
24. John C.
Dernbach
Associate Professor
Widener University School of Law
Harrisburg Campus, PA
25. Natalie
Deveaux
Seoul, Korea
26.
Janet M.Eaton
27. Siri Engesaeth
The Bellona Foundation
OSLO
Norway
28. Richard
J. Estes
29.
Nicole Foss
Oxford Institute for Energy Studies
United Kingdom
30. Jose
Lorenzo Garcia-Baltasar
Madrid, Spain
31. Emma
Gardner
Worsley
Manchester
England
32.
Raquel Garrido
Pompeu Fabra University
33.
Joseph Gbagbo
Sustainable Community Group
Madina-Accra
Ghana
34.
Anastassios Gentzoglanis
Department of Economics
University of Sherbrooke
Quebec
35.
Vic Getz
Department of Sociology
Washington State University
U.S.A.
36.
J.A. Gillies
Professor of Agricultural and Bioresource Engineering
Chair, Division of Environmental Engineering
University of Saskachewan
Saskatoon
37. Alvaro Gonzales
Professor
Department of Geography
Faculty of Sciences
Universidad de la
Republica
Montevideo
Uruguay
38.
Moraia Grau
Victoria
British Columbia
39. Yu Guangming
Professor
Xianning Normal College
Xianning City, Hubei
Province 437005
P R CHINA
40.
Isabelle Guinomet
European Commission & UNCSD
World System(Europe)Ltd.
Batiment AEG
Luxembourg
41. Pekka
Haavisto
Chairman
Joint UNEP/Habitat
Balkans Task Force
International Environment
House
Châtelaine-Geneva,
Switzerland
42.
Lotfollah Haji
Senior Environmental Engineer
Carmel Environmental Co.
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
43.
Meredith Hamstead
York University
44.
Hsiang-Ling Han
and Poh Hui
45. Andrew
Hay
Measurement and Indicators
Program
International Institute
for Sustainable Development(IISD)
Winnipeg, Manitoba
46. Alan
Herring
Facility Engineer
Greater Toronto Airports
Authority
Toronto, Ontario
47.
Hamner Hill
Department of Philosophy and Religion
Southeast Missouri State University
Cape Girardeau, MO
48.
Anne Hillyer
Overseas Development Group
Plant Science Project
Tsumeb
Namibia, Africa
49.
Elise Houghton
TDSB Parents Environmental Network
Faculty of Environmental Studies
York University
50.
D. Gordon Howell
Howell-Mayhew Engineering, Inc.
Edmonton, Alberta
51.
Sven Hunhammar
Stockholm Environment Institute
Sweden
52.
I. Lyasah
53.
Katherine Inman
Research Scientist
Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
University of Wyoming
Laramie, WY
U.S.A.
54.
Karel Janda
Department of Economics
University of Iowa
Iowa, U.S.A.
55.
E. Keith Jasper
Alder, Alberta
56.
Rene Jinon
Communications Specialist
Development Communications Program
PASAD Foundation, Inc.
57.
Helmut Karl
Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena
Department of Economics
Jena, Germany
58.
Alexander Karpov
Board Member of the
St. Petersburg Society of Naturalists
Russia
59.
Hisham Khatib (Dr.)
Honorary Vice Chairman
World Energy Council
Amman
Jordan
60.
Natalie Kirvalidze
Environmental Information and Sustainable Development Centre "Rio"
Tbilisi
Georgia
61.
Andrey Kovenya
United Nations Development Programme
Minsk, Belarus
62. Enrique
Leff
Coordinator, Environmental Training Network
for Latin America and the Caribbean
United Nations Environment Programme
Mexico
63. Georges
Letarte
St-Antoine -de-Tilly
Quebec
64. Masinde
Ministry of Environmental Conservation
Nairobi, Kenya
65.
Nobuhiko Masuda
Department of Economics
Toyama University
Toyama, Japan
66.
Tom J. McCann
T.J. McCann and Associates Ltd.
Calgary, Alberta
67.
Moya H. Jose
Professor
Central University of Venezuala
Coordinator of Institutional Relationships of FORJA of Venezuala
Latin American Association of Environmental Educators
World Network about Climatic Changes
World Council for the Earth
World Commission of Education and Communication of the Union for the Conservation
of Nature
ECO-SOC of the United Nations
68. Rodrigo
Matta Machado
Departamento de Biologia
Geral
Instituto de Ciencias
Biologicas
Universidale Federal
de Minas Gerais
Brasil
69. William
Mah
Office and Administrative Services
Norcen Energy Resources Limited
Calgary, Alberta
70. Kalia
Moldogazieva
Director
Human Development
Centre
Tree of Life
Kyrgyzstan
71.
Eduardo Gil Mora
DIRECTOR INANDES
Instituto Andino de
Ecologia y Desarrollo - INANDES
Cusco, Peru
72.
Eugene T. Murphy
Asst. Professor of Sociology & Anthropology
Director, Asian Studies Program
Fairfield University
Fairfield, CT
73.
Mark Nagler
Professor
Policies and Disabilities Studies
Department of Sociology
Renaissance College
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, Ontario
74.
Urvashi Narain
Ag & Resource Economics
University of California
Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.
75. Ron
Nielsen
Consultant
Environmental Affairs
and Sustainability
Alcan Aluminium Ltd.
76.
Stephen P. Osborne
Reader in Public Management Research
Public Services Management Group
Aston Business School, Aston University
Birmingham, United Kingdom
77. Natalia
Pasishnyk
Management Department
Ukrainian State University
Lvivska Polytechnika
Ukraine
78. Jose
Alberto Cristancho Perez
Geologist
Geographic Institute
- IGAC
Colombia
79. Gabriella
Petterson
County Board of Forestry
Soderhamn
Sweden
80. Christina
Popivanova
International Trade
and European Integration
Staffs University,
England
International Relations
Central European University,
Budapest
Prague, The Czech
Republic
81.
Roland Prelaz-Droux
Maitre d'enseignement et de recherche
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Lausanne, Switzerland
82.
Emiliano Ramieri
Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei
Castello, Venezia
83. Blake
Ratner
Project Manager
Resources Policy Support
Initiative(REPSI)
at International Centre
for Research in Agroforestry
Forest Resources Department
Faculty of Agriculture
Chiang Mai University
84.
B. Rogaly
Overseas Development Group
University of East Anglia
Norwich
United Kingdom
85.
Christine Roger (Dr.)
Sessional Instructor
Department of Social Sciences
Women Studies
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, Manitoba
86.
Lidia Romanciuc
The Department of Ecological and Industrial Chemistry
State University of
Moldova
87.
Caroline Rossignol
Earthwatch Intitute in Boston
GPC Communications (Sponsorship in Ottawa)
Canada
88.
Lev.N. Ryabchikov
Center for Alternative Agrotechnology(CAAT)
Saint-Petersburg
Russia
89. Joan
Ryan
Bragg Creek, Alberta
90.
Gohar Oganezova and Hrant Sargsyab
Vice President of the Armenia Botanic Society
Eco-Club "Tapan"
Armenia
91.
A.S.R.A.S. Sastri
Professor
Associate Director
Research &
Head, Dept. of Agrometeorology
Indira Gandhi Agricultural
University
RAIPUR (M.P.)
INDIA
92. Alex
Savenko
Enakievo, Ukraine
93. Ashok
Sharma
Himachal Productivity
Council
Shimla
India
94. Abhayendra
Mohan Singh
University of Delhi
India
95.
Otari Sichinava
Chairman of the Society of Georgia's Environmental Ecocentre
U.S.A.
96.
Martin Singer
Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Science
Concordia University
Montreal, Quebec
Michal Skapa
Professor
Spolecnost pro trvale udrzitelny zivot
The (Czech) Society for Sustainable Living(STUZ)
Breitcetlova 881/203
Prague 9
Czech Republic 198 00
97.
Bernie Slepkov
Dream TEAMS International: Healing Fragmented Communities
Niagara Regional Community-Building and Resource Centre
St. Catherines, Ontario
98.
Hans Smits
Faculty of Education
University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta
99.
Sonun Teltaeva
Kyrgyzstan
100. Tran
Duc Thanh(Dr.)
Head
Marine Geo-environment
Department
Haiphong Institute
of Oceanology
Haiphong City
Vietnam
101. Joleen
Timko
Institute for Resources
and Environment
University of British
Columbia
Vancouver, B.C.
Canada
102.
Duffie VanBalkom
University of Calgary
Calgary, Alberta
103. Rustam
Vania
Centre for Science and Environment
Tughlakabad Institutional Area
New Delhi, India
104.
Rob VanWynsberghe and
Sociologist at the University of British Columbia,
Simon Fraser University and Capilano College
105.
Betty L. Wells
Professor of Sociology/Extension
Iowa State University
Ames, IA
U.S.A.
106.
Justus Wesseler (Dr.)
Agricultural and Environmental Resource Economist
Fall Church, VA
107.
Donna M. Wilson
Associate Professor, Faculty of nursing
Clinical Sciences Building
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
108.
Xiaohui Hao
Chief of Resource and Environment Division
Associate Professor
Institute of Spatial Planning and regional Economy
The State Development Planning Commission
Beijing
China
109.
Evgeny Zagorsky
Executive Director
Environmental Centre of Sochi(ECOS)
Sochi, Russia
|
|
|
|
7. Proposed Roundtable Sessions.
a) On well-being, the healthy family
and the community
b) Measurement of indicators of
Sustainable
Development
c) The Global Community:
its objectives, the Charter, the grassroots process and the organization
d) The education of our youth
e) Land Degradation
f) Quality of Life
g) Institutions for Environmental Governance:
issues of Community Participation and Sustainable Development
h) Health
i) The Scale of Values
j) Energy
k) Waste Management
l) Ozone Layer
m) Global Warming
n) Globalization
o) Climate Changes
p) Women's Issues
q) Vision of Earth for Year 2024
r) Spiritual values guiding a
sustainable future
s) Air pollution
t) Water pollution
u) Resources Management
v) Global Economic Development
Interested? Interested in participating in any of these Roundtables?
Papers will be published in the Proceedings of the World Congress.
As
mentioned earlier, 35% of the space in the Final Program of the
World
Congress is reserved for participants who will be submitting abstracts/papers
between February 2000 and the final deadline March 24, 2000.
8. Procedure for the transfer of
payments into SWSD bank account.
Those making payments (membership, sponsorship, etc.) to SWSD please
send us an email about the reason of your payment, who you are, your address,
the exact time and date you made that payment, where you made it, how much
it was, and which one of the three ways listed here you have used.
This is very important as we must be able to track down the information
related to each payment.
Payments maybe made as follows.
The Society for World Sustainable Development has an account
with the Bank of Montreal.
There are three ways to make payments.
In each way you must include the following information:
1. Bank of Montreal 001
2. Transit number 001D9
3. SWSD account number
1218-199
Address:
Bank of Montreal
First Canadian Centre
340-7th Avenue SW
Calgary, Alberta
Canada T2P 0X4
The three ways to make payments are:
1. Wire transfer
This means you transfer money electronically from
your bank to the Bank of Montreal in your city.
2. Deposit at branches
You go to a Bank of Montreal in your city and you
make a deposit
3. You go to your bank and you sent a draft to
the Bank of Montreal
9. Abstracts to be published
in February 2000 Preliminary Program
of the World
Congress.
Abstracts received will be printed in the
Preliminary Program which
is due to be published February 2000.
With the new Internet agenda, all work will be published on the Web,
an opportunity for net-working and reaching contacts important to your
future, not to be missed.
You will also be made a Life Member of S.W.S.D., and The Global Community
organization which promises to be of world-wide significance as time goes
by. A Certificate will be sent you as well to
verify your participation and membership which may be important to
you as Chapters of the organization open in your district.
10. Editor's comments: sending
us articles for publishing in Newsletters and making them available on
the Internet.
We are delighted to receive additional articles for the Newsletters
from our readers.
We have received many books and articles from readers and members around
the world but the authors did not give us specific permission to print
part of their work in the Newsletter, and therefore we cannot do so.
It is imperative that, if you give us permission to re-print, all or
in part, you include all copyright verification of permission to quote.
We do not have a copyright research expert to do this
work.
Your articles should also follow the same Guidelines used for
the preparation of Papers (see Criteria in Call for Papers on the
website or see Letter sent June99 in part 5 of this Newsletter ).
We thank Md. Hasibur Rahman and EADSC for so gracioustly
sharing information with The Global Community. Thank you again
Sir. We appreciate your articles.
In the words of Md. Hasibur Rahman, Bangladesh is suffering from
various environmental and agricultural constraints such as air, water and
soil pollution, frequent flooding, desertification, poor sanitation, malnutrition,
health and over population problems.
For the betterment of environmental and sustainable agricultural development
EADSC has envisaged
different oriented activities on different urgent issues which might
be solved for the survival of the country and the coming generation in
the next century.
Those who wish a copy of the complete article send us a stamped, self-addressed
8.5 x 11 envelope and we'll see you get one. People who wish to contact
Md.
Hasibur Rahman may email him at
icms@bdcom.com
The Editor.
11. Global assessment contracts:
including your CV along with your abstract/paper.
We are at the moment seeking global assessment contracts which
can be handled by the Global Community Assessment Centre (GCAC).
GCAC is compiling a list of people who wish to be involved in such challenge.
Should a contract be accepted, will shall first consider our members in
that area, providing they wish such employment and they have the necessary
expertise and/or experience for the job at hand.
Those who submit papers to the World Congress are invited
to send applications with their CVs if they wish to be considered for contract
work, here or abroad. The application package is found under Services/Job
possibilities on the website.
Our sponsor GlobalCommunityWebNet Ltd. also has a website
found at:
http://members.home.net/gdufour99
Send your application and CV to the business as well (the package is
found under Reaching us).
It is important you realize our proposals benefit only the people who
are involved with the World Congress and S.W.S.D. If you are
prepared to comply with those requirements, let us know. Study carefully
our websites for full information.
As soon as a global assessment contract comes up requiring your expertise
you will be notified. Only those who submit papers to the World Congress
can be considered.
12. Articles
12 a. To-day's children evoke a VISION of new millennium,
by
Virginia
Dufour, retired teacher
With the advance of a new millennium one tends to dream of a new Eden.
The signals of what the world could become are already apparent in the
life-style of to-day's children.
From babyhood our little ones have been privileged to enjoy group activities.
They develop a circle of friends from many ethnic backgrounds, boys and
girls together. They learn consideration for others early on, the rewards
of sharing, and a special code of conduct necessary for a group to function
as an harmonious whole.
By the time our children have become teen-agers the group of friends
has virtually replaced the family unit in importance. It is most apparent
in High School years. As they enter University the group of friends has
solidified to the point where a group-home will be rented, all sharing
the cost.
These young people habitually hold two or three part-time jobs, or engage
in some entrepreneural activity, for money is regarded as the energy source
for their way of life.
They spend their extra money investing in the money-market ~ even real
estate. They finance their own educations for they are keenly aware they
go nowhere if they are not intellectually prepared.
Freedom of lifestyle is more important to them then mounds of possessions.
These young people are not trapped by "things" although they own the best
of sports equipment and outdoor clothing, being very health conscious.
They eat very well.
All of their lives they have been educated by osmosis through T.V.,
movies, computers, and on another level by enlightened teachers in sophisticated
educational settings. They drive cars, some fly planes, all use machines
of every kind every day. And all of these things, in conjunction with the
close security of the group of friends, lays the ground work for a new
life-style, this new world just beginning, in the care of these brave new
souls.
And what a great, wide, wonderful world they have upon which to lavish
their uninhibited imaginations!
Being outdoors-aware, these young people will be focusing on the air
we breathe, the water we drink. Few of them really know where their food
comes from for all their lives they have bought food in boxes from stores.
They will have to address food supply ~ perhaps influenced by the food
prepared for astronauts, but it will be health conscious food, with low
preparation time.
Food was bountiful in the original Eden. It is hoped in the new Eden
everybody will have enough to eat. Unfortunately, today, starvation in
some countries forces people to kill and eat their animals. This means
rare species have to be herded into safe areas to avoid extinction. Even
oceans are filthy. Some people wonder if the giant world-wide business
conglomarates, who have made so many marvellous philanthropic gifts to
the world, will take it upon themselves to help the starving in an intelligent
manner. Globalization could become the "god who will provide"!
The young adults in charge of our new Eden will benefit from the popularity
of small businesses cropping up. It is to be expected they will have re-acted
to the businesses in the past whose job-security plan was built on products
with built in obsolescence, and the creation of one of our major new industries
to-day-waste control! Garbage makes a lot of money! Our young people will
be the first to grasp that fact! It will pay them handsomely not to allow
this "creative energy" to escape their grasp!
Most of us are somewhat aware we have to unload. It is necessary to
follow the job market at the first opportunity. Possessions are costly
to buy, but far more costly to move across country. The result is Thrift
Stores flourish and bulge at the seams! Department stores have empty aisles.
Our new generation already exhibits the inner awareness: less is more.
Living with a group of friends in a Space Age may involved jobs in Space.
Take Tourism for example. The Tourist Trade is making a very clear statement
about its future ~ at present the practice is to take customers to all
the remaining unique cultural outposts for the picturesque experiences
~ but since the aboriginal people who live there tend to ape their viewers
with such alarming speed, soon the only place Tourism can advertise is
Outer Space!
And if our group of friends work in Space their human mating practices
will have to change to deal with extended periods away from Earth.
Furthermore, their children may be born in a gravity free environment.
Will these babies have to be especially genetically altered to survive?
One very re-assuring fact is that the young people of to-day are interested
in all the secret wisdom behind all the existing religions and sifting
out the common truths. They seek the best of the best.
Their childhood conditioning has prepared them to act on a firm understanding
of what it takes to get along with others, working as a group.
They are educated to understand a broad panorama of human truths ~ all
those universal needs and rights every one shares.
They see money for what it is - energy to use for good.
Their idea of power is power over Self.
Each and every Self is dedicated to an idea for good that others can
share together in creating this new Eden.
What we have here is the birth of genuine group concern and unconditional
support for the individual's well-being ~ a giant leap in human behaviour
which could well change the functioning of global communities everywhere.
12 b. The Personal Sustainable Development
pathway for children,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
Improvement based on conscience is self-improvement which requires discipline
to get rid of things that have to go because the results are negative and
be replaced by actions that succeed because the results are positive.
Conscience in the minds of children is needed for they will inherit
the earth.
The seed planted in the mind of a child will grow and when he has children
they will see it was good.
"The body is the horse the soul rides on ~ you don't get far on a sick
horse."
There are a number of ideas to keep a child's development sustainable:
* Eating for power: combinations of foods that
create vitality and health.
* Teaching your child how to make
good things for himself.
* Making good things to eat: simple
meals children can make for themselves.
* Let your child know where food
comes from ~ the labour required to get food; give him personal experience
in the growing of edible food by means of individual garden plots
at school growing food that keeps them strong and healthy. Community effort
is necessary to make this work ~ gardens grow during summer holidays. They
need constant care.
* Developing the perfectly healthy
body: games and exercises, activities that develop a great body(swimming,
skating, skiing, roller-blading, etc.)
* Developing an open mind: ideas,
concepts, attitudes that have proven to work well in foreign societies
as well as our own.
* How learning works: how
to study, how to memorize, how to think, logic. Finding "best ways" to
do things, workable sound solutions.
* Children have to learn to become
problem solvers as they will be facing global problems on a daily basis.
Give them confidence in problem solving.
* How kindness works: how people
react; cause and effect of action; living smoothly.
* What is happiness: LOVE is a verb;
one does nice things for others. It is not enough to just say "I
love you."
* Build a program to develop the
ability of the children to make decisions.
Most of us have been brought up with the knowledge adults make their
own choices ~ and
pay the price. Could children not be made aware of this as well?
Even a child can see if he acts in certain ways, things can backfire
and cause harm. And also
that he can act in ways that attracts good things ~ even over a period
of time.
If a child has the habit of reacting to unpleasant life events in knee-jerk
revenge or angry
responses, sparks fly and nasty side-effects flare up all around him.
Such action causes
memories that rankle for years. Children need to be aware of this.
It is one of Nature's Laws.
It is very important for children to have experience in choosing
to react well, even in little
things.
It is not so important that one agree with other children all
the time. One obeys parents and
teachers. But a child has to be taught it is not required of him to
be somebody's victim; that
is o.k. to disagree with a course of action.
What must be let go is the uncontrolled way some children react
to the troubles of their lives.
Let us teach them making unproductive choices attracts even more trouble
and frustration.
Reacting in inappropriate ways in time of conflict must stop.
Teaching a child how to sustain the development of his own life toward
happy solutions calls for a series of small victories, each one easily
achieved.
Perhaps the best place to start is care and management of the child's
own room at home, and his own personal care. Personal experience will teach
him a sense of order affects his life for good in all ways. Once the child
feels he has his personal space in good control, he can advance to dealing
with problems with family members, later on, school-mates.
Older children could be encouraged to keep a journal about incidents,
and how things happened
and were worked out.
Referring back to these records, a child gains a sense of mastery, and
quickly builds up finesse
with successful ways and means, good phrases to use and so on.
It won't take long before a child has solid evidence that bad luck and
tough breaks were only
wrong moves that could have been avoided.
He'll get the conviction it is not people or "things" that makes him
happy. He is making himself
happy ~ it is a state of mind he has created for himself.
This self-improvement journey will sustain him for as long as
he uses it, the results to be
enjoyed for ever.
12 c. The Personal Sustainable
Development pathway for an adult,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
Conscience in the mind of an adult:
He realizes his personal life needs changes.
He needs self-empowerment...free thought upon which his creativity
for a better life will grow.
He will face, and reject all that must go.
He will replace bad habits.
He will meet his needs with self-empowerment.
No one else's.
To empower himself is the first step.
The ultimate war of independence is to decide for yourself
what you want
to "own" your life quest outright free and clear of imaginary obligation
or laid-on guilt.
A man (a woman) has the right to decide what he will become and must
his own personal clean-up with the aim of becoming: a better person, a
better neighbour, a better citizen, and more useful member of his global
community.
Every man (woman) must make a personal decision about:
What is most important to me?
What about me deserves to be nurtured?
What is holding me back?
What requires serious attention?
What about me needs "starving out" so good qualities can grow?
Each and everyone of us is part of "a Global Community" wherever
we go throughout our life. Personal sustainable development has to do with
our behavior within this global community, what we do or dont, cause and
effect, and how we interact with someone else's global community and, on
the planetary scale, with The Global Community. We are constantly
required to re-evaluate our values and make decisions. The following is
meant to question our ways and behaviors and start a discussion amongst
us all about a universal scale of values. A Roundtable Discussion on a
Scale of Values has been proposed.
Life's major problems make us react ~ and there are myriad possible
reactions ~ but to be of a mind-set that allows one to calmly face the
problem detached from emotion in order to pick the best solution, may quite
possibly be the most powerful tool of any person interested in personal
development.
Human desires, vanities, attachments to family mores, influence these
decisions and so they tend to be accurate expressions of each individual's
character at that particular time, at that age in his life. These tend
to constantly change as we frow in expereince.
Our choice, in the end, is what we want because of what we feel.
This particular assessment of any given situation appears to express
our level of development as a human being devoted to building strong character.
One feels the most honest thing to do is face exactly what is presented
on the horns of our dilemma:
One solution will satisfy old values. The other will be in accord with
new. Make a choice!
As a human, one is constantly challenged - go forward, or not - just
yet! Are you ready for it?
We are endlessly faced with the same choice hidden in endless guises
until we "get it right."
Personal sustainable development has to do with each and everyone of
us:
* being with self-control; eating
to accommodate your body's needs and holding hereditary ills in check;
maintaining a well working physical vehicle(your body); balancing our life
with work, play and rest; feeding our mind and being constantly learning;
communicating with others
* living with the
empowerment of free-thought, creativity
* taking charge of
our lives
* planning for our own future
Everyone has to decide this by himself. Knowing our weaknesses we can
work at eliminating them or at least making sure they would not affect
significantly our decision-making process. It is a struggle that spans
our lifetime.
Once an individual is in control of his own being then he can extend
his empowerment out to his global community and The Global Community.
This way each person has to decide:
* what are the things holding
him back and requiring serious attention and how can they be starved-out
so good things may grow
* what is most
important
* what deserves
to be nurtured
At the end each and everyone of us decides what sort of person we want
to become. After going through this personal clean-up a person becomes
a better citizen, a more sensitive neighbour, a moral responsible father,
and a more useful and respected member of The Global Community.
12 d. Globalization vs The
Global Community concepts and its organization,
by Germain Dufour, Physicist
The concept of "a Global Community" gives back control on our
lives to each one of us. We all have a say about what we want. We feel
alive and responsible. We are moral individuals with a conscience but we
also belong to The Global Community. We have an identity, a meaning,
a part to play in the world.
One tends to be alarmed at the popular concept of globalization because
it is based on greed. Globalization is here to stay and is a fact of life.
The world has become global. Societies throughout the world are struggling
to be in step with the most powerful nations. National economies and financial
markets are connected through computer link-up and are interlocked. Commercial
banking and business ownership has no economic or political borders. Because
of the dynamic of trade in goods and services and because of the movement
in capital and technology, production in different countries has become
increasingly dependent on one another.
In consequence of globalization, the new economic and political distribution
of power around the world has become very different then we were used to.
It has become very fluid, in perpetual motion and affected by global markets.
Giant new markets are forming all over the world. Competition is hardening.
National economies can no longer insure or guarantee rights of possession
on any property. National borders no longer mean protection, security,
cultural boundaries, resources ownership, political and economic control.
International market regulations try to control or ease the effects
of globalization. The effects are often devastating. With globalization
comes global problems such as:
* unemployment in industrial nations
* poverty increases world-wide
~ entire countries in a state of starvation
* environmental degradation
* national interests of a country
changing and becoming more trade oriented and trying to go with the wave
of global trade
* international interests of a
country take prime importance
* in developing countries, national
debts constrict the institutions of the national state and contribute to
the destruction of the economic activity which, in turn, as the effect
of creating unemployment
* national currencies of many
countries are affected by national debts and contribute in destroying social
life, creating ethnic conflicts and civil wars
* the large corporation is becoming
larger and getting more power and control falls into the hands of a few
people
* globalization is another way of keeping
control on our lives in the hands of a few people
* with globalization, we have
no control and no say in our future and the world becomes a game played
by a few people just as it has alway been through history, leading to revolutions
and war
* with globalization there is no sense
of direction and meaning, no security for the individual, just a few people
getting richer and controlling us all
Human conscience will insist all possible measures be taken to prevent
the planet from becoming uninhabitable. Globalization has the effect of
a giant tidal wave on all our values. The Global Community organization
has the task of proposing to the world a new system of values.
Human conscience means humans have the knowledge to keep the planet
healthy; it is the science of determining right and wrong. In case of the
planet's survival it is:
* Saving one's own country from becoming an uninhabitable
place
* Stopping the planet from becoming an uninhabitable
place
Human conscience can prevent the planet from becoming uninhabitable.
The need to survive can put checks and balances on the rampantglobalization
effects already raging like a virus in our world.
To survive what must be re-thought? Old ideas and values, traditions,
laws, ways of doing things must be re-evaluated and some left behind.
It's your life at stake here. Your life and the lives of your children
~ there is no such thing as you taking a Spectator Sport position in the
grandstands, enjoying the happenings of the time with detachment and amusement!
Men have the right to be able to provide for their families. We can
help the Planet recover from wanton destruction. We can control the resources
of our world with good sense. Greed and power of the few can be replaced
by Community Conscience and the desperate will to survive!!
The choice is simple survival:
* every man has the right to be able to provide for
his family
* people have the right to food
* children have the right to be educated
* the world has a right to clean healthy fields,
streams, meadows and mountains, water and breathable air
* resources can be helped to last indefinitely
Actions by groups that lead to revolution and war must be curtailed.
Power based on greed is not in the best interest of humanity.
12 e. Ozone Layer Depletion
and its Adverse Effects,
by Md. Hasibur Rahman, Executive Director, Environment and
Agricultural Development Studies Centre, Dhanmondi, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Strastopheric ozone layer inhibits to enter the dangerous Ultra Violet
(UV) rays of the sun to the earth's surface. Ozone layer is working as
an umbrella to protect the life on earth from the adverse impacts of lethal
radiation of the sun. Man-made some harmful chemicals are causing depletion
of the ozone layer, the hope of survival of life on earth the only habitat
of human being. With the depletion of ozone layer more solar radiation
(UV-B) will reach to earth's biosphere that will effects on human health,
ecosystem and climate change.
Introduction
Earth's atmosphere is divided into several layers on the basis of temperature
and gaseous variation. The lower portion of the atmosphere is called troposphere,
it is usually extends upto 12 km from the earth surface. Above the tropopause
there is a stable layer of air that usually extends upto 50 km from the
earth's surface is called stratosphere. The vertical distribution of the
ozone extends roughly between 15 to 50 km above the earth's surface and
about 25 km with a maximum concentration of (5x1012) molecules per cubic
centimeter. The existence of this thin shield of a relatively highest concentration
of a poisonous gas "Ozone" in the stratosphere is called the "Ozone
Layer". The average depth of this layer is about 2.5-3.0 mm. In the earth
atmosphere a negligible quantity of ozone found but it creates air pollution
and causes health hazardous. Ozone presents in the stratosphere layer as
a vital layer to filtrate and efficiently screens out almost all the harmful
ultraviolet rays of the sun. According to the wavelength category ultraviolet
radiation can be classified into three types: UV-A (315-400nm), UV-B (290-315nm)
and UV-C (200-280nm). Relatively shorter wavelength radiation is more harmful
to living organisms. However, the UV-C from the sun is completely absorbed
by the stratospheric ozone. Even though little depletion of ozone layer
can almost totally screened out UV-C radiation. The longer wavelength UV-A
is relatively harmless. The middle wavelength UV-B, less lethal than shorter
wave radiation also absorbs most of all but due to little depletion of
stratospheric ozone it enters to the earth atmosphere in large quantity
and causes dangerous impacts on human health and ecosystem. The rate of
entry increase is said to be approximately 2% for every 1% decrease of
ozone concentration of the stratosphere.
What is Ozone?
Ozone is an allotropic modification form of oxygen. It is a pale blue
gas having a pungent irritating odor. Oxygen contains two atoms but
ozone formed with the three atoms of oxygen. Chemical formula is O3 and
molecular weight is 47.998.
Through natural atmospheric process ozone molecules are created and
destroyed continuously. Ultraviolet radiation from the sun breaks up oxygen
molecules into atoms which then combine with oxygen molecules to form ozone.
Electric discharge reactions, including lighting and electric sparks from
motors, also convert some oxygen to ozone.
Ozone Layer Depletion:
Any damage to the ozone layer allows more UV-B radiation to reach the
surface of the Earth. The first major statement of scientific concern over
ozone depletion was prompted by James Lovelock’s discovery of the presence
of CFCs in the atmosphere all around the world. Depletion of the ozone
layer was discovered when a Scientific Research lead by Prof. F. Sherwood
Rowland and M. Molina was jointly published and suggested that the
increasing use of chlorine, fluorine & carbon compounds called Chloroflurorocarbons
(CFCs) might play a major role in depleting Ozone layer in the stratosphere.
Their extensive works have been conducted in the meantime to confirm the
possibility of the ozone depletion by CFCs and assess the future environmental
impact. In fact, such ozone depletion was observed later in global trends
of total ozone as well as dramatic depletion of the stratospheric ozone
thereby found the "Ozone Hole" over Antarctica.
Unexpected recurrence of cold winter temperatures in the stratosphere
may itself be due to cumulative ozone destruction, or possible to climate
change; in either case, ozone losses over the Northern Hemisphere may be
more severe than anticipated in the near future.
From the report of federal meteorological department of Russia, it has
been shown that two large ozone hole were observed in the ozone layer over
Russia, one in the over Bultic States, Belaruss and Ukraine including Scent
Petersburg and another over Yakutaska and Crushnoyearsk of Sieveria. The
second ozone hole is very large and the amount of the depletion ozone layer
is unanimous. For taking excess protection measures, it has been warning
the peoples of the concern area. It has been known from the department
that the amount of ozone layer over North-west Russia decreases 20% than
the normal state and for that region, the solar ultraviolet radiation penetrates
about the increasing rate of 40% in the concern area. In Sieveria, it has
decreased about 35% of ozone. It is not mentioned by expert, how many times
is stable this ozone hole but warned the peoples, specially, white skin
and red hair not to move in the day sunlight.
Ozone Depleting Substances
Human interventions are now threatening the destruction of fragile shield
of ozone layer that protects the earth from the harmful rays of the sun
through the use of some chemicals termed as "Ozone Depleting Substances"
(ODSs). The major ozone depleting substances are Chloroflorocarbons (CFCs),
halons, carbon tetrachloride and methyl chloroform.
Most of the world's CFC production is used in fridge's, freezers, air
conditioners, spray cans, blowing foams for various uses from buildings
and cars to fast food containers and for cleaning and used as propellants
in aerosol cans. Halons, which are similar to CFCs in structure but which
contain bromine atoms rather than chlorine are more dangerous to ozone
destruction. Halons are mainly used as fire-extinguishing agents. Carbon
tetrachloride also used in fire fighting and present in pesticides, dry
cleaning agents and grain fumigants is slightly more destructive than the
CFCs.
Rowland and Molina asserted that CFC molecules could diffuse up into
the stratosphere where they are broken apart by solar UV radiation, releasing
free chlorine radicals. The chlorine radicals act as a catalyst to destroy
ozone molecules without itself undergoing any permanent change. The net
result is that 2 molecules of ozone are replaced by 3 molecular oxygen
leaving the chlorine radical free to repeat the process. Thus each chlorine
radical can destroys thousands of ozone molecules before it is removed
from the stratosphere. Some of the CFC substitutes already developed such
as Hydrochlorofluorocarbon (HCFC) also deplete the Ozone layer at much
lower rates.
Impacts of Ozone Layer Depletion
UV-B radiation adversely effects on plants growth, harming crop yields,
and quality, and damaging forest, increases plant pathogens and decreases
the productivity of phytoplankton and also the early development stages
of fish and other aquatic organisms. The most severe effects of solar
UV-B radiation are on early development stages of aquatic systems such
as fish, shrimp, crab, amphibians and other animals, decreased reproductive
capacity and impaired larval development. This will leads to a significant
reduction in the size of the population of consumer organisms. It is particularly
important that more than 30% of the world’s animal protein for human consumption
comes from the sea and in many countries. So decrease of seafood will increase
socio-economic problems. On the other hand, reduction in the productivity
of marine and terrestrial ecosystem could, in turn, reduce the absorption
of carbon dioxide thus contributing to global warming.
The increased penetration of solar UV-B radiation to the earth’s surface
has adverse effects on human health, animals, plants, microorganisms and
materials and air quality. The substantial adverse effects on human health
rises in the incidence of and morbidity from skin cancer, eye diseases,
and infectious diseases. Impacts on human health is as follows:
(a) Skin Cancer: UV-B radiation is the key risk factor for the
development of melanoma skin cancer. White skinned people who have little
protective pigment in the skin are most susceptible to skin cancer. Epidemiological
data observed by UNEP environmental impact panel that indicates the possibility
of incidence of melanoma increases with exposure to sunlight especially
in childhood.
Prediction has also been made that a sustained 10% decrease in ozone
will be associated with a 26% increase in melanoma skin cancer. If all
other things remain constant there will be an increase in excess of 300,000
cases of cancer per year throughout the world (UNEP, 1991).
(b) Cataracts: An increase in the incidence of eye disorders
particularly Cataracts, is related to the rise in the level of UV-B radiation.
If the ozone layer decreases by 1%, it is predicted that globally the number
of cases of cataracts will increase by 0.6% to 0.8% (UNEP, 1994). Eye cataracts
will lead to the cause of blindness in future.
(c) Weakening of immunity: Exposure to increase UV-B radiation
could also suppress the body's immune system. According to the report of
environmental impact panel, a lowering of immunity is occurring not only
in light-skinned people, but is affecting dark-skinned people also. It
is believed that a weakening of immunity results in increase of infectious
diseases such as simple herpes, leishmanoid and malaria. Weaken immune
system could lead to an increase in the occurrence of infectious diseases
and possible decrease of body protection such effect would exacerbate the
poor calorie consuming mal-nutrient people of many developing countries.
Promotion of Ozone Layer Protection in Bangladesh
Bangladesh accessed to the Montreal Protocol on 2nd August, 1990 and
ratified its London amendment on 18th March 1994. As a signatory to the
protocol, control measures have to be imposed on the import and consumption
of ODSs in Bangladesh from July 1, 1999. As a developing country, Bangladesh
will enjoy a ten-year grace period in order to meet its basic domestic
needs and schedule of ban of CFCs, halons and carbon tetrachloride in 2010,
methyl chloroform in 2015 and of HCFCs in 2040.
Within the stipulated period Bangladesh is committed to Phase-out ODSs,
Ozone Cell was constituted within the Department of Environment (DOE) on
1995. The major activities of Ozone Cell are:
· to coordinate and facilitate activities related to ODS phase-out;
· to grant permits during transition Period and Monitor activities
related to ODS use in Bangladesh;
· to facilitate exchange of information and access to information
on ODS phase-out activities, technology alternatives, technical reports,
etc.;
· to disseminate information and create awareness about ODS
phase-out;
· to organize Seminars/Workshops on ODS substitutes, alternative
technologies recycling and recovery, etc.;
· to report to the ozone Secretariat, on yearly basis, about
Progress being made in the implementation of the country Programme;
Aerosol sector is the single largest CFC consuming sector (as per survey
report, 49% of total ODS is used in this sector) in Bangladesh and uses
a CFC-11/12 mix. The Montreal Protocol Multilateral Fund has agreed to
finance "Aerosol Sector Phase-out" project in Bangladesh, and the Govt.
of Bangladesh recently approved the project (Source: DOE).
Conclusion
It is most important to stop ODS production phase by phase with replacing
by non-ODS production for industrial purpose. Ozone layer is a global concern
its adverse effect would be most vulnerable to the life on earth.
Increases in solar UV radiation could decreases the productivity of marine
and terrestrial ecosystems, hence destroying the marine phytoplankton which
are a major atmospheric CO2 absorber and reservoir will impacts on global
warming and climate change.
Ozone layer is the vital to life survivor, because it absorbs dangerous
ultraviolet rays of sun to reaching the surface of the earth. Bangladesh
contribution to ozone depletion is negligible. As a developing country,
having low level of industrialization and economic development, so the
chances of using ozone-depleting substances are insignificant. To
mitigate ozone layer depletion, ozone friendly alternative technologies
are needed to introduce immediately. In the recovery and recycling sector
of refrigeration and air conditioners is to be adopt modern technology
to take care in case of licking of ODS during recycling period. Citizen
can play a vital role in choosing ODS free equipment for their daily life
and for better environment.
12 f. The Ozone Depleting Substances:
A Sustainable Development Issue by Germain Dufour, Physicist
The technical definition of Sustainable Development is:
"a sound balance among the interactions of
the impacts (positive and/or negative), or stresses, on the four major
quality systems: People, Economic Development, Environment and Availability
of Resources."
The non-technical definition is:
"a sound balance among the interactions designed to create a healthy
economic growth, preserve environmental quality, make wise use of our resources,
and enhance social benefits."
An evaluation of sustainable development consists of ranking risks relative
to each other and to help deciding which practice is better than another.
It takes into accounts:
* the economic impacts of environmental and health degradation;
* the impact of people activity on the environment;
* global concerns and their impacts on the economy, health and the
environment;
* the welfare, economic development and quality of life of future generations;
* expenditures on pollution abatement, clean-ups, and people health;
* the depreciation or appreciation of natural assets, the depletion
and degradation of natural resources and the environment, ecological processes
and biological diversity, the costs of rectifying unmitigated environmental
damage, the values of natural resources, capital stocks, the impacts of
degradation or improvement, social costs, health costs, environmental clean-up
costs, and the costs of the environment, economic growth, and resources
uses to current and future generations and to a nation’s income.
The measurement also gives a proper and sound signal to the public,
government and industry about the rate and direction of economic growth;
it identifies environmental, health, and social quality; it identifies
sustainable and unsustainable levels of resource and environmental uses;
it measures the success or failure of sustainable development policies
and practices; and it identifies resource scarcity. Values obtained enable
us to make meaningful comparisons of sustainable development between cities,
provinces, nations over the entire planet.
The Ozone layer of the Earth is an important physical characteristic
of our environment that protects life from the ultraviolet radiation from
the Sun. Several different substances affect the capacity of the layer
from blocking these rays.
An Ozone-Depleting Substances (ODS) is a chemical compound that
is sufficiently stable to reach the stratosphere and is capable of reacting
with stratospheric ozone, leading to ozone depletion.
The Montreal Protocol on substances that deplete the ozone layer
is an international treaty that was ratified by 24 nations in 1987 that
allows the continued trade of recycled halons (i.e., those produced before
January 1, 1994). The Montreal Protocol does not prescribe restrictions
on the use of any ODS; however, the Montreal Protocol does call upon Parties
to make best efforts to control unnecessary emissions.
The Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA) provides the legal
basis for Canadian compliance with the requirements of the Montreal Protocol.
There are two regulations under the Act:
a. The Ozone-depleting Substances Regulations (ODS Regulations),
SOR/95-576, December 7, 1995 ; and
b. The Ozone-depleting Substances Products Regulations (ODS
Products Regulations), SOR/95-584, December 13, 1995.
c. The former prohibits the manufacture of ODS's (such as halons)
in Canada, and prescribe
restrictions on the importation of ODS's (such as halons) into Canada.
The latter prohibits the use
of ODS's in specific applications.
Several provincial legislatures have established environmental requirements
for ozone-depleting substances, including halons. In addition to these
legal requirements, industry and trade associations also establish standards
for the management of various substances within their fields.
Since 1987, the federal government has initiated several regulatory
projects to reduce or eliminate the use of ozone-depleting-substances in
Canada. These projects have targeted manufacturers, importers or users
of these substances. One such project is The Canadian Environmental
Protection Act Ozone-depleting Substances Regulation designed to
eliminate the production and importation of CFCs as of January 1, 1996.
Federal ODS Regulations control the manufacture, use, sale, offer for
sale, import and export of ozone depleting substances. Federal ODS Regulations
do not restrain the use of ODS in Canada. Regulations applies to the production
and importation of ODS.
Several federal government officials were contacted and have confirmed
that:
* No permits are required to use any equipment containing ODSs;
* The intent of the Regulations is controlling emissions not replacing
existing systems;
* Most developing countries no longer produce ODSs; the only way we
can use ODSs is through recycling; users will eventually find that there
will be less and less equipment making use of ODSs and that the equipment
will be more expensive to purchase;
* Users of ODS should also contact provincial authorities for further
information on purchase, use, reuse, and release of ODS;
* As well, the Act and its Regulation has provisions related to the
servicing of equipment which may contain ozone-depleting substances (refrigeration
and air conditioning equipment and other equipment which contains ozone-depleting
substances); servicing procedures must also conform to the requirements
specified in the Environment Canada "Code of Practice for Reduction of
Chlorofluorocarbon Emissions from Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Systems."
Persons servicing equipment which contains ozone-depleting substances are
required to have training in accordance with the Apprenticeship and Industry
Training Act and its regulations.
The release of air emissions exceeding or contrary to the limits set
in this regulation are reportable in accordance with the substance release
provisions of the Act. Regulatory offences and penalties are set out in
this regulation, with a maximum fine for individuals of $50,000 and $500,000
for corporations.
ODS Federal - Provincial Government Officals were contacted. It was
found that
(A) The federal government position was to create a Strategy on ODS
and
to make sure that all federal buildings and facilities across Canada would
be phasing out ODS; and
(B) The Defence Department was stocking all cylinders containing
ODS for its own uses and purposes at a later date; the Government of
Canada has a lot of equipment with ODS and stocking cylinders would
protect future needs.
If you happen to have a Fire Extinguishing System with a cylinder
containing Halon1301, the disposal of halons should be decided in
advance and be performed in a manner that does not endanger the environment
(through unnecessary releases to the atmosphere). Chem-Security (Alberta)
Ltd., with the Alberta Special Waste Management System in Swan Hills, was
contacted to estimate the cost of destroying the Halon 1301 cylinder.
It was found that Chem-Security was unable to destroy the ODS. They
have never destroyed ODS because they are not equipped to do so. They said
they could not take the cylinder.
Government officials were called back and told that it was not
surprising that Chem-Security had not destroyed the Halon cylinder
or any other ODS container because no one in Canada can do it. It
has never been done in this country. Even though ODS will make their
way to the Ozone layer and destroy the atmosphere of the Earth, everybody
prefers to recycle ODS.
So far only one U.S. company was found to have the capacity of
destroying the ODS. Inspectors from the company are willing to come to
Canada to start the procedure of taking away the Halon 1301 cylinder and
having the gas destroyed but for a high cost.
More ODS are at this moment slowly making their way to the
Ozone layer (it can take years for ODS to get there). If we do not stop
recycling ODS, most recycled ODS, if not destroyed now, will eventually
make their way to the Ozone layer and destroy it. It makes no sense that
the federal and provincial governments, and the industry, are not
doing anything about this (except on paper with long and expensive strategies
and phasing out plans). Thousand of kilograms of ODS stockpiled by governments
and the industry will eventually make their way to the Ozone layer and
destroy it.
Basic principles of sustainable development require that we do all possible
to protect Earth and its atmosphere from being damaged beyond repairs.
Certainly there are other options.
It is proposed here that incentives should be given to any individual
or organization to take an ODS containing cylinder to a federal government
owned storage facility where it can be destroyed and rendered harmless.
It should be made easy for anyone wanting to have the ODS destroyed.
Anyone consciously contributing good to the evolution of the planet
deserves encouragement.
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