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18 November 1992
Human beings and the natural world are on a collision course.
Human activities inflict harsh and often irreversible damage on
the environment and on critical resources. If not checked, many
of our current practices put at serious risk the future that we
wish for human society and the plant and animal kingdoms, and
may so alter the living world that it will be unable to sustain
life in the manner that we know. Fundamental changes are urgent
if we are to avoid the collision our present course will bring
about.
The Environment
The environment is suffering critical stress:
The Atmosphere
Stratospheric ozone depletion threatens us with enhanced
ultra-violet radiation at the earth's surface, which can be
damaging or lethal to many life forms. Air pollution near ground
level, and acid precipitation, are already causing widespread
injury to humans, forests and crops.
Water Resources
Heedless exploitation of depletable ground water supplies
endangers food production and other essential human systems.
Heavy demands on the world's surface waters have resulted in
serious shortages in some 80 countries, containing 40% of the
world's population. Pollution of rivers, lakes and ground water
further limits the supply.
Oceans
Destructive pressure on the oceans is severe, particularly in
the coastal regions which produce most of the world's food fish.
The total marine catch is now at or above the estimated maximum
sustainable yield. Some fisheries have already shown signs of
collapse. Rivers carrying heavy burdens of eroded soil into the
seas also carry industrial, municipal, agricultural, and
livestock waste -- some of it toxic
Soil
Loss of soil productivity, which is causing extensive Land
abandonment, is a widespread byproduct of current practices in
agriculture and animal husbandry. Since 1945, 11% of the earth's
vegetated surface has been degraded -- an area larger than India
and China combined -- and per capita food production in many
parts of the world is decreasing.
Forests
Tropical rain forests, as well as tropical and temperate dry
forests, are being destroyed rapidly. At present rates, some
critical forest types will be gone in a few years and most of
the tropical rain forest will be gone before the end of the next
century. With them will go large numbers of plant and animal
species.
Living Species
The irreversible loss of species, which by 2100 may reach one
third of all species now living, is especially serious. We are
losing the potential they hold for providing medicinal and other
benefits, and the contribution that genetic diversity of life
forms gives to the robustness of the world's biological systems
and to the astonishing beauty of the earth itself.
Much of this damage is irreversible on a scale of centuries
or permanent. Other processes appear to pose additional threats.
Increasing levels of gases in the atmosphere from human
activities, including carbon dioxide released from fossil fuel
burning and from deforestation, may alter climate on a global
scale. Predictions of global warming are still uncertain -- with
projected effects ranging from tolerable to very severe -- but
the potential risks are very great.
Our massive tampering with the world's interdependent web of
life -- coupled with the environmental damage inflicted by
deforestation, species loss, and climate change -- could trigger
widespread adverse effects, including unpredictable collapses of
critical biological systems whose interactions and dynamics we
only imperfectly understand.
Uncertainty over the extent of these effects cannot excuse
complacency or delay in facing the threat.
Population
The earth is finite. Its ability to absorb wastes and
destructive effluent is finite. Its ability to provide food and
energy is finite. Its ability to provide for growing numbers of
people is finite. And we are fast approaching many of the
earth's limits. Current economic practices which damage the
environment, in both developed and underdeveloped nations,
cannot be continued without the risk that vital global systems
will be damaged beyond repair.
Pressures resulting from unrestrained population growth put
demands on the natural world that can overwhelm any efforts to
achieve a sustainable future. If we are to halt the destruction
of our environment, we must accept limits to that growth. A
World Bank estimate indicates that world population will not
stabilize at less than 12.4 billion, while the United Nations
concludes that the eventual total could reach 14 billion, a near
tripling of today's 5.4 billion. But, even at this moment, one
person in five lives in absolute poverty without enough to eat,
and one in ten suffers serious malnutrition.
No more than one or a few decades remain before the chance to
avert the threats we now confront will be lost and the prospects
for humanity immeasurably diminished.
Warning
We the undersigned, senior members of the world's scientific
community, hereby warn all humanity of what lies ahead. A great
change in our stewardship of the earth and the life on it, is
required, if vast human misery is to be avoided and our global
home on this planet is not to be irretrievably mutilated.
What we must do
Five inextricably linked areas must be addressed simultaneously:
1. We must bring environmentally damaging activities under
control to restore and protect the integrity of the earth's
systems we depend on.
We must, for example, move away from fossil fuels to more
benign, inexhaustible energy sources to cut greenhouse gas
emissions and the pollution of our air and water. Priority must
be given to the development of energy sources matched to third
world needs small scale and relatively easy to implement.
We must halt deforestation, injury to and loss of
agricultural land, and the loss of terrestrial and marine plant
and animal species.
2. We must manage resources crucial to human welfare more
effectively.
We must give high priority to efficient use of energy, water,
and other materials, including expansion of conservation and
recycling.
3. We must stabilize population. This will be possible only
if all nations recognize that it requires improved social and
economic conditions, and the adoption of effective, voluntary
family planning.
4. We must reduce and eventually eliminate poverty.
5. We must ensure sexual equality, and guarantee women
control over their own reproductive decisions.
The developed nations are the largest polluters in the world
today. They must greatly reduce their overconsumption, if we are
to reduce pressures on resources and the global environment. The
developed nations have the obligation to provide aid and support
to developing nations, because only the developed nations have
the financial resources and the technical skills for these
tasks.
Acting on this recognition is not altruism, but enlightened
self-interest: whether industrialized or not, we all have but
one lifeboat. No nation can escape from injury when global
biological systems are damaged. No nation can escape from
conflicts over increasingly scarce resources. In addition,
environmental and economic instabilities will cause mass
migrations with incalculable consequences for developed and
undeveloped nations alike.
Developing nations must realize that environmental damage is
one of the gravest threats they face, and that attempts to blunt
it will be overwhelmed if their populations go unchecked. The
greatest peril is to become trapped in spirals of environmental
decline, poverty, and unrest, leading to social, economic and
environmental collapse.
Success in this global endeavor will require a great
reduction in violence and war. Resources now devoted to the
preparation and conduct of war -- amounting to over $1 trillion
annually -- will be badly needed in the new tasks and should be
diverted to the new challenges.
A new ethic is required -- a new attitude towards discharging
our responsibility for caring for ourselves and for the earth.
We must recognize the earth's limited capacity to provide for
us. We must recognize its fragility. We must no longer allow it
to be ravaged. This ethic must motivate a great movement,
convince reluctant leaders and reluctant governments and
reluctant peoples themselves to effect the needed changes.
The scientists issuing this warning hope that our message
will reach and affect people everywhere. We need the help of
many.
We require the help of the world community of scientists --
natural, social, economic, political;
We require the help of the world's business and industrial
leaders;
We require the help of the worlds religious leaders; and
We require the help of the world's peoples.
We call on all to join us in this task.
Prominent Individuals among more than 1500 Signatories
- Anatole Abragam, Physicist; Fmr. Member, Pontifical
Academy of Sciences; France
- Carlos Aguirre President, Academy of Sciences, Bolivia
- Walter Alvarez Geologist, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Viqar Uddin Ammad, Chemist, Pakistani & Third World
Academies, Pakistan
- Claude Allegre, Geophysicist, Crafoord Prize, France
- Michael Alpers Epidemiologist, Inst. of Med. Research,
Papua New Guinea
- Anne Anastasi, Psychologist, National Medal of Science,
USA
- Philip Anderson, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Christian Anfinsen, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; USA
- How Ghee Ang, Chemist, Third World Academy, Singapore
- Werner Arber, Nobel laureate, Medicine; Switzerland
- Mary Ellen Avery, Pediatrician, National Medal of Science,
USA
- Julius Axelrod, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Michael Atiyah, Mathematician; President, Royal Society;
Great Britain
- Howard Bachrach, Biochemist, National Medal of Science,
USA
- John Backus, Computer Scientist, National Medal of
Science, USA
- Achmad Baiquni, Physicist, Indonesian & Third World
Academies, Indonesia
- David Baltimore, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- H. A. Barker, Biochemist, National Medal of Science, USA
- Francisco J. Barrantes, Biophysicist, Third World Academy,
Argentina
- David Bates, Physicist, Royal Irish Academy, Ireland
- Alan Battersby, Chemist, Wolf Prize in Chemistry, Great
Britain
- Baruj Benacerraf, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Georg Bednorz, Nobel laureate, Physics; Switzerland
- Germot Bergold, Inst. Venezolano de Investigaciones
Cientificas, Venezuela
- Sune Bergstrom, Nobel laureate, Medicine; Sweden
- Daniel Bes, Physicist, Argentinean & Third World
Academies, Argentina
- Hans Bethe, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Arthur Birch Chemist, Australian Academy of Science,
Australia
- Michael Bishop, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Konrad Bloch, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Nicholaas Bloembergen, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- David Mervyn Blow, Wolf Prize in Chemistry, Great Britain
- Baruch Blumberg, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Bert Bolin, Meteorologist, Tyler Prize, Sweden
- Norman Borlaug, Agricultural Scientist, Nobel laureate,
Peace; USA & Mexico
- Frederick Bormann, Forest Ecologist; Past President,
Ecological Soc. of Amer.; USA
- Raoul Bott, Mathematician, National Medal of Science, USA
- Ronald Breslow, Chemist, National Medal of Science
- Ricardo Bressani, Inst. of Nutrition, Guatemalan &
Third World Academies, Guatemala
- Hermann Bruck, Astronomer, Pontifical Academy of Sciences,
Great Britain
- Gerardo Budowski, Natural Resources, Univ. Para La Paz,
Costa Rica
- E. Margaret Burbidge, Astronomer, National Medal of
Science, USA
- Robert Burris, Biochemist, Wolf Prize in Agriculture, USA
- Glenn Burton, Geneticist, National Medal of Science, USA
- Adolph Butenandt, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Fmr.
President, Max Planck Inst.; Germany
- Sergio Cabrera, Biologist, Univ. de Chile, Chile
- Paulo C. Campos, Medical scientist, Philippine & Third
World Academies, Philippines
- Ennio Candotti, Physicist; President, Brazilian Soc. Adv.
of Science; Brazil
- Henri Cartan, Wolf Prize in Mathematics, France
- Carlos Chagas, Biologist; Univ. de Rio de Janeiro; Fmr.
President, Pontifical Academy of Sciences; Brazil
- Sivaramakrishna Chandrasekhar, Center for Liquid Crystal
Research, India
- Georges Charpak, Nobel laureate, Physics; France
- Joseph Chatt, Wolf Prize in Chemistry, Great Britain
- Shiing-Shen Chern, Wolf Prize in Mathematics, China &
USA
- Christopher Chetsanga, Biochemist, Affican & Third
World Academies, Zimbabwe
- Morris Cohen, Engineering, National Medal of Science, USA
- Stanley Cohen, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Stanley N. Cohen, Geneticist, Wolf Prize in Medicine, USA
- Mildred Cohn, Biochemist, National Medal of Science, USA
- E. J. Corey, Nobel laureate, Chemistry, USA
- John Cornforth, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Great Britain
- Hector Croxatto, Physiologist, Pontifical & Third
World Academies, Chile
- Paul Crutzen, Chemist, Tyler Prize, Germany
- Partha Dasgupta, Economist, Royal Society, Great Britain
- Jean Dausset, Nobel laureate, Medicine; France
- Ogulande Robert Davidson, Univ. Res. & Dev. Serv.,
African Acad., Sierra Leone
- Margaret Davis, Ecologist, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Luis D'Croz, Limnologist, Univ. de Panama, Panama
- Gerard Debreu, Nobel laureate, Economics; USA
- Pierre-Gilles de Gennes, Nobel laureate, Physics; France
- Johann Deisenhofer, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Germany
& USA
- Frederica de Laguna, Anthropologist, National Academy of
Sciences, USA
- Paul-Yves Denis, Geographer, Academy of Sciences, Canada
- Pierre Deligne, Mathematician, Crafoord Prize, France
- Frank Dixon, Pathologist, Lasker Award, USA
- Johanna Dobereiner, Biologist, First Sec., Brazilian
Academy of Sci.; Pontifical & Third World Academies,
Brazil
- Joseph Doob, Mathematician, National Medal of Science, USA
- Renato Dulbecco, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Heneri Dzinotyiweyi, Mathematician, African & Third
World Academies, Zimbabwe
- Manfred Eigen, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Germany
- Samuel Eilenberg, Wolf Prize in Mathematics, USA
- Mahdi Elmandjra, Economist; Vice President, African
Academy of Sciences; Morocco
- Paul Ehrlich, Biologist, Crafoord Prize, USA
- Thomas Eisner, Biologist, Tyler Prize, USA
- Mohammed T. El-Ashry, Environmental scientist, Third World
Academy, Egypt & USA
- Gertrude Elion, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Aina Elvius, Astronomer, Royal Academy of Sciences, Sweden
- K. O. Emery, Oceanographer, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Paul Erdos, Wolf Prize in Mathematics, Hungary
- Richard Ernst, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Switzerland
Vittorio Ersparmer, Pharmacologist, Accademia Nazionale dei
Lincei, Italy
- Sandra Faber, Astronomer, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Nina Federoff, Embryologist, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Herman Feshbach, Physicist, National Medal of Science, USA
- Inga Fischer-Hjalmars, Biologist, Royal Academy of
Sciences, Sweden
- Michael Ellis Fisher, Physicist, Wolf Prize in Physics,
Great Britain & USA
- Val Fitch, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Daflinn Follesdal, President, Norwegian Academy of
Science; Norway
- William Fowler, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Otto Frankel, Geneticist, Australian Academy of Sciences,
Australia
- Herbert Friedman, Wolf Prize in Physics, USA
- Jerome Friedman, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Konstantin V. Frolov Engineer; Vice President, Russian
Academy of Sciences; Russia
- Kenichi Fukui, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Japan
- Madhav Gadgil, Ecologist, National Science Academy, India
- Mary Gaillard, Physicist, National Academy of Sciences.
USA
- Carleton Gajdusek, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Robert Gallo, Research Scientist, Lasker Award, USA
- Rodrigo Gamez ,Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad, Costa
Rica
- Antonio Garcia-Bellido, Biologist, Univ. Auto. Madrid,
Royal Society, Spain
- Leopoldo Garcia-Collin, Physicist, Latin American &
Third World Academies, Mexico
- Percy Garnham, Royal Society & Pontifical Academy,
Great Britain
- Richard Garwin, Physicist, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Murray Gell-Mann, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Georgii Georgiev, Biologist, Lenin Prize, Russia
- Humam Bishara Ghassib, Physicist, Third World Academy,
Jordan
- Ricardo Giacconi, Astronomer, Wolf Prize in Physics, USA
- Eleanor J. Gibson, Psychologist, National Medal of
Science, USA
- Marvin Goldberger, Physicist; Fmr. President, Calif. Inst.
of Tech., USA
- Maurice Goldhaber, Wolf Prize in Physics, USA
- Donald Glaser, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- Sheldon Glashow, Nobel laureate, Physics; USA
- James Gowans, Wolf Prize in Medicine, France
- Roger Green, Anthropologist, Royal Society, New Zealand
- Peter Greenwood, Ichthyologist, Royal Society, Great
Britain
- Edward Goldberg, Chemist, Tyler Prize, USA
- Coluthur Gopolan, Nutrition Foundation of India, Indian
& Third World Academies, India
- Stephen Jay Gould, Paleontologist, Author, Harvard Univ.,
USA
- Roger Guillemin, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Herbert Gutowsky, Wolf Prize in Chemistry, USA
- Erwin Hahn, Wolf Prize in Physics, USA
- Gonzalo Halffter, Ecologist, Inst. Pol. Nac. ,Mexico
- Kerstin Hall, Endocrinologist, Royal Academy of Sciences,
Sweden
- Mohammed Ahmed Hamdan, Mathematician, Third World,
Academy, Jordan
- Adnan Hamoui, Mathematician, Third World, Academy, Kuwait
- A. M. Harun-ar Rashid, Physicist; Sec., Bangladesh,
Academy of Sci., Bangladesh
- Mohammed H. A. Hassan, Physicist; Exec. Sec., Third World
Academy of Sciences; Sudan & Italy
- Ahmed Hassanli, Chemist, African Academy of Sciences,
Tanzania & Kenya
- Herbert Hauptman, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; USA
- Stephen Hawking, Mathematician, Wolf Prize in Physics,
Great Britain
- Elizabeth Hay, Biologist, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Dudley Herschbach, Nobel laureate, Chemistry, USA
- Gerhard Herzberg, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Canada
- Antony Hewish, Nobel laureate, Physics; Great Britain
- George Hitchings, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; Great
Britain
- Roald Hoffman, Nobel laureate, Chemistry; USA
- Robert Holley, Nobel laureate, Medicine; USA
- Nick Holonyak, Electrical Engineer, National Medal of
Science, USA
- Lars Hormander, Wolf Prize in Mathematics, Sweden
- Dorothy Horstmann, Epidemiologist, National Academy of
Sciences, USA
- John Houghton, Meteorologist; Chairman, Science Working
Group, IPCC; Great Britain
- Sarah Hrdy, Anthropologist, National Academy of Sciences,
USA
- Kenneth Hsu, Geologist, Third World Academy, China &
Switzerland
- Kun Huang, Physicist, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
- Hiroshi Inose, Electrical Engineer; Vice President,
Engineering Academy; Japan
- Turner T. Isoun, Pathologist, African Academy of Sciences,
- Nigeria Francois Jacob, Nobel laureate, Medicine; France
- Carl-Olof Jacobson Zoologist; Sec-Gen., Royal Academy of
Sciences; Sweden
- ... list was shortened, to fit in one message ...
- Alexander L. Yanshin, Geologist, Karpinsky Gold Medal,
Russia
- Yongyuth Yuthavong, Biochemist; Director, National Sci.
& Tech. Devl. Agency, Thailand
- Zhao Zhong-xian, Physicist, Chinese & Third World
Academies, China
- Zhou Guang-zhao, Physicist; President, Chinese Academy of
Sciences;, China
- Solly ZuckerInan, Zoologist, Royal Society, Great Britain
Over 1,500 members of national, regional, and international
science academies have signed the Warning. Sixtynine nations
from all parts of Earth are represented, including each of the
twelve most populous nations and the nineteen largest economic
powers. The full list includes a majority of the Nobel laureates
in the sciences. Awards and institutional affiliations are
listed for the purpose of identification only. The Nobel Prize
in medicine is for physiology or medicine.
Union of Concerned Scientists, 96 Church Street, Cambridge, Mass
02238-9105, USA
[Warning issued on November 18, 1992, transcribed by Jay
Hanson -- apologies for any typos] |