Our Planet Healthy Planet, Healthy People-2015Our Planet May 2015 Fa PDF
Our Planet Healthy Planet, Healthy People-2015Our Planet May 2015 Fa PDF
Our Planet Healthy Planet, Healthy People-2015Our Planet May 2015 Fa PDF
Khaled Fahmy
Time to Act
Maria Neira
Development's
Healthy Heartbeat
Nina Cromnier
Within Reach
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ISSN:
10137394
OurPlanet,
the magazine of the
United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP)
Director of Publication: Naysn Sahba
Editor: Geoffrey Lean
Assistant Editor: Mark Foss
Coordinator: Angeline Djampou, Mohamed Atani
Design and Layout:
Hybrid Design (San Francisco)
William Orlale
Produced by:
United Nations Environment Programme
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concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
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Table of Contents
Features
Page 6
Page 22
Massoumeh Ebtekar
Enabling Breathing
of Clean Air
Nithya Ramanathan
IH Rehman
Veerabhadran Ramanathan
Credit Where its Due
Page 10
Khaled Fahmy
Time to Act
Page 16
Page 28
Maria Neira
Development's
Healthy Heartbeat
Nina Cromnier
Within Reach
Page 18
Hans Bruyninckx
Breathtaking
Challenge
Page 30
Page 44
Chris W Williams
Julian Kyomuhangi
Silent Emergency
Richard Fuller
Pollution The
Greatest Killer
Page 34
Page 48
Hugh Montgomery
Terminal Blow?
Gladys
Kalema-Zikusoka
Felling Trees
Brings Disease?
Page 36
Samuel S Myers
Clear and
Present Danger
Page 40
Peggy Liu
A New Way to Eat
Page 4
Reflections
Page 14
Page 20
Extreme Beans
Page 26
Page 32
Page 38
Page 46
Making Connections
Page 50
UNEP Publications
Page 52
Environmental Champion
Achim Steiner
Reflections
n a few
munity
Sustainable
create the
sustainable
to build a
Achim Steiner
United Nations UnderSecretary-General and
UNEP Executive Director
Margaret Chan
Director-General of the
World Health Organization
We are now on track for recovery to pre1980 levels, and the benefits are astonishing:
new data released by the US Environmental
Protection Agency showed that actions under
the Montreal Protocol will have prevented
283 million cases of skin cancer by 2100.
Extrapolated across the globe, this means
billions of cases, and millions of lives saved.
Another achievement comes in the form of the
Minamata Convention on mercury, a toxic element that can cause serious health impacts.
After years of negotiation, the Minamata
Convention was adopted in early 2013 and
subsequently discussed at the World Health
Assembly. It now has 128 signatures and 11 ratifications, and preparatory work is well underway
to support nations in meeting their obligations.
This is all encouraging, but health challenges also emerge from environmental
Massoumeh Ebtekar
Enabling Breathing
of Clean Air
Irans experience in abating air pollution
shows the importance of long-term planning
and social mobilization
vehicles on the roads, inefficient fuel consumption and a lack
of pollution control facilities in industrial plants burning
fossil fuels.
Massoumeh
Ebtekar
Vice President of the
Islamic Republic
of Iran and Head
of Department of
Environment
Champion of
the Earth 2006
ranians were the first to refer to air pollution in the scientific literature. Avicenna, in his Canon of Medicine
completed in 1025 AD, classifies and describes various types
of air and water with potential to harm humans. Now the
World Health Organization has repeatedly named air pollution as a major threat to human health and a carcinogen,
showing that it is not only an environmental issue, but a
global economic and public health challenge.
Air quality is important for over 35 million Iranian citizens
in major cities. Rapid industrialization and urbanization
has seen more than 70 per cent of the population migrate to
urban areas in recent decades, creating many environmental
challenges. Mashad, Tabriz, Isfahan, Shiraz, Ahwaz, Karaj
and Arak are now major cities with over 1 million inhabitants. Many other provincial centreslike Kermanshah,
Rasht, Ghom, Urumieh, Ghazvin, Bushehr, Kerman, Yazd
and Bandar Abbasare large cities booming with population
and economic growth.
The late Professor Taghi Ebtekar began research on air pollution in Iran as early as 1974, at Tehran University and as
an advisor to the mayor of Tehran. He set forth a strategy for
substituting natural gas (CNG) as a cleaner fuel for public
transportation. His studies and plans later became the basis
for Tehrans roadmap to combat air pollution. This project
now spans one and a half decades. In 1998, multiple studies
on air pollution in Tehran were compiled, and a comprehensive plan to combat it was drawn up. After adoption by the
cabinet in 1999, and allocation of resources, the scheme was
implemented as seven major projects.
From 1999 up to 2005, cars came under strict emission controls, emitting 80 per cent fewer pollutants due to engine
modifications and the installation of catalytic converters
and filters. Lead was completely phased-out from petroleum during those years. Electronic automobile inspection
centres were established, CNG-operated buses were introduced, public transport (including the underground metro
and the bus system) was promoted and a nationwide awareness-raising campaign, including a national Clean Air Day,
was initiated. An ad hoc committee met regularly with
all stakeholders and major players to monitor the plan.
However, after 2005 the plan faced serious impediments
and delays. Over an eight-year period, Tehran faced an
annual increase of between 200,000 to 400,000 new vehicles that were regulated, but which still added to the traffic
and pollutant load. A plan to phase-out obsolete cars was
initiated in 2002, but bureaucratic impediments delayed its
implementation until several years later.
One reason for the delay was a change in development priorities. Following elections in 2005, the incoming president
introduced different national priorities and widespread
changes in management within administrative bodies. The
inter-sector cooperation committee in charge of monitoring
the pollution strategywhich had convened more than 150
These environmental complications of conflict and insecurity signify the importance that United Nations bodies
should attach to conflict resolution. The role of Iran as a
promoter of peace and moderation, and the countrys influential role in both regional and global equations, can serve as
a deterrent force to curb extremism and ameliorate the current lack of security that is now a mainstay of global political
attention.
Khaled Fahmy
Time to Act
Africa needs to invest in health and
environment for sustainable development
Minister of
Environment, Egypt
and President, African
Ministerial Conference
on the Environment
10
Khaled Fahmy
UNEP at Work
A Breath of Fresh Air
Reducing short-lived climate pollutants in the
waste and transport sectors can harness health
Maria Neira
Development's
Healthy Heartbeat
Proven, affordable strategies can address
the one-quarter of the global burden of
death and disease that is due to unhealthy
environmental factors
generation, outdoor waste, biomass burning and the use of
energy in buildings. Another 4.3 million deaths are linked
to household air pollution, mostly from exposures to smoke
emissions from rudimentary biomass and coal cookstoves and
fires, upon which nearly 3 billion people worldwide primarily
depend. Many people are exposed to both indoor and outdoor
air pollution. Due to this overlap, mortality attributed to the
two sources cannot simply be added together, hence the total
estimate of around 7 million deaths in 2012.
Maria Neira
Director for Public
Health, Social and
Environmental
Determinants of
Health, World Health
Organization
16
in the aftermath of Nepals recent earthquake, where widespread building collapses have claimed thousands of lives.
Unhealthy diets may include excessive consumption of
processed foods and red meats that may both be carbon
intensive and increase risks of obesity and obesity-related
NCDs. Dietary choices may, in turn, be heavily influenced by
urban environmental factors such as the decline of neighbourhood fresh food markets and the predominance of fast
food chains.
Unhealthy urban and rural environments also remain a
major source of communicable diseases. Indoor smoke from
rudimentary cookstoves, for example, is a cause of over onehalf of childhood pneumonia deaths. Unsafe drinking water,
sanitation and hygiene (WASH) remains a factor in 58 per
cent of under-five deaths from diarrhoeal diseasedespite
significant declines in both WASH-related and overall mortality. Tuberculosis is transmitted in crowded housing
Hans
Bruyninckx
Breathtaking
Challenge
Air pollution still harms Europeans health,
and shortens their life expectancy
Executive Director,
European Environment
Agency
18
Hans Bruyninckx
Innovation
01
Extreme Beans
New heat-tolerant varieties offer
environmental and health benefits
While drought and disease have long been threats to beans, recent
climate models have suggested that extreme heat renders bean
pollen less fertile, which reduces both the quantity and quality of
the crop. Given predicted temperature increases, some countries in
Africa and Latin America could lose up to half of their land suitable
for bean crops by 2050.
We were surprised to find that heat stress will be the biggest threat to
bean production, said Steve Beebe, who leads CIATs bean programme.
The 30 elite lines of heat-tolerant beans developed by Beebes team
are expected to cut loss of land from 50 to 5 per cent. In fact, the new
varieties may allow farmers in some parts of Africa and Latin America to
expand production, using land that was previously too hot for bean crops.
20
Apart from helping farmers adapt to climate change, the new varieties
also have health benefits. For many poor smallholders who cannot
afford meat, dairy or fish, beans and other grain legumes provide a
rich source of protein.By preservingand possibly addingland
for bean production, the new varieties will help promote both food
security and nutrition.
Beans are also a vital source of iron, an essential micronutrient that
strengthens the immune system, helps fight off anaemia and promotes
the physical and cognitive development of children. More than a decade
ago, CGIAR researchers successfully created bean varieties that offered
twice as much iron as common beans. Weve been fortunate that a
few of the new heat-tolerant bean lines had been previously fortified
with iron, said Beebe. Thats an added bonus to the extensive health
and environmental benefits that the new lines will offer.
Developing new heat-tolerant varieties is an ecosystems-based (EbA)
approach to adaptation, one that works with nature rather than
against it. Apart from being more cost effective than conventional
techniques, EbA measures are known to increase yields, as well as
to enhance nutrition, community resilience and ecological capacity.
The CIAT project, therefore, has the potential to produce all these
benefits and should be promoted. In the coming months, the CIAT
team will continue its research with formal yield trials.
Nithya Ramanathan
IH Rehman
Veerabhadran Ramanathan
Nithya Ramanathan
President, Nexleaf
Analytics
IH Rehman
Director, The Energy
and Resources
Institute, New Delhi
Veerabhadran
Ramanathan
Professor, University of
California, San Diego
22
nergy access is a basic requirement for human development and well-being, but it is vastly different for the
poorest 3 billion people on Earth than it is for the richest 1
billion. The top billion consume 50 per cent of available fossil energy whilemore than two centuries after the industrial
revolutionthe poorest 3 billion are still forced to rely on
traditional fires (fueled by wood, dung, agricultural waste,
charcoal and coal) to cook and heat their homes. One third
of them are also forced to use kerosene and candles for lighting. This imbalance in access to modern energy comes at
enormous costs to human health and the environment, and
creates further disparities in how the effects of those costs are
experienced.
In their use of fossil fuels, the top 1 billion contribute more
than half the emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that cause global warming. If they (and the
middle-income 3 billion) continue current rates of fossil fuel
consumption, the world will witness warming of 2C or more
in a few short decades. The brunt will be borne by the bottom
3 billion, who live on the edge of subsistence and are most vulnerable to the resulting droughts or other changes in weather
and climate.
At the same timethrough being limited to using inefficient
cooking fires and lampsthe poorest 3 billion are exposed to
large quantities of soot (or black carbon) and brown carbon.
About 4 million
people die each year
from the toxic smoke
emitted by household
fires and lights.
Exposure to household
air pollution kills more
people than malaria,
TB and HIV combined.
added performance comes additional cost. The coststypically, about six weeks of income for rural householdsalong
with the lack of robust supply chains, inhibit scaling up the
technologies to the hundreds of millions of households where
they are needed.
23
24
Photo: Shutterstock
Photo: Robert Harding Picture Library
Project Surya
focuses on clean
energy solutions
for the poorest that
achieve benefits
in health, climate,
and sustainability
by employing clean
cooking and lighting
technologies that
reduce smoke
emissions by 90 Per
cent or more.
25
UNEP at Work
The Missing Link
Scientists are studying
how Ebola jumps from
great apes to humansfor
26
Photo: Shutterstock
27
Nina
Cromnier
Within Reach
Sound management of chemicals is an
essential part of sustainable development
nationally, regionally and globally
Nina Cromnier
Director-General,
Swedish Chemicals
Agency and Chair
of the Management
Board of the European
Chemicals Agency
28
A growing proportion
of hazardous
chemicals is
produced and used in
developing countries
where controls are
often inadequate,
exposing people and
environments to
unacceptable risks.
Chris W Williams
Julian Kyomuhangi
Silent Emergency
Providing access to sanitation for all is both
the key public health challenge of our time
and a moral obligation
Chris W Williams
Executive Director
of the Water Supply
& Sanitation
Collaborative Council
Julian
Kyomuhangi
Assistant
Commissioner of
Health Services
Environmental Health
for the Republic of
Uganda
30
The major obstacles are low political interest, the need for
clear lines of responsibility within different ministries,
and the lack of awareness of the need for community-led
behaviour change.
Many in the development world believe that building toilets is a sufficient measure for providing total sanitation. But
this is not so. All too often large sums of money are spent on
providing toilets to communities that are never used. It is
increasingly becoming clear that 100 per cent latrine coverage is not enough to mitigate sanitation and hygiene-related
diseases, and that the answer lies in stopping open defecation
through sustained changes in hygienic behaviour.
In March 2008, the Water Supply & Sanitation Collaborative
Council (WSSCC)the only United Nations body devoted
to the sanitation and hygiene needs of vulnerable and marginalized people around the worldlaunched the Global
Sanitation Fund, the first global mechanism for financing sanitation and hygiene. Its purpose is to boost the flow
of money to organizations in developing countries with
expertise in demand-driven sanitation and hygiene programmes. National programmes it has supported have so
far ensured that 7 million people in 20,600 communities
in Africa and South Asia now live in environments free of
open-defecation (ODF); 7.9 million people have access to
UNEP at Work
Cleaning Our Air
Reducing urban air pollution
Hugh
Montgomery
Terminal Blow?
Climate change, the greatest threat to
health this century, is striking at an
already weakened world
Hugh
Montgomery
Prof of Intensive Care,
University College,
London and Director
of its Institute for
Human Health and
Performance
34
35
Samuel S Myers
Clear and
Present Danger
New research is identifying threats to health
and nutrition from the Great Transformation
being forced on natural systems
Senior Research
Scientist, Harvard
School of Public Health
36
Samuel S Myers
UNEP at Work
Off the Shelf
Access to online resources is transforming
Photo: Research4life
38
Photo: Research4life
Photo: Research4life
Photo: Research4life
39
Peggy Liu
A New Way
to Eat
Chinese diets increasingly imperil both
health and the planet, but a bid to change this
is starting at the beginning
wants for meals, and makes his mom give his friends expensive toys to win them over at playdates. He prefers to spend
his time indoors studying, and on video games, than on running around outside playing sports.
Peggy Liu
Chairperson of
JUCCCE
40
41
42
43
Richard Fuller
Pollution
The Greatest Killer
Tackling the health effects of pollution
should be a core focus of development
Richard Fuller
CEO of Pure Earth/
Blacksmith Institute,
New York
44
Contaminated air,
water and soil were
responsible for 8.9
million deaths in
2012, according to
data from the World
Health Organization
and the Institute for
Health Metrics and
Evaluation.
Innovation
02
Making
Connections
Ecohealth approaches integrate
health, environment and social equity
46
Gladys
Kalema-Zikusoka
Felling Trees
Brings Disease?
Deforestation and wildlife exploitation lead
to outbreaks of Ebola and other diseases
Gladys
Kalema-Zikusoka
Founder and Chief
Executive Officer,
Conservation Through
Public Health
48
While Western
Lowland gorillas still
number over 100,000,
Ebola has wiped out as
many as 5,000 of them
in the past 15 years.
UNEP Publications
United Nations
Environment Programme:
Annual Report 2014
Responsible Food
Purchasing: Four Steps
Towards Sustainability for
The Hospitality Sector
50
Environmental
Champion
Jamie Oliver
52
I believe
passionately
in taking great
care of the
animals we
breed for food
both because
it is the right
thing to do
and because
you are what
you eat.
53