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Which are the principles and rules that we have to implement in
order to safeguard one of the greatest resources (together with
water) of our planet?
Perhaps it is worth reading the
note below in order to develop a different way of looking
at conscience and
at the politics of
the world.
Air resources
We know that the atmosphere is a fundamental sphere for life on
our planet. Its chemical composition assumes a fundamental role
in the interaction with the Sun and is important in the
regulation of the climate. This composition varies with
altitude, and depending on
the presence of areas which have been more or less
developed by man. Above all, Carbon dioxide forms a sort of
insulating system of gas that maintains the earth warm in
comparison to the constant average values. This function,
similar to the one produced by a greenhouse (hence the term
“greenhouse effect”)
is of notable importance in the equilibrium of the world’s
climatologic system and therefore to the equilibrium of the
ecosystems.
The ecosystem represents that environmental motor that covers an
important role in the production of gases and especially in the
quality of this. The influence of the ecosystem on
atmospheric equilibrium has determined notable changes in
various epochs of the earth so as to represent one of the
fundamental factors in its quality.
In recent times one of the components of the ecosystem, that is
to say, humanity, with all of its thermodynamic functions, has
interfered forcefully (or better still, in a tangible way) in
the workings of
atmospheric equilibriums, so much so that (especially in the
last 50 years) this has become an issue of great global
interest.
This issue has produced two factors of notable sociological and
political interest:
1. For the first time in the history of
humanity, a common planetary interest has been generated by
the necessity to globally resolve the delicate issue of the
incidence of human activities on the environment. The Kyoto
conference (see
http://www.terredelsud.org/kyoto.php) represents the first
concrete attempt of trans-national policy on the models of
development which is anthropologically compatible with the needs
of the ecosystem
and the environment.
It is in practice a protocol for the codification of the
principles of Sustainable Development (see http://www.terredelsud.org/brundtland.htm)
enacted by the United Nations in 1987.
2. The environmental issue has become an international meeting
point, increasingly needing a vision of things that goes beyond
the territorial and socio-cultural limits of the single
countries. In this way, the delicate issues which regard the
resources of the ecosystem
(among which, above all, are the forests and the
agro-environmental activities) will necessarily have to find a
minimum common denominator without which even the most
farsighted
policy of a single state cannot reach the preset
objectives. This last issue obviously has need of a scientific
sensitivity and a new policy. It will be increasingly necessary
to find solutions of socioeconomic development which do not
conflict with the delicate rules of the ecosystem, but, rather,
are in line with them.
This is because The Ecological System, in its perfectly
integrated whole, minimizes waste. Nothing or almost nothing of
what is
produced by an organism is wasted: every single waste
constitutes a
source of usable material or energy for another organism. Dead
or alive, all the animals and the plants and their waste
products
constitute food for other living organisms. The
micro-organisms consume and expel their waste, and this in turn
becomes nourishment for other larger organisms and so on along
the food chain. But human waste does not have the same effect.
This permits many of our defaced woods to lie in a state of
deterioration and abandonment, suffering not only from
litter, but also from indiscriminate logging, fires and actions
of pure vandalism, as well as various "tourist" or "urban"
development plans which risk eliminating nature under a blanket
of cement.
For this reason, knowing the rules of the ecosystem and the
fundamental rules needed to safeguard it or even to promote it,
represents the new frontier which every action will have to
take into account, even if not strictly linked to it.
It deals with an evolution of the political idea of the
management of the world, going from the exploitation of the
resources (of any nature) to that of the conservation of these
(with rules for using them which are
similar to the equilibriums found in the ecosystem).
Public opinion is
very interested in issues like the protection of the world’s
great oxygen lungs (the Amazonian forest being first among these)
neglecting as usual, because it is less newsworthy, the fact
that in the near future
the management of the resources and their protection will see
man both as implementer and planner. We intend to say that the
protection of the world’s patrimony does not pass only through
the protection of the great, green areas of the planet but also,
and above all, in consideration of the future management of the
resources, from the planning and promotion of the terrestrial
surface leading to a new redistribution of the "green" areas.
The concept of "green" area obviously refers not only to the
wooded surfaces, which every country will have a part to
protect, but also to agrarian and agro-environmental production
We believe that it
is more important to urgently find the rules that avoid
deforestation rather than be outraged that this happens.
This is a more correct way of doing
environmentalism.
We cannot tell the small or great destroyers of nature to stop
if we
have not striven to find an "alternative" way to make them
stop.
The first way is surely more effective for public opinion (but
not useless), the second way is more complex and
asks for a scientific and socio-political culture which is
more "sophisticated" but far more conscientious.
This aspect is worth
addressing a little more.
The problem is that it is the developing countries
that are using up the environmental patrimony more (among which are the forests for the production of
lumber) to be able to compete with the richest and
technologically more advanced nations.
It is the only way available
to decrease the economic deficit that they have with these.
On one hand we are outraged because these countries deforest and deface the land, but it is we (rich countries) who do not
implement any policy that
tends to remove the causes of this socioeconomic defect.
To do this we need great international policies, not only at a
financial level; we have seen that in the global world the
implementation of Policy based only on finances provokes more and more
distortions and macroscopic social injustices.
A similar disquisition will seem to be beside the point with
regards to the issue of Air Resources, but we have to learn to
appraise
things in a less sectional way if we want to really
understand and know
how to globally face the problems of the future.
Guido Bissanti
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