Environment and Health Issues We are living in a

游客2024-02-15  12

问题                            Environment and Health Issues
    We are living in a hostile world: depletion of ozone (臭氧) layer, global warming, air pollution, worldwide transmission of AIDS.... The fact that these environmental and health issues do not respect national boundaries implies that solutions to these problems only be global in scope.
    Concern about the state of the world’s environment has grown domestically and internationally in the 1990s. The growth of Greenpeace as a movement, the limited success of Green parties in Europe, and legislation to halt the destruction of the environment in most developed democracies are concrete indications of the importance of this policy field.
    The essential problem for the environment, and many other international issues such as health protection, comes from the fact that it is a collective good. That such goods need to be preserved is often explained by what is called the "tragedy of the commons". In villages and towns where there are "common lands", they are invariably overgrazed (过度放牧) by individuals who choose to keep their own lands under-utilized while they use the common land extensively. In other words, short-term individual, company, or state interests tend to prevail over common concerns and issues. Collective goods are not considered as important as the selfish interests of states, corporations, and individuals. In the same manner oceans are over fished and parklands destroyed.
    The advance of scientific knowledge and technology has brought immeasurable good and bad consequences for humankind. It has been responsible for improvements in health, nourishment, and physical labor, but its side effects are often dangerous. Environmentalists have pointed out many ways that humans are destroying the planet. They have shown that state borders do not count for very much with regard to environmental issues. Policy must, therefore, be developed at a level above the stale--in other words, internationally.
    Here are some examples of environmental issues that call for global action:
    Ozone
    The release of harmful man-made gases is destroying the ozone layer that protects the earth from ultraviolet rays (紫外线). In the mid-1980s scientists discovered that this thin layer of ozone encircling the stratosphere was being destroyed by the emission of chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) (含氯氟烃)  gases and bromine from halons (哈龙) into the atmosphere. As the ozone layer is destroyed, it allows more ultraviolet light to reach the earth causing increased incidents of skin cancer, endangering marine life and possibly affecting the climate. In response the developed democracies signed and later amended a Montreal Protocol on Substances That Deplete the Ozone Layer, which freezes and eventually begins to decrease the use of CFCs and halon production.
    Global Warming
    Global warming is taking place at an alarming speed. This so-called "greenhouse" effect is caused by the release of pollutants--CFCs, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone--into the atmosphere and by the destruction of the rain forests. The destruction of forests reduces the earth’s natural ability to extract carbon dioxide from the air. In other words, industrialization is causing the earth’s climatic conditions to change. The so-called First World countries contain only 25% of the world’s population yet consume 75% of its energy, 85% of its forest products, and are responsible for 75% of global warming. Country participants at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro drafted conventions of climate change, biological diversity, and forests. Although governments were satisfied with the enunciated (确切表明的) goals, environmentalists criticized the protocols because they contained no targets or timetables.
    Renewable Resources
The earth’s vegetation (植被), too, is deteriorating. Forests are being destroyed and plant and animal species are becoming extinct. This waste of renewable resources is the subject of much controversy and is covered by a large variety of international treaties and protocols. Possibly the most important concept in this field is sustainable development. In 1987, the authors of Our Common Future, published by the UN Commission on Environment and Development, called for a commitment to the idea of sustainable development. It asked states and individuals to understand that the environment must be protected at the same time as economic growth takes place. The sustainable development concept calls for both values to be considered in tandem (合作地), not in opposition. Our Common Future stressed the need of the world’s poor and the necessity for limits to be imposed on technology and social organization.
   Nuclear Issues
The breakdown of nuclear plants may create deadly radioactivity as happened in the Chernobyl disaster in USSR. As well, states continue to prepare for the non-peaceful use of nuclear energy. Nuclear testing continues. In 1995-1996 France again tested underground nuclear explosions in the South Pacific. Greenpeace ships tried to sail in the waters but were prevented by French military personnel. Rioting in Papeete, the capital of Tahiti, did not halt the tests, but world pressure finally caused French President Jacques Chirac to cancel the tests as of January 1996 after six explosions.
    Biology
    Biological research may lead to major international issues. One example is gene splicing (recombinant DNA), which could lead to the inadvertent development of new violent microbes.
    Questions about global health include such topics as poverty, food production, housing, and disease. However, one disease, acquired immune-deficiency syndrome (AIDS) has become so widespread and dangerous that it belongs alongside environmental and population issues as being of world concern. As of 1992, 12 million adults and over 1 million children have been infected with human immune-deficiency virus (HIV), which is widely believed to be the cause of AIDS. And more than one out of four who had HIV has contracted the deadly disease.
    The AIDS epidemic is now widespread throughout the world. In all cases HIV damages ceils involved in the immune system, which then makes the body vulnerable to infections. AIDS is transmitted from person to person by an exchange of bodily fluids through sexual contact, blood transfusions, shared IV needles, and open sores. The highest rates of AIDS are found among homosexuals and even heterosexuals (异性恋者) who do not practice safer sex (i.e., use condoms) and drag abusers.
    These are only some of the international issues concerning the environment and health issue only governments can solve. But the issues are complex and values about them are often conflicting. Should one push up the cost of industrial production in order to eliminate toxic wastes? Should we preserve the Amazon rain forest if it means a reduction of employment for poverty stricken Brazilians ? What role should international organizations play in protecting the environment? [br] Those highly developed countries that contain 25% of the world’s population consume 85% of its______.

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答案 forest products

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