Page:Brundtland Report.djvu/44

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A/42/427
English
Page 44

in the case of food products a sharp difference exists, particularly in the products that are more resource-intensive. (See Table 1-2.)

Table 1-2
Distribution of World Consumption, Averages for 1980-83
Developed Countries (26% of population) Developing Countries (74% of population)
Units of Per Capita Consumption Share in World Consumption Share in World Consumption
Commodity per cent per capita per cent per capita
Food
Calories kcal/day 34 3,395 66 2,389
Protein gms/day 38 99 62
Fat gms/day 53 127 47 40
Paper kg/year 85 123 15 8
Steel kg/year 79 459 21 41
Other Metals kg/year 86 26 14 2
Commercial Energy mtco/year 80 5.8 20 0.5

Source: WCED estimates based on country-level data from FAO, UN Statistical Office, UNCTAD and American Metals Association

22. In recent years, industrial countries have been able to achieve economic growth using less energy and raw materials per unit of output. This, along with the efforts to reduce the emission of pollutants, will help to contain the pressure on the biosphere. But with the increase in population and the rise in incomes, per capita consumption of energy and materials will go up in the developing countries, as it has to if essential needs are to be met. Greater attention to resource efficiency can moderate the increase, but, on balance, environmental problems linked to resource use will intensify in global terms.

3. Survival

23. The scale and complexity of our requirements for natural resources have increased greatly with the rising levels of population and production. Nature is bountiful, but it is also fragile and finely balanced. There are thresholds that cannot be crossed without endangering the basic integrity of the system. Today we are close to many of these thresholds; we must be ever mindful of the risk of endangering the survival of life on Earth. Moreover, the speed with which changes in resource use are taking place gives little time in which to anticipate and prevent unexpected effects.

24. The 'greenhouse effect', one such threat to life support systems, springs directly from increased resource use. The burning of fossil fuels and the cutting and burning of forests release carbon dioxide (CO2). The accumulation in the

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