Time For A Department of Sustainable Development

Federal governments everywhere are not structured to recognize -- much less address -- the serious environmental pressures they face, and as a result end up responding militarily. The alternative? Ministries and Departments of Sustainable Development.

2 minute read

October 24, 2006, 6:00 AM PDT

By Michael Dudley


"Governments are not organized to meet...crises that are fundamentally ecological in nature [and] are managed by outdated strategies of war and diplomacy."

"Consider, for example, the situation in Darfur, Sudan. This horrible conflict is being addressed through threats of military force, sanctions and generally the language of war and peacekeeping. Yet the undoubted origin of the conflict is the region's extreme poverty, which was made disastrously worse in the 1980s by a drought that has essentially lasted until today. It appears that long-term climate change is leading to lower rainfall not only in Sudan, but also in much of Africa just south of the Sahara Desert-an area where life depends on the rains, and where drought means death."

"Our governments should all establish Ministries of Sustainable Development, devoted full-time to managing the linkages between environmental change and human well-being. Agriculture ministers by themselves will not be able to cope with water shortages that farmers will face. Health ministers will not be able to cope with an increase in infectious diseases due to global warming. Environment ministers will not be able to cope with the pressures on oceans and forests, or the consequences of increasing extreme weather events like last year's Hurricane Katrina or this year's Typhoon Saomai-China's worst in many decades. A new powerful ministry should be charged with coordinating the responses to climate change, water stress and other ecosystem crises."

Monday, October 23, 2006 in Tom Paine

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