• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Africa fast running down resources-WWF report

Mon Jun 9, 2008 9:50am EDT
GENEVA, June 9 (Reuters) - Many African countries are rapidly running down their natural resources as growing populations push the continent towards its ecological limits, the conservation organisation WWF said on Monday.

The warning was issued in its first-ever detailed report on Africa's ecological footprint -- an estimate of the area of a country or region's land and sea surface used annually in meeting the individual consumption demands of its people.

"A growing number of African countries are depleting their natural resources -- or will shortly be doing so -- faster than they can be replaced," said WWF President, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, in presenting the findings to a Johannesburg conference.

The report put Egypt, Libya and Algeria at the head of a list of nations of the continent already living well beyond their ecological means.

But nine others were also using up their bio-capacity -- Morocco, Tunisia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Senegal, Nigeria, South Africa and Zimbabwe.

The Swiss-based WWF, previously known as the World Wide Fund for Nature but now identified only by the initials and its panda logo, issued the report, "Africa-Ecological Footprint and Human Well-being" together with a U.S.-based research body, the Global Footprint Network.

It said that despite over-consumption of resources in some countries, Africa's overall ecological footprint at 1.1 hectares of land and sea -- still behind the continent's total biocapacity of 1.3 hectares per head of population.

And the African figures are still well below the global average footprint of 2.2 hectares per person which, with 1.8 hectares available, is running at a rate suggesting humanity will need two planets by 2050.

But the big danger for the continent is that its current population of some 680 million is growing rapidly and is predicted to double, meaning Africa will account for nearly a quarter of the world's people by 2050.

Although development is vital for Africans, at the lower end of the United Nations' human welfare index, they have to "work with, rather than against, ecological budget constraints," said Global Footprint Network director Mathis Wackernagel.

"Development that ignores the limits of our natural resources ultimately ends up imposing disproportionate costs on the most vulnerable and the most dependent on the health of natural systems, such as the rural poor," he added. (Reporting by Robert Evans; Editing by Jon Boyle)



More from Reuters

Photo

Investors seen jumping the gun on airport security

BANGALORE (Reuters) - Investors' optimism surrounding the shares of airport security systems makers could be premature as interest in the companies' products after the Christmas Day plane scare is not expected to translate into immediate orders.

A hiring sign hangs in a window at PETCO in Falls Church, Virginia June 5, 2009.REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Dust off your resumes

Employers say they'll be adding headcount in the coming year. Here's where the jobs will be.  Full Article 

Tiger Woods blows on his putter on the 10th hole during final round play of the Tournament Players Championship golf tournament at the TPC at Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra, Florida May 13, 2007.

Tiger's $12 billion scandal?

Shareholders of Tiger Woods' sponsors discover that along with the upside, there are big downside risks, too, a study shows.  Full Article