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The Asia and Pacific region covers 40 per cent of the Earth’s land area territory, and is home to 61 per cent of the world’s population. Dramatic economic growth has enabled the reduction of poverty and social progress in many parts of the region. However, the rapid increases in industrial and agricultural production, as well as rising levels of consumption are exerting increasing pressure on the environmental carrying capacity of the region. The Asia and Pacific region is becoming the hub of global production, and this soaring economic growth is causing considerable impact on the environmental carrying capacity, the sources of which can be traced to:
Other trends heavily impacting the environmental carrying capacity of the region include:
Despite the signs of stress, the need for further economic growth remains large. In the ESCAP region, some 670 million people were still living on less than $1 a day (PPP adjusted) in 2004, representing some 63 per cent of the global total. China and India account for some 80 per cent of the region’s poor. In 2001, more than one in every ten persons in the region was still undernourished. The per capita energy supply of the region is less than 60 per cent of that of the global figure, posing a significant barrier to social development. Given the region’s limited ecological carrying capacity and the enormous need for further economic growth to reduce poverty and meet the basic needs of its vast and expanding population the region has to find ways and means to reduce the environmental impact of its economic growth. As such, the governments of the region have agreed that Green Growth is the foremost strategy to ensure environmental and economic sustainability of the countries in the Asia and Pacific region. |
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