

World Resources Institute in collaboration with the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Environment Programme, and the World Bank
The dawn of a new millennium is an appropriate time to take stock of the condition of the Earth’s ecosystems and to draw lessons from our global experience with managing and protecting them. This millennial edition of World Resources focuses on five critical ecosystems that have been shaped by the interaction of physical environment, biological conditions, and human intervention: croplands, forests, coastal zones, freshwater systems, and grasslands.
These ecosystems produce a wide variety of goods and services, some of which have not been recognized or valued but all of which sustain human life. The report provides examples of goods and services, such as water purification or pollination, which occur naturally in a healthy ecosystem, but have to be replicated or supplemented if the natural capacity declines. The first step to good management, the report proposes, is to acknowledge the value of these goods and services and the tradeoffs that we often make among them.
The second step is to base decisions on current information about the capacity of ecosystems to continue to provide goods and services. Such information, however, has never before been collected comprehensively. To demonstrate the feasibility of a full-scale Millennium Assessment of Global Ecosystems, the report provides bottom-line judgments based on a survey of current evidence for each ecosystem on food or fiber production, water quantity and quality, biodiversity, carbon sequestration, and recreation.
The final step to good management advocated in the report is an “ecosystem approach” that explicitly recognizes the interaction and tradeoffs among these goods and services, as well as the political and social context in which environmental decisions are made. Through five detailed case studies and many additional examples, the report demonstrates that people in all parts of the world, rich and poor, have the capacity to improve the way they manage ecosystems.
Like the eight previous editions of World Resources, the millennial edition also presents an overview of current global environmental trends in population, human well-being, food and water security, consumption and waste, energy use, and climate change. Comprehensive current data and time series for hundreds of indicators in more than 150 countries make the World Resources data tables an invaluable reference for environmental research and decision-making.
For more information see our main website page at World Resources Report 2000-2001
Full Summary on line in downloadable PDF format
SEPTEMBER 2000
Paperback / 400 pages approx / 1-56973-443-7 / $27.00
Hardcover / Available from Elsevier Science ONLY /ISBN 0-08-0437818 / US$49.00
Now Available
French edition /398 pages / ISBN 274720031-0
Editions Eska
12, rue du Quatre-Septembre
75002 Paris, France
order from http://www.eska.fr
Forthcoming in three language editions by September 2001:
Arabic edition
Al-Ahram Center for Translation and Publishing
Al Galaa Street,
Cairo, Egypt
Chinese edition
State Environmental Protection Administration
115 Xizhimennei Nanxiaojie
Beijing 100035, China
Japanese edition
Nikkei Business Publications, Inc.
2-7-6, Hirakawacho, Chiyoda-ku
Tokyo 102-8622, Japan
http://www.nikkeibp.com
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