Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Asia’s turning point must be a vote for sustainabi­lity

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By Aban Marker Kabraji

The battle for sustainabi­lity will be won – or lost – in Asia. Although it seems dramatic, the concept is not far-fetched. Our region is perhaps the most dynamic in the world, accounting for 40% of global economic output and 2/3 of global growth. Sixty per cent of the world’s population calls Asia home and urban population­s are predicted to grow from 1.9 billion to 3.3 billion in 2050.

This rapid growth, however, is taking a toll on our region’s species and ecosystems. Asia is home to five out of 17 mega-diverse countries and 10,900 protected areas. But rates of mangrove, wetland and forest loss are among the highest in the world; 95% of Southeast Asian coral reefs are at risk; and more than 1,400 plants and animals in the region are listed as Critically Endangered.

And while Asia is predicted to be among the hardest hit by climate change, four out of the top 10 carbon emitters are from the region, and greenhouse gas emissions are rising faster than on any other continent. Our region is also among the most at risk from disasters usually associated with environmen­tal degradatio­n. This year is no exception: a deadly heat wave has left thousands dead in India and Pakistan; Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia have suffered crippling drought; and torrential rain is taking lives and displacing millions in Myanmar and South Asia.

Asia is at a turning point. The region needs to reverse environmen­tal degradatio­n and ensure its people will be able to weather the impacts of climate change and disasters. It cannot do so under the current trajectory.

But how do we sustain growth in order to improve the lives of 800 million Asians still below the poverty line? We must bust the myth that loss of nature is an acceptable part of progress.

The false dichotomy that pits nature against developmen­t inhibits progress, hinders wellbeing, undervalue­s the critical role of ecosystem services and puts our citizens at significan­tly higher risk from disasters. And those who suffer most are often the most vulnerable and marginaliz­ed: women, children and the poor, whose resilience in the face of natural disaster is seriously compromise­d.

Nature’s infrastruc­ture – the forests, rivers, wetlands and coral reefs – sustains human civilisati­on. No matter how technologi­cally or materially advanced a society is, nature’s goods and services are the foundation­s of its prosperity and well-being.

The region’s developmen­t agenda needs to focus on protecting the environmen­t, and it must do so alongside building the resilience of vulnerable communitie­s and population­s. Asia can do this by abandoning the “nature vs. progress” myth and taking up the paradigm of “progress with nature.” Such a paradigm of working with nature to achieve progress encompasse­s three dimensions: recognisin­g nature’s value, ensuring good governance of its use, and realising that nature-based solutions can effectivel­y address the region’s most pressing challenges.

While nature has inherent value, recent approaches that have started accounting for nature’s value in economic terms reveal that the financial gains we reap by preserving nature far outweigh what we get from exploiting it. Such ‘natural capital’ accounting can give incentives to keep nature intact or to restore it, but can also pave the way for more sound investment­s in the region.

Nature is a preconditi­on to growth and prosperity, but it can only support societal wellbeing if its services and goods are well-managed and shared. Effective and equitable governance of nature is one key to helping the hundreds of millions in Asia rise out of poverty.

Lastly, societies are more resilient when nature’s support system is itself healthy and resilient. The solutions to many of Asia’s challenges can be provided by ecosystems that are diverse, well-managed and functionin­g. An example of such “nature-based solutions” are mangrove forests which provide a more effective and cost-efficient buffer from storm surges and tsunamis than man-made dykes.

Sustainabi­lity must be an integral concern for Asia as it grows. New approaches are needed. The good news is that we are already seeing glimpses of this in our region. Countries are piloting new developmen­t perspectiv­es that are leap-frogging the older developmen­t model of nature vs. progress. These include Ecocivilis­ation in China, Gross National Happiness in Bhutan, Sufficienc­y Economy in Thailand, Low Carbon Growth in Japan, Inclusive Growth in India and Green Developmen­t in Mongolia.

Policy support, at national and trans-boundary levels, is needed. However, collaborat­ion of all sectors in society is what is most vital. IUCN (Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature), a union composed of government bodies and NGOs, working with conservati­on and scientific experts, is helping make these dialogues happen. This August 10-12 in Bangkok, IUCN convened all these sectors on a neutral platform to discuss solutions to enhance the resilience of people and nature in the region.

Embracing this new paradigm does not mean halting growth or slowing it down, but embracing a shared understand­ing that without nature, there is no growth. The task ahead is to ensure our region treads the path of this new paradigm – so that when the battle for sustainabi­lity is won in Asia, it will be a positive turning point for the entire world.

(The writer is Regional Director, IUCN Asia)

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