Population, Family Planning,
& Ecology News Digest
Archives 1998

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Archives 1998

  • Dec 22 1998 BBC Appeal for Birth Control in Pakistan. Religious-based parties should understand that Islam is not against family planning.
  • Dec 1998 Substandard Condoms Dumped in Africa New York Times 100s of millions handed out free. 48 out of 200 in test batches broke

  • Dec 31 1998 ENN Landscape changes may alter climate
  • A University of Wisconsin-Madison computer-driven model showed that continued deforestation of the Amazon, combined with increased carbon dioxide levels, would reduce annual rainfall . This concept also applies to the transformation of North American prairies to farmland. Evapotranspiration, where rain is recycled back to the atmosphere through trees and forest plants, is essential to a landscape's ability to cool itself. Plus forests and prairies can store carbon dioxide much better than cornfields or pasture.

  • Dec 31 1998 U.S. Population Grows 1 percent July 1 1997 - July 1 1998 Highest growing states Nevada (4.1%), Arizona (2.5 %), Georgia, Colorado and Texas. From the US Census Bureau
  • Dec 31 1998 Zambia's Population Project Obtains UNFPA support. Finance Secretary Nonde: "All people have the basic right to information so as to decide freely and responsibly the number and spacing of their children".
  • Dec 31 1998 China Tackles Pollution in Taihu Lake
  • Dec 30 1998 Family Planning is Working, but World Population Still Growing From the Population Institute. A dozen of the poorest nations are still expected to triple their populations by mid-century, according to the Population Institute. 97 percent of the increase occurred in poor nations already burdened with economic, environmental, public health and other problems; 58 countries have fertility rates of five or more children per woman.
  • Dec 28 1999 New York Times Sea Otter Decline along California's Central Coast. Pollution and disease suspected.
  • Dec 28 1998 Fragile Sea Horse Threatened by Overfishing Prized for their use in Chinese medicine and the aquarium trade, 70 percent have been lost over the last ten years.
  • Dec 28 1998 China's Natural Conservation Land up to Average World Level. Now up to 7.64 percent. To add 100 reserves every year for several years.
  • Dec 28 1998 Tool aids forest carbon storage studies
  • Dec 28 1998 Malaria Spreading Quickly in Sub-Saharan Africa - a result of deforestation, global warming, creation of dams, irrigation schemes and commercial tree cropping, according to the World Health Organization.
  • Dec 26 1998 Mozambican Capital's Population Grows by 79% since 1980
  • Dec 26 1998 China: Local Governments Blamed for Grave Soil Erosion. 38.2 percent of the national land mass involved in serious erosion
  • Dec 25 1998 China: Gauze Masks Help People of Lanzhou Deal with Air Pollution. The main pollutants are dust and sulphur dioxide. Fast economic growth and the use of coal for heating have caused further air quality deterioration.
  • Dec 25 1998 Bangladesh: Air Pollution in Dhaka Reaches High Level. 160,000 motorized vehicles operate in the metropolitan area, with about 1/3 of them having no fitness certificates, emitting black smoke and fumes.
  • Dec 24 1998 Hunting, Fishing Groups Seek to Ban Big Livestock Farms - Blamed for manure spills that have polluted streams, rivers and ground water in more than 30 states.
  • Dec 24 1998 Pollution in Vietnam Becomes More Serious: Carbon dioxide and nitric oxide due to vehicles, dust, and solid waste.
  • Dec 23 1998 Global Warming Can Destabilize an Ecosystem Colorado - gives invading plants an advantage over native plant life.
  • Dec 22 1998 Mexico City Smog Forces Third Day of Emergency
  • Dec 22 1998 Should Ethiopia Suffer the Present Level of Environmental Degradation? "Since most of our rivers eventually end up in foreign lands, our biggest export is fertile soil. A positive balance of commodity exchange minus the dollars." "The more people you have in a community, the more trees will have to be cut down to satisfy the needs of the people for wood for fuel and construction."
  • Dec 21 1998 Asia Faces Growing Toxic Waste Dangers: says UN Environment Program director. Despite the Basel Convention-- signed by 117 nations-- banning the export of toxic waste from rich countries to poor , underground concerns are importing banned pesticides, waste oils, heavy metals and hazardous medical waste, materials from from broken ships (asbestos, lead-based paint, heavy metals, and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in India, lead acid battery dumping in the Phillipines, waste oil dumping from South Korea in Thailand, Cambodia, Indonesia.
  • Dec 18 1998 Australian Population Aging Rapidly
  • Dec 18 1998 China's Capital Bans Coal to Stamp out Pollution
  • Dec 18 1998 Raw Materials Use and the Environment: report from the World Watch Institute. Consumers, businesses, and governments around the world are finding ways to profit and prosper while simultaneously slashing their use of wood, metal, stone, plastic, and other materials, removing many contributors to global warming, species loss, air and water pollution, lead poisoning, and a long list of other environmental and health problems.

  • Dec 16 1998 Worrying New El Nino Effect Seen in Amazon Rainforests. Dryness causes forest to emit carbon dioxide rather than absorbing it.
  • Dec 15 1998 Bottom trawlers decried as ocean clearcutters
  • Dec 15 1998 Shocking malnutrition found in North Korea ... from the New York Times. Food shortages, diarrhea due to impure water, and lack oh health care have contributed to the deaths of from 1 to 3 million, mostly children in the last 5 years. Long-term malnutrition has caused stunted growth, and impaired mental development.

  • Dec 15 1998 Tehran Schools Shut for Second Day Due to Smog
  • Dec 15 1998 Plains could be in for droughts worse than Dust Bowl
  • Dec 15 1998 Indonesia Has Difficulties to Save Wild Animals. Due to protracted economic crises, conservation areas have low priority. Mining in conservation areas and rampant poaching has threatened endangered species. Indonesia now has 12 percent of the world's mammals, 10 percent of reptiles, 17 percent of birds, and 25 percent of the world's marine biotas
  • Dec 15 1998 World Food Program Aid Projects Fruitful in Central China
  • Dec 15 1998 Southern California Sea Otter Population down 12 Percent in Year
  • Dec 15 1998 Guangzhou to Ease Pollution Caused by Motorcycles. If you've ever been to SE Asia, you've experienced the choking fumes from motorcycles. The noise is also reduced by these measures. An example of what happens when a country with a burgeoning population starts to become affluent. ... Karen
  • Dec 14 1998 Poisoned Environment in Nigeria. Industrial plants discharge toxic liquids and materials into rivers, carbon dioxide and dangerous gases and fumes into the air, and bury hazardous wastes threatening to poison underground water. Life expectancy in Nigeria has dropped from 65 to 48 years. Gas flaring from oil production puts Nigeria ahead of all other countries in global environmental pollution. Unsustainable population growth (doubling the world average of 2.1) in the country to blame for resource depletion and brings about food insecurity that forces farmers to rely on chemical fertilizers. Shifting cultivation, bush-burning, uncontrolled grazing, reckless felling of trees have led to massive deforestation and exposure of the topsoil which unduly over exposed the soil and the essential nutrients. Fishing methods that include the use of dynamite and pesticides have damaged the ecosystem.
  • Dec 14 1998 World Bank- 41 Percent of Earth's Surface Eaten up by Desertification. Due to exceptionally high population growth, which has increased demand for land and has led to migration to new lands that lack capacity. World-wide economic loss estimated at 42.3 billion US dollars.
  • Dec 14 1998 In Canada's Frigid North, Warming Trend Seen as Foe, Not Friend

  • Dec 11 1998 Britain Wants UN Body to Tackle Threat to Oceans: coral reef damage result of rising temperatures and pollution. 10 % of the world's coral reefs beyond recovery; 60 % at medium to high risk. Early warning sign of problems for the world's oceans.
  • Dec 10 1999 BBC Micro Credit Plan for Bangladesh: small loans given to families living below the poverty line. (This plan, when combined with education on family planning, is very effective in slowing population growth)
  • Dec 10 1999 BBC Urban growth means more hunger, says UN FAO (Food and Agricultural Organization) Full report is here
  • Dec 10 1998 Dangers of heat, humidity rising in US, due to global warming. Crucial factor in heat related deaths. From the New York Times.

  • Dec 10 1998 Italy Rejects Ambitious Floodgate Project to Protect Venice. Only a stopgap measure, inadequate to protect the city as the Adriatic rises ever higher, pushed on by global warming.
  • Dec 9 1998 Looking at "Big Picture" of Marine Disease
  • Dec 9 1998 Landscape Changes Contribute to Climate Changes. Intensive farming, forest clearing and other changes coincide with rising temperatures and rainfall shifts.
  • Dec 8 1998 Pennsylvania Dep Upgrades More Counties to Drought Warning
  • Dec 9 1998 Poverty to Blame for MALAWI'S Ecological Woes
  • Dec 8 1998 WWF warns about dangers to ocean
  • Dec 7 1998 Acid Rain Spreads to 40 Percent of China
  • Dec 7 1998 Industrial Pollution and Dust Crosses Pacific
  • Dec 6 1998 12 Primate Species under Threats of Extinction in Nigeria. Due to uncontrolled logging, tree felling and gas flaring. The gas flaring results in acid rain which destroys fresh water fishes and forests. Nigeria has 28% of the world's flared gas.
  • Dec 6 1998 Advocate for Population Policy Implementation - Zimbwabe Where one in every four adults is HIV positive. 1997 fertility rate 4.3. No free contraceptives as from January next year due to a lack of funding. 99% of pregnant women who died in child birth the world over, were Africans.
  • Dec 2 1998 Population-Cairo Conference: Rich Countries Not Keeping Promises to Poor
  • Dec 1 1998 Official, Citing Changes in China, Urges Restoration of U.S. Foreign Population Funding
  • Nov 30 1998 Africa Remains Upbeat on Protection of the Environment
  • Nov 30 1998 China: Trees Come to Mighty Rivers' Rescue
  • Nov 27 1998 Record Year for Weather-Related Disasters According to theWorldwatch Institute, storms, floods, droughts, and fires caused at least $89 billion in economic losses during the first eleven months of the year, which exceeds the $55 billion in losses for the entire decade of the 1980s. US: weather-related claims $8 billion; Honduras and Nicaragua: $5 billion due to Hurricane Mitch; $30 billion: flooding of China's Yangtze River; $3.4 billion: Bangladesh flooding; $2.5 billion: ice storm in Canada and New England; $2 billion: floods in Turkey; $2.5 billion: floods in Argentina and Paraguay. In many cases, due logging and agricultural clearing, forests dried out to the point where deliberately set fires were able to spread quickly out of control, or the loss of forests and wetlands,which normally intercept rainfall and allow it to be absorbed by the soil, permits water to rush across the land, carrying valuable topsoil with it. As the runoff races across deforested land, it causes floods and landslides with the strength to wipe out roads, farms, and fisheries far downstream.

  • Nov 27 1998 Indonesia Fires Blur Singapore's Skies
  • Nov 26 1998 Brazil under Fire Over Plan to Cut Amazon Program
  • Nov 26 1998 People Are to Blame for Global Warming
  • Nov 23 1998 Egypt to Control Cairo's Air Pollution
  • Nov 23 1998 Tibet Has China's Largest Area of Nature Reserves
  • Nov 23 1998 Humans Destroy 16 Million Ha of Forests each Year
  • Nov 23 1998 Indonesia Fires Devastate 3 Mln Hectares
  • Nov 23 1998 Foes Warn Kyoto Global Warming Treaty won't Survive Senate
  • Nov 22 1998 World Air Pollution to Balloon, Says Energy Group
    Carbon dioxide emissions will climb 70 percent by 2020 from 1995 levels without action by leading economies to limit air pollution levels
  • Nov 20 1998 China Closes Polluting Factories near Three Gorges
  • Nov 17 1998 Hungary Faces Aging Population Problem
  • Nov 17 1998 Global warming may harm human health Warmer winters alter the distribution of mosquito-borne diseases, while extreme weather events such as floods and droughts are spawning large "clusters" of infectious disease outbreaks. Heat waves cause thousands of deaths in India and hundreds in central Europe and the United States. Extreme droughts turn forests into tinderboxes, causing air pollution leading to a dramatic rise in the number of cases of eye irritation, respiratory illness and cardiovascular disease. Floods lead to upsurges of cholera, malaria and Rift Valley fever. Both floods, which encourage the growth of fungi, and droughts, which promote whiteflies, locusts and rodents, have an impact on agricultural production. Half of the world's agricultural production, worth $250 billion, is currently lost to pests and weeds and this figure could increase with warmer and more unpredictable weather. From the Johns Hopkins Program on Health Effects of Global Environmental Change
  • Nov 16 1998 Nitrous Oxide Found in Tropical Waters of Pacific
  • Nov 13 1998 October Temperatures Make Month Second Warmest on Record WorldWide
  • Nov 13 1998 Sri Lanka Launches Sex Education Project for Youths
  • Nov 12 1998 Beijing Bans Burning of Dead Grass, Leaves
  • Nov 11 1998 Argentina to Voluntarily Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions
  • Nov 10 1998 U.S. water use declines despite growing population.
    A 20 percent drop per person in 15 years. However, "the era of increasing water supplies is probably over".

  • Nov 10 1998 Zimbabwe's Air Hazardous to Health. Toxic emmissions from industrial processes and vehicles
  • Nov 9 1998 Letter Appeals to Beijingers Not to Eat Wild Animals

  • This is good, because any visitor to SE Asia and China will notice the apparent LACK of wildlife

    Oct 18 1998 US Teenage Pregnancy Rate Now Lowest in Two Decades

  • Oct 18 1998 Disputes over details could still trip up budget deal
    "Essentially what that means is that groups that talk about family planning, that advocate family planning, cannot have dollars -- U.S. dollars," said Rep. Nita Lowey, D-New York.
  • Oct 18 1998 China Academy of Sciences to Step up Ecological, Environmental Study of Yangtze
  • Oct 15 1998 Japan Offers "Ecological Credit" to Russia. (geothermal vs coal energy sources)
  • Oct 15 1998 W.Bank Helps Bangladesh Fight Pollution
  • Oct 14 1998 September Temperatures at Record Highs for World
  • Oct 14 1998 Central Africa Moves to Look after Its Forest
  • Oct 14 1998 Significant Losses to California's Wild Lands
  • Oct 12 1998 Record El Nino Took Devastating Toll on Nation's Wildlife, Says National Wildlife Federation Survey
  • Oct 9 1998 Heed the Public Outcry on Forests - Nairobi

  • Oct 8 1998 US Smog Threat Said Worse than Originally Thought

  • Oct 8 1998 Canada: Pollution at Lethal Level

  • Oct 8 1998 More Acid Rains for India

  • Oct 8 1998 Even Snow-Capped Mountains Are Contaminated

  • Oct 5 1998 Adding Contraceptive Coverage To Health Plans Estimated To Cost Less Than $2 Per Month, Per Enrollee
  • Oct 5 1998 Kenya: Low Use of Contraceptives Causes Concern
  • Oct 5 1998 Haiti: Not enough Services for Fast-Growing Population
  • Oct 3 1998 Nearly 10 Percent of Vietnam's Wildlife in Threat of Extinction
  • Oct 1998 National Geographic October 1998: Population
    Including a survey on population: you can participate!
  • Oct 1 1999 BBC Destruction of natural world 'speeding up', according to WWF. More that 30% of the natural world destroyed since 1970. Living Planet Index
  • Sept 29 1998 Southern Chinese Ban on cutting natural forests
  • Sept 29 1998 South Pole Ozone Hole may be largest on record
  • Sept 28 1998 Brazil: More and More young people jobless
  • Sept 26 1998 African Population to Reach Zero Population Growth the Hard Way - AIDS Populations devastated by AIDS and further threatened with food shortages, water depletion, ecological collapse and social chaos.

  • Sept 24 1998 Chinese Report Says Population under Control. Population that is 200 million less than what it could have been had nothing been done.
  • Sept 17 1998 Global Energy Consumption Increasing. Will grow by about 50% in 20 years, according to the World Energy Council.
  • Sept 17 1998 PAI Foreign Aid Bill: House Passes Global Gag Rule; Throws Free Speech out Window
  • Sep 9 1999 BBC World: The Poor get Poorer African people consume 20% less than they did 25 years ago, whereas the richest 20% of people consume nearly half of the world's meat and fish. 70 - 80 countries have lower per capita incomes than 10- 30 years ago. From the UN Development Program.
  • Sept 2 1998 FDA approves "morning After" pill (otherwise known as emergency contraception)
  • Sept 2 1998 UNFPA releases 1998 State of World Report
    The United Nations Population Fund released its annual report at sites around the world. This year's report focused on "new generations"-the growing portions of the global population under 24 and over 65, which would challenge "societies' ability to provide education and health care for the young, and social, medical and financial support for the elderly." The report also said world population would continue to grow by 80 million per year for the next decade.
  • Sept 2 1998 API Senate approves Foreign Operations Bill
    which included $18 billion dollars for the International Monetary Fund and did not include any restrictions on population assistance as was expected.
  • Aug 4, 1998 United Nations to Offer Sex Education Website.

  • July 1998 BBC World's population warning
  • April 1998 ENN Global warming could flood New York City
  • Apr 7 1998 Can economics save Suriname rain forest? Loss of biodiversity through deforestation not only removes materials that could be used to create pharmaceuticals, but eliminates herbal remedies
  • 09/01/98 Britannica.Com Earth Island Journal Water: In Short Supply. This article cites statistics from the Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health: 2.8 billion people in 48 countries will experience water shortages in the next 25 years. 31 countries already face shortages. The study said "it is important to act now" by slowing human population growth, conserving water and avoiding water pollution. Sydney Austrailia has a state-of-the-art water system that shows signs of Giardia and Cryptospondium. Even after a major upgrade of the system, the levels tested higher than before.