Ottawa Mike
New member
"The two year study from the UN Environment Programmme, The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB), will show that the annual economic impact of biodiversity loss stands at between $2 trillion (£1.3 trillion) and $4.5 trillion, equating to up to 7.5 per cent of global gross domestic product." http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2266348/un-warns-biodiversity-loss
"It argues that contamination of water supplies, the loss of productive land through soil erosion and drought, and disruption to supply chains caused by deforestation and overfishing all result in multibillion-dollar costs that are largely ignored by the current global economic system."
Can anyone explain what exactly these costs are, how they are being paid and by whom? How can a cost "be ignored"?
From the answers so far, I get the feeling we are going to have to wait and read the report. It's just that "costs" of $2-4.5 TRILLION DOLLARS per year is quite an extrodinary number.
Is the real problem here the fact that current environmental regulations are not sufficient (I would probably agree) or is just simple human expansion and growth?
"It argues that contamination of water supplies, the loss of productive land through soil erosion and drought, and disruption to supply chains caused by deforestation and overfishing all result in multibillion-dollar costs that are largely ignored by the current global economic system."
Can anyone explain what exactly these costs are, how they are being paid and by whom? How can a cost "be ignored"?
From the answers so far, I get the feeling we are going to have to wait and read the report. It's just that "costs" of $2-4.5 TRILLION DOLLARS per year is quite an extrodinary number.
Is the real problem here the fact that current environmental regulations are not sufficient (I would probably agree) or is just simple human expansion and growth?