EPA United States Environmental Protection Agency information Resources Management (34D4) EPA/220/N-94-027i Sep/0ct1994 INTERNATIONAL UPDATE INFOTERRA GOPHER The INFOTERRA Network now has its own gopher! The gopher is managed by the Central European Environmental Data Request Facility (CEDAR) in Vienna, Austria. CEDAR is the Regional Service Centre for INFOTERRA sites in Central and Eastern Europe. The INFOTERRA Gopher may be accessed via the EPA Public Access Server (gopher.epa.gov) through the following steps: EPA Public Access Gopher Client OtnerEnvironmental Information OtherEnvironmental Gophers Central European Environmental Data Request Facility INFOTERRA: United Nations Environment Programme Currently, the main menu of the INFOTERRA gopher has these options: 1. About INFOTERRA How to subscribe to the INFOTERRA subscription list INFOTERRA subscription list archives/ Databases/ Monthly list of environmental meetings - WordPerfect/UUcode The Environment in Print 1994 Glossary of terms used with Environmental Impact Assessment UNEP INFOTERRA Thesaurus of Environmental Terms UNEP Staff E-mail Address Directory 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. The Databases option (#4) includes the following selections: 1. Description of the INFOTERRA Interna- tional Experts Database 2. Search the INFOTERRA International Experts Database > 3. Search for INFOTERRA National Focal Points by country > 4. Search the UN Environment Programme Global 500 Award Winners > 5. Books in Print of the United Nations Systems/ INFOTERRA/USA National Focal Point 6. Directory of UN Databases & Info Services -DUNDIS> The Environment in Print 1994 (#6) is the complete listing of UNEP publications including summary, price and availability information for each document. To subscribe to the INFOTERRA subscription list (#2): send e-mail to listproc@pan.cedar.univie.ac.at leave the subject line blank • send the message: subscribe INFOTERRA "your name" To post a message to the list send email to infpterra@pan.cedar.univie.ac.at. You may also access CEDAR and the INFOTERRA gopher via Ecogopher (ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu) under the Exploration option. Happy surfing! NEW BOOKS The following titles may be checked out from the Interna- tional Collection at the Headquarters Library: Global Environmental Politics. Porter,Gareth and Janet Welsh Brown. San Francisco: Westview Press. 1991. INTL HC79 E5P6691991, Qfoba! Network: Computers In a Sustainable Society. Young, John E. Washington, DC: WorldWatch Institute. 1993. INTL TKS10S.SY681993. The Greening of industrial Ecosystems. Allenby, Braden R. and Deanna J. Richards, Editors. Washington, DC: National Academy of Sciences. 1994. flvTt GE1Q5G741994. Women and Children First: Environment, Poverty, and Sustainable Development. Steady, Filomina Chioma, Editor. Rochester, Vermont: Schenkman Books Ltd. 1992. INTLHQ1240 W6451993. Women, the Environment and Sustainable Develop- ment: Towards a Theoretical Synthesis. Braidotti, Rosi et al., Editors. London: Zed Books Ltd. 1994. ------- Journal Articles of Interest "The Environmental Challenge," Kirwin, Joe. Earth Island Journal. (Summer 1994), p. 29. Apartheid has left a legacy of environmental degradation that includes severe airand waterpollution and extensive soil erosion and desertification. These problems are largely the result of coal and wood being burned forfuel, acid run-off from mismanaged coal mines, and people forced to eke out a living on marginal land to which they were forcibly removed. Now, many whites fear that environmental issues will be ignored by a black govern- ment trying to raise living standards in the black home- lands. However, there is a growing green movement in the country, and some industries have begun to develop programs to deal with pollution. "The Nile 2002: The Vision Toward Cooperation in the Nile Basin," Shady, Aly M., Adam, Ahmad M., and Mohamed, K. Waterlnternational. (June 1994), pp. 77-81. The Nile 2002 conference series started in February 1993 in Aswan, Egypt and was followed by the second in Khartoum, Sudan in January 1994. The main theme of both conferences was comprehensive water resources development of the Nile Basin. Forty-two papers were presented at the conference in Khartoum. These papers emphasized the need forcooperation among the co-basin countries and assistance from external support agencies and internal organizations. Institutional aspects, modali- ties and cooperation principles are discussed. "GATT Threatens US Environment," Nader, Ralph. Earth Island Journal. (Summer 1994), pp. 30-31. Naderargues that the WoridTrade Organization (WTO), established during the latest GATT negotiations, is an autocratic regime that, if approved, would have the power to force the US to change federal, state and local laws or else face economic sanctions. Laws at risk include those covering environmental protection, food safety and work- place safety, mainly because the WTO would be heavily influenced by large multinational corporations while greatly reducing citizen involvement. The WTO demands that all standards be the "least trade restrictive", so bans on dangerous products such as certain pesticides or destructive practices such as drifmet tuna fishing that kills dolphins, would automatically be threatened. Details about howthe WTO would operate are provided. "U.S. Log Import Rule Poses Threats to U.S. and Exporting Countries." Pesticide Action Network Updates Service (PANUPSl June 29.1994. The USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has proposed a rule to allow the importation of unmanufactured wood products from foreign temperate forests. Leading experts and the EPA say this could lead to the devastation of U.S. Western forests by imported pests and massive pesticide-based insect eradication programs, since the rule would require exporting countries to use large quantities of dangerous pesticides on the wood (including methyl bromide, an ozone-depleting chemi- calthat will be banned formanufacture and sale in the U.S. in 2002). Assessments prepared by the Forest Service expressed concern that pests would not be completely eliminated despite such heavy pesticide application. EPA also expressed concerns, stressing that the use of methyl bromide is not consistent with the Montreal Protocol and the Clean Air Act. Importation of foreign timberis being promoted by sawmill owners in the Pacific Northwest who seek cheap replacements for logs no longer available from public lands, despite Forest Service figures showing that overtwo billion board feet of North- west timber are exported annually. *To subscribe to PANUPS, send a message to: panna@igc.apc.org (this is a non-automated address, i.e. a person, not a computer will read your message). "The World Bank Now Fifty But How Fit?," French, Hilary F. WorldWatch. (July/August 1994), pp. 10-18. Fifty years ago, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund were created out of the Breton Woods Conference. Todate, the World Bankis the single largest source of development lending (US$22 billion in 1992). However, the World Bank has attracted heavy criticism for funding environmentally destructive projects that displace people and contaminate natural resources. Despite a proliferation of policies and the creation of a vice-presi- dency for Environmentally Sustainable Development, the World Bank will need to prove its willingness to change. For copies of these articles visit INFOTERRA in the Headquarters Library, call (202) 260-5927, or e-mail libra ry.infoterra. UNEP (202) 260-5917 Head Ubrarian Elizabeth Behrendt (202) 260-5638 Reference Librarian Kerith McFadden (202) 260-3638 ESza McLeod (202) 260-5927 JNFOTERRA/EP3 Ubrarian Lara Wiggert (202)260-9357 INFOTERRA is contractor operated and managed by the Office of Information Resources Management (OIRM), Information Management and Services Division (tMSD), Information Sharing Branch. ------- |