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AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SUSTAINABILITY |
Heading: Economy Topic: Trade
IEF sustapediaTrade and environment
Trade has the potential to
contribute to the highest possible level of global sustainable development,
but only if social and environmental aspects are considered along with
economic benefits. Attention has thus increasingly turned to the
significant impacts of trade on the environment. Trade in environmental
resources in the global market increases the international pressures
on those resources, without necessarily taking account of non-market
values of those resources at the national and local levels. Many chemicals,
organisms, wastes and other materials traded can have significant environmental
impacts, sometimes more than the importing country is prepared to manage.
The growing international flux of energy, materials and information
traded is a major force for globalization increasing the interdependence
of countries and requiring more integrated approaches to both trade
and environmental resource accounting and management (Dahl,
1994).
Dahl, Arthur L. 1994. Global sustainability and its implications for trade. GATT Trade and Environment Bulletin 9:87-89
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Last updated 26 February 2006