Earth Policy Institute
Encyclopedia
Earth Policy Institute is an environmental organization based in Washington DC in the United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

. It was founded by Lester R. Brown
Lester R. Brown
Lester Russel Brown is a United States environmental analyst, founder of the Worldwatch Institute, and founder and president of the Earth Policy Institute, a nonprofit research organization based in Washington, D.C...

 in 2001. It writes on average weekly articles regarding environmental indicators and ways to move civilization to a sustainable path both environmentally and economically.

Cited by environmental advocates, as well as policymakers and journalists alike, the Institute is a nonprofit that provides articles, data resources, and select free downloads of their books on their website.

Description

The Earth Policy Institute is to provide a plan of a sustainable future along with a roadmap of how to get from here to there. EPI works at the global level simply because no country can fully implement a Plan B economy in isolation.

EPI’s goals are (1) to provide a global plan (Plan B) for moving the world onto an environmentally and economically sustainable path, (2) to provide examples demonstrating how the plan would work, and (3) to keep the media, policymakers, academics, environmentalists, and other decision-makers focused on the process of building a Plan B economy.

Publications & releases

The Institute sends out articles called Updates, Eco-Economy Indicators, Book Bytes, Data Highlights, and Press Releases to the media and the general public on a free low-volume e-mail listserv and are posted on its website along with supporting data and sources for additional information.

Publications

Publications are released in several languages. International publishers for books can be found on the website, as well as links to other organizations who publish the translations of articles.

Books

The Institute has released the following books:

Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth. The purpose of Eco-Economy is to describe the new economy, to provide a vision of what it will look like, how it will work, and how we get from here to there (See Table of Contents). The eco-economy is designed to mesh with the Earth’s ecosystem instead of destroying it. The book contains detailed descriptions of the policy instruments, such as tax shifting and eco-labeling, which will be at the center of the restructuring process. Currently being published in 18 languages, Eco-Economy is the Institute’s flagship publication. Pulitzer Prize winner, E.O. Wilson, called it "an instant classic." TheGlobalist.com named it one of the Top Ten Books (in the world) in 2001. The Japanese edition was rated the number one recommended translation by Asahi Shimbun.
The Earth Policy Reader. In scores of countries, converging ecological deficits are undermining local economies on a scale that has no precedent. In The Reader, Lester Brown, Janet Larsen, and Bernie Fischlowitz-Roberts examine the economic costs of these ecological deficits and assess progress in building an eco-economy.

Outgrowing the Earth: The Food Security Challenge in an Age of Falling Water Tables and Rising Temperatures. Lester Brown documents the ways that human demands are outstripping the Earth's natural capacities-and how the resulting environmental damage is undermining food production. He also outlines the steps needed to secure future food supplies.

Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble. Our modern civilization is in trouble. We have created a bubble economy, one whose output is artificially inflated by overconsuming the Earth's natural capital. Nowhere is the bubble economy more evident than in the food sector where the world grain harvest has been inflated by overpumping aquifers, a practice that virtually guarantees a future drop in production when aquifers are depleted. Plan B is a way of sustaining economic progress worldwide, an alternative to continuing environmental deterioration and eventual economic decline. Rated one of the Top Ten Books of 2003 by the Globalist and winner of the National Library Wen-Jin Book Award (Chinese edition), Plan B calls for a worldwide mobilization to stabilize population and climate before they spiral out of control. It provides a plan for sustaining economic progress worldwide.

Plan B 2.0: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble.An expansion and update to Brown's best-selling Plan B. Here he outlines a plan, a budget, and a timetable for rescuing our twenty-first century civilization. The plan includes eradicating poverty and stabilizing population, protecting and restoring soils, forests, rangelands, and fisheries, and conserving the earth's biological diversity.

Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization. In this greatly revised edition, Brown outlines a survival strategy for our early twenty-first century civilization. The scale and complexity of the issues facing our fast-forward world have no precedent. Brown outlines an ambitious plan that includes cutting carbon emissions 80 percent by 2020, achievable with existing technologies.

Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization: Brown argues that food may be the issue that convinces the world of the need to cut carbon emissions 80 percent by 2020. Every major environmental trend from climate change to deforestation and water scarcity affect food supplies. In this completely revised edition, Brown focuses on details of the plan and how it is already emerging in the energy economy.

Updates

Plan B Updates are original, four-page analyses of environmental issues ranging from worldwide advances in renewable energy to deaths from heat waves to new flows of environmental refugees.

Eco-Economy Indicators

Eco-Economy Indicators consist of the 12 trends EPI uses to measure progress toward building a Plan B world. The 12 trends are Population
Population
A population is all the organisms that both belong to the same group or species and live in the same geographical area. The area that is used to define a sexual population is such that inter-breeding is possible between any pair within the area and more probable than cross-breeding with individuals...

, Global Economy, Grain Harvest, Fish Catch, Forest Cover, Water Resources
Water resources
Water resources are sources of water that are useful or potentially useful. Uses of water include agricultural, industrial, household, recreational and environmental activities. Virtually all of these human uses require fresh water....

, Carbon Emissions, Global Temperature, Ice Melting, Wind Power
Wind power
Wind power is the conversion of wind energy into a useful form of energy, such as using wind turbines to make electricity, windmills for mechanical power, windpumps for water pumping or drainage, or sails to propel ships....

, Bicycle Production, Solar Power
Solar power
Solar energy, radiant light and heat from the sun, has been harnessed by humans since ancient times using a range of ever-evolving technologies. Solar radiation, along with secondary solar-powered resources such as wind and wave power, hydroelectricity and biomass, account for most of the available...

.

Book Bytes

Book Bytes are highlights and adaptations from EPI's books and research.http://www.earth-policy.org/index.php?/book_bytes

EPI regularly contributes releases to other websites, including:
  • Sustainablog
  • Grist
  • Treehugger
  • Green Press
  • Mission Zero
  • World.edu
  • Care2
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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