Rachel's Precaution Reporter #50
Wednesday, August 9, 2006

From: Center for Ecoliteracy ..............................[This story printer-friendly]
July 18, 2006

A PRECAUTIONARY TALE

[Rachel's introduction: "In adopting the precautionary principle, members of the Emeryville School District school board chose to assume the role of guardians of this generation and those to come. As guardians they are taking steps to protect children for the long term."]

By Carolyn Raffensperger

Children in our day suffer from a host of diseases and problems that our great-grand parents could not have imagined. We have seen increases over the span of one generation in autism, learning disabilities, certain birth defects and cancers, asthma, obesity, and diabetes. The nature of the increases point to the possibility that these afflictions may have been preventable. Some statistics are startling: the chance that a little girl would get breast cancer was only one in 25 when my mother got married. But now, one woman in seven can expect to get breast cancer. By the time my 12-year-old niece gets married, one in three will likely face that diagnosis. Unless we do something.

My generation came of age in a world in which the best minds thought we could measure and manage risk. We believed that economic decisions would take care of any unacceptable risk and the market would make necessary course corrections. That old approach has failed. Measuring and managing risk has led to global warming, emptying the oceans of fish, polluting much of the world with toxic chemicals, and increasing chronic diseases in humans. The GNP may be healthy, but our world and our children are not.

Risk management may represent a flawed strategy, but a new and significant approach to protecting public health has emerged in the last decade. In January of 1998, at the Johnson Foundation's Wingspread Conference Center, environmental leaders met to develop guiding principles for evaluating decisions that affect human health and the environment. They came to consensus around what is referred to as the precautionary principle, or the "forecaring" principle. It is based on the simple notion that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

The group called on governments, corporations, communities, and scientists to implement the precautionary principle when making decisions affecting public health:

When an activity raises threats of harm to the environment or human health, precautionary measures should be taken even if some cause and effect relationships are not fully established scientifically. In this context the proponent of an activity, rather than the public, should bear the burden of proof. The process of applying the precautionary principle must be open, informed, and democratic, and must include potentially affected parties. It must also involve an examination of the full range of alternatives, including no action.

In other words, we can take precautionary action in order to prevent harm and suffering in the face of uncertainty. This simple idea of preventing harm is, at its core, an ethical precept, with its origins in other ethical norms like the physician's Hippocratic Oath to do no harm or the Golden Rule, which says we should do to others as we would have them do to us. In this case, "others" represents our fellow beings on the Earth, including future generations. Implementing the precautionary principle emphasizes upstream evaluation and decision- making -- preventing potential problems and harm -- in contrast to the risk management approach based on evaluating our capacity to deal with problems downstream.

While several state, municipal and county governments have adopted the precautionary principle to guide environmental and public health policy, public schools have been in the vanguard of this precautionary principle movement. The school is a primary environment for children from the day they enter kindergarten until the day they walk out with a diploma. In the late 1990's the Los Angeles Unified School District adopted the precautionary principle paired with a program of Integrated Pest Management to eliminate unnecessary pesticides from the buildings and grounds of the largest school district in the United States. LAUSD chose this route because they believed that a child's future health and learning potential should not be compromised through the use of pesticides that include neurotoxicants, carcinogens, or mutagens on playgrounds or in classrooms.

More recently the Governing Authority of the Emeryville Unified School District in California adopted the precautionary principle as the foundation of all its environmental policy. This far-reaching policy will guide everything from curriculum to building materials and the food served at the schools. Some elements of the precautionary principle included in the policy are the following:

** The community has a right to complete and accurate information on the impacts of school district choices. The proponent of the product or service must supply the information, not the public.

** Precautionary decisions should be transparent, participatory and democratic.

** The district asserts an obligation to examine and choose the alternative with the least harmful impact on human health and the environment.

** When evaluating those alternatives, there is a duty to consider all the reasonably foreseeable costs, including raw materials, manufacturing, transportation, use, cleanup, eventual disposal and health costs even if such costs are not reflected in the initial price. Short- and long-term benefits and time thresholds should be considered when making decisions.

Taking the long view is key to the precautionary principle. Our children stand on the threshold of the future. My Indigenous friends say that the precautionary principle is the seventh generation principle, which comes from the Six Nations Iroquois Confederacy practice of making decisions with the seventh generation in mind. The only way we can guarantee that we leave blessings and an inheritance for future generations, rather than the fruits of our shortsightedness, is to acknowledge that we can't wait for science to prove everything before we take action. We need to use the precautionary principle and make decisions that are the wisest, fairest, and most preventive of harm.

In adopting the precautionary principle, members of the Emeryville School District school board chose to assume the role of guardians of this generation and those to come. As guardians they are taking steps to protect children for the long term. Those steps were laid out in 10 action points, three of which describe a precautionary food policy. The food recommendations are to:

Follow and build upon the examples of New York City, Chicago, Nashville, San Francisco and others and ban soda, candy, junk food, and fast food from all school grounds.

Evaluate the district's school lunch program to ensure good nutrition and consider developing a farm-to-school program.

Encourage the development of school gardens and green schoolyards as hands-on learning tools that promote good nutrition and stewardship of the land.

The Emeryville School District leaders intuitively understand that school meal programs stand at the center of our hope for a good and healthy future. Lunch is the time when we can say, "We have provided food that will nurture your body and not harm you. We want to show you your place in the community of farmers, bees, water, and the land that grew your food. We promise to be wise guardians of your future."

School lunch is our communion, of past lessons and hope for the future, of knowledge that wisdom accrues in small bites, and of our vow to forecare.

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Carolyn Raffensperger is the Executive Director of the Science and Environmental Health Network (SEHN). In 1982 she left a career as an archaeologist to work for the Sierra Club, where she addressed an array of environmental issues, including forest management, river protection, pesticide pollutants, and disposal of radioactive waste. She began working for SEHN in 1994. As an environmental lawyer, she specializes in fundamental changes in law and policy necessary for the protection and restoration of public health and the environment. Carolyn is coeditor of Protecting Public Health and the Environment: Implementing the Precautionary Principle (Island Press, 1999), the most comprehensive exploration of the history, theory, and implementation of the precautionary principle. She coined the term "ecological medicine" to encompass the broad notions that health and healing are entwined with the natural world. She writes the Public Trust column for the Environmental Law Institute's journal Environmental Forum.

This essay is part of Thinking outside the Lunchbox, an ongoing series of essays connected to the Center for Ecoliteracy's Rethinking School Lunch program. Read all the essays at www.ecoliteracy.org

No part of this article may be reproduced without permission. Please contact the Center for Ecoliteracy to obtain permission.

Copyright 2006. Center for Ecoliteracy

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From: Stateside Dispatch ..................................[This story printer-friendly]
July 31, 2006

ILLINOIS JOINS 'PRE-SCHOOL FOR ALL' MOVEMENT

[Rachel's introduction: All across the U.S., people are taking action to prevent life-long problems for children by helping them get a good educational start in life.]

This past week, Illinois Governor Blagojevich signed the first law in the nation that establishes the goal of universally-available public preschool for all 3- and 4-year olds in that state.

As a first step, the legislature this year set aside $45 million in additional funding to open up 10,000 new slots with a priority for children with language barriers, developmental disabilities and middle-income families earning less than four times the poverty rate -- up to $80,000 per year for a family of four. In the last four years, Illinois had already increased funding for preschool by $90 million, so this was the natural next step.

Currently, federal and state dollars in Illinois pay for preschool for 130,000 low-income or academically "at risk" Illinois children, but the new law aims to make pre-K available regardless of income, with the goal of enrolling 190,000 children in publicly-funded preschool by 2010.

"This is a bill that can raise the bar for the rest of the country," said Dr. T. Berry Brazelton, a Harvard professor of pediatrics and national child development expert, in an interview with the Chicago Sun Times.

Universal Pre-K: An Emerging Trend

Illinois' new law is just part of a trend in recent years of expanding pre-K in the states; in 2005, state lawmakers increased pre-K funding by $600 million across 26 states, adding 180,000 more children to pre- school rolls around the country.

And the increased commitments to pre-K continued this year. As just one example, Tennessee announced that it will add 227 new pre-K classes to serve 5000 "at risk" 4-year-olds statewide, bringing the state total to 13,500, funded by a combination of state lottery and general revenues.

Still, most families across the country either have to pay for private programs or do without preschool for their kids, since fewer than 10 percent of 3- and 4-year-olds nationwide are in state-funded preschool programs. Because of this, states are increasingly moving towards integrating existing preschool programs into a more universal pre-K program that is seen as an extension of the overall K-12 public education system. In creating its goal of universal pre-K, Illinois is joining Florida, Georgia and Oklahoma as states with statewide preschool programs.

And other states are looking to join these pioneers; while California voters did not support a recent pre-K ballot initiative (partly, some analysts believe, because of general ballot initiative fatigue), the legislature did support a substantial expansion of preschool funds. And new Virginia Governor Tim Kaine has announced the goal of universal preschool for every 4-year old in that state, although the plan is not likely to be introduced until 2008 after a commission established by the governor comes back with recommendations on the best way to design and fund the program.

Why Universal Pre-K?

Three simple reasons explain this turn to universal pre-K:

** the desire for greater equity in our educational system

** the clear economic returns to society from investing in early education

** the need to lift the financial burden on parents

Educational Equity: Since research increasingly shows that early education provides children with the skills necessary for later school success, most analysts see broadly-accessible preschool as critical for giving all children an equal educational opportunity. A study by NIEER of pre-K programs in five states -- Michigan, New Jersey, Oklahoma, South Carolina and West Virginia -- found that children in those states had clear gains in early language, literacy, and mathematical development. A more recent study of the Oklahoma pre-K program found across-the board gains from preschool for all socio- economic groups. Significantly, the Oklahoma study indicated that lower-income children gained more benefits when programs included middle-income children-- a strong argument for more universal preschool programs that bring children together from all communities.

Economic Returns: And if the returns to the children are clear, so are the economic returns to states investing in them. Just last week, a major study, The Economic Promise of Investing in High Quality Preschool, released by the business-backed Committee for Economic Development at a DC conference, highlighted research that every dollar invested in preschool is expected to yield $2 to $4 in future societal benefits, including savings for states from less crime and lower remedial educational costs down the road.

Easing Financial Burden on Parents: One key benefit of preschool programs are that they ease the financial burden on parents of paying for child care and preschool programs themselves-- and making sure that working families are forced to put their kids in substandard and potentially unsafe care situations out of financial desperation. A recent study found that families with a 4-year-old spend an average of $3,016 to $9,628 a year in child care fees-- roughly 10% of median household incomes and an even higher percentage for many lower-income working families. While pre-K doesn't solve all those child care issues, it can play a significant role in easing the burden and can provide a real alternative to often substandard child care options available in many communities.

Models for Universal Pre-K

The Oklahoma Preschool Program is the longest standing state pre-K program and has achieved the highest percentage of 4-year olds in publicly-funded preschool in the country. The link above highlights key statutory provisions on defining eligibility, the responsibility of local school boards, and the creation of both curriculum and teacher certification standards for the pre-K program.

Senate Bill 1497, the Illinois Preschool for All law, doesn't create a similar right by Illinois children to pre-K education yet, but instead specifies a grant program for local school systems to expand their preschool programs, along with guidelines for the state Board of Education to assist in the expansion of the program to achieve the goal of universal access in coming years as funding expands.

The legal organization, Starting at 3, has a state-by-state breakdown of statutes and the legal context for pre-K systems in different states, while the Economic Commission of the States tracks ongoing legislative developments. The Commission also has a searchable database of program characteristics from different states.

Pre[k]now put out a recent report, Funding the Future, outlining the different ways states are funding their pre-K programs.

The Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP) issued two recent reports, Missed Opportunities on how states can better use Title I funds from the No Child Left Behind Act to fund preschool, and All Together Now on how states are integrating community-based child care centers into their pre-K programs.

Universal Pre-Kindergarten Organizations Supporting Pre-K

pre[k]now -- advocacy center for pre-K

Starting at 3 -- legal center focused on preschool funding litigation

Economic Commission of the States -- provides education news and assistance to state on education issues

National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)- nation's largest organization of early childhood educators

CLASP -- national non-profit focused on the needs of low-income families

Preschool California -- state group with range of resources on pre-K issues

Legislation and Models for Pre-K

Oklahoma Preschool Program

Senate Bill 1497, the Illinois Preschool for All law

Starting at 3 has a state-by-state breakdown of statutes and the legal context for state pre-K systems

Economic Commission of the States tracks ongoing legislative developments

Reports and Studies

The Institute for Women's Policy Research: The Price of School Readiness: A Tool for Estimating the Cost of Universal Preschool in the States- reports built around a model for measuring costs of implementing pre-K

Pre[k]now, Funding the Future on funding pre-K

CLASP's Missed Opportunities on using Title I funds from NCNL to fund preschool and All Together Now on integrating community-based child care centers into pre-K.

American Business Leaders' Views on Publicly-funded Pre-Kindergarten and the Advantages to the Economy details polling by Zogby International.

NIEER: The Effects of State Prekindergarten Programs on Young Children's School Readiness in Five States

The Effects of Universal Pre-K on Cognitive Development -- study done at Georgetown University

Committee for Economic Development: The Economic Promise of Investing in High Quality Preschool

Stateline.org: Preschool gets record boost in '05

Copyright 2006 Progressive States Network

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From: Inside Green Business ..............................[This story printer-friendly]
July 24, 2006

COMPANY'S GREEN CHEMISTRY PROGRAM WINS ENVIRONMENTALISTS' PRAISE

Profile: SC Johnson

[Rachel's introduction: The SC Johnson Company has devised a system for ranking chemicals based on their environmental impact, thus giving a boost to green chemistry.]

By David Clarke

As companies face mounting pressure to limit their use of toxic chemicals, a patented system called "Greenlist," developed by SC Johnson for classifying and managing chemicals based on their environmental impact, has already influenced other attempts to eliminate harmful chemicals, including efforts by activists who praise the firm's aggressive promotion of greener chemistry.

The family-owned consumer products manufacturer based in Racine, WI, has made its Greenlist process a key element of its business strategy, relying on it to influence chemical companies that supply its raw materials.

Besides its Greenlist efforts, the company is working with DuPont, Hewlett-Packard and Tetra Pak, as well as a group of leading universities, to develop a "base of the pyramid (BOP) protocol" that can identify and develop sustainable new products and business in low- income markets -- a cutting-edge direction in sustainability.

While Greenlist and the BOP protocol are two ways in which SC Johnson is using sustainability as a business strategy, there are other programs as well, says Scott Johnson, vice president of SC Johnson's Global Environmental and Safety Actions. For example, one of the company's largest facilities for manufacturing globally sold products, located in Waxdale, outside Racine, is solely powered by two co- generation turbines that burn landfill and natural gas, saving the company millions of dollars a year while obviating the production of 52,000 tons of greenhouse gases annually.

In South Africa and elsewhere, the company also participates in programs that promote its products while reducing malaria and benefiting the health of local communities.

Greenlist, however, stands out among the company's efforts, according to several outside observers. Basically, Greenlist is a process the company uses to evaluate whether the chemicals it uses in its products could adversely impact human health or the environment, says Dave Long, SC Johnson's Sustainable Innovation Manager. Depending on the type of material, four to seven criteria are used evaluate and rate chemicals. The criteria include whether a chemical biodegrades, which would make it less risky; its potential to harm aquatic organisms and human health; how the European Union (EU) classifies the chemical based on its environmental impacts; its vapor pressure, which affects its potential to become an air pollutant; its octanol/water coefficient, which affects its water polluting properties; and other factors.

Depending on how environmentally good or bad a chemical is rated based on the Greenlist criteria, it is given a number: 3 is "best," 2 is "better," and 1 is "acceptable." A raw material rated 0 can be used, but only when there is no viable alternative and only with senior management approval. In such cases, a request must clearly demonstrate that there is no alternative and include a plan for eventually eliminating the material.

"Everything is science-based," says Long, who notes, for example, that aquatic toxicity testing must use three or more organisms. Also, he says, for biodegradability assessments the company uses the 301 approach employed by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

Since its inception in 2001, Greenlist has been used to rate 95 percent of the raw materials the company uses. SC Johnson does not manufacture chemicals but instead buys raw materials from hundreds of chemical companies. These raw materials include waxes, preservatives, fragrances, solvents, propellants, resins, surfactants, insecticides, packaging, and other materials.

The Greenlist process arises from a basic company commitment to environmentally preferable choices, according to senior officials. "We've long been embracing sustainability," Johnson says. "We aren't jumping on a bandwagon or reacting to government regulations. In fact, the standards we hold for ourselves are sometimes ahead of the government regulations," he notes, adding that the company is also working in partnership with government programs.

"We're doing today what five generations of Johnson family leadership have led by example," says Johnson, who is not a relative of the family. "We're doing this because it's the right thing to do," both for the business today and for future generations, he adds.

The company's focus on Greenlist grew out of a personal commitment by Fisk Johnson, the company's current chairman, to continue in a tradition established by his father and grandfather, explains Long. In the 1930s, Fisk's grandfather sought out a sustainable source of wax, and his father, a founding member of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, phased out ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons three years before doing so was mandated. When he became chairman in 2000, he recognized that eco-efficiency -- which focuses on reducing waste and raising recycling rates -- is limited in scope, and so 2he asked, "What do we do next?" explains Long. The company sells products in 110 countries, has operations in 70 nations, and thus has a large environmental footprint. The question for Fisk Johnson was, "How do we improve it?"

When SC Johnson first looked for methods to evaluate products and materials so it could reduce its footprint, it did not set out to build a new chemical ranking system. But no system existed to measure the attributes of raw materials and "steer formulators in the right direction," Long says. So the company created the Greenlist process.

Originally, SC Johnson's goal was to raise the overall rating for its raw materials to 1.4 in six years, almost halfway to the highest ranking of 3. The company reached 1.41 two years ahead of schedule, resulting in the increased use of "better" and "best" materials by more than 13 million kilograms and eliminating more than 11 million kilograms of 0-rated materials. In December 2002, the company phased out the production of chlorine-based external packaging materials worldwide. It also phased out bottles made of polyvinyl chloride and the use of bleached paperboard, which relies on chlorine as a bleaching agent. These and other changes did not add significant costs for raw materials, the company says.

Today, when a Greenlist rating is completed, the results are instantly sent to SC Johnson chemists worldwide. Company chemists try to formulate new products using chemicals rated 3 or 2. When they reformulate existing products, they must include materials that have an equal or higher rating than materials used in the original formula. For example, when SC Johnson reformulated Windex in 2002, it eliminated a volatile organic compound (VOC) solvent and thereby reduced VOC use by 1.8 million pounds. Windex was reformulated again in 2004, resulting in the elimination of 400,000 million pounds of VOCs and improving Windex's cleaning power by 30 percent.

Since receiving a patent last December for Greenlist, SC Johnson has been in the process of licensing the system to one company and is in discussion with others. The licensing is royalty-free, but the company stipulates that a user of Greenlist must 1) set goals to improve the company's environmental footprint; 2) track implementation; and 3) report publicly the progress being made against the goal. SC Johnson receives credit as the creator and owner of Greenlist.

"We get interesting questions from companies that are looking for examples of how they can 'green' their chemicals," says Long. "We've even been contacted by the World Bank," which is interested not in the Greenlist chemical criteria but in the applying the basic model to evaluate light bulbs that are more efficient but have a higher mercury content.

The next Greenlist step is to set the company's goal for 2011. That goal is still being defined, but it will be "a significant increase in the score," requiring "disruptive technology, not incremental change," says Long. For example, a switch from petroleum to bio-based products is a possibility.

"The striking thing about Greenlist is that it's a core strategy for the company," says Rich Liroff, a senior fellow at World Wildlife Fund who works with the Investor Environmental Health Network. SC Johnson has made Greenlist "a core goal," Liroff says -- actively training employees to use the process "from the get-go" while tying employee compensation to successful use of the system.

"No doubt about it, they're a leader," Liroff says. "It's quite remarkable."

In fact, he adds, "Quite a few points in my program were inspired by their program."

Liroff developed a benchmarking tool for both investors and senior corporate executives to use in assessing the progress of their own companies, or of other companies, in meeting the growing demand for environmentally preferable products. Other environmentalists echo Liroff's views, although one activist questioned why the company's plug-in household fragrance produce, Glade, is even necessary.

Greenlist is now several years old. But a new sustainability effort under way at SC Johnson involves the BOP protocol. About the company's BOP strategy, Johnson says, "There are four billion people at the base of the world's economic pyramid. As we continue to grow the business, this is a critical mass of people to tap into by developing business models that target these consumers."

Johnson notes that the company is at work on an effort to test the BOP protocol in Kenya, a project that lets local people help SC Johnson understand the real needs of the community. "A business model is being developed and piloted by the company in partnership with some of the groups the [BOP] 'testers' worked with in Kenya," Johnson says.

The company has also had success helping farmers grow the natural source of insecticide pyrethrum, an active ingredient used in Raid, helping SC Johnson while also enabling the farmers to grow a more sustainable business and boost their household income, Johnson says.

Johnson comments that what is important with BOP is that, "At the same time we are seeking to grow profits for the company, in using the BOP model and developing products and businesses in partnership with BOP consumers, we are bringing these consumers sustainable value."

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From: Countercurrents.org ................................[This story printer-friendly]
July 8, 2006

AN INCONVENIENT PRINCIPLE

[Rachel's introduction: "Regrettably, the precautionary principle -- a simple, sensible concept -- has surreptitiously slipped out of the global-warming discussion. It is time for it to be concertedly reinserted into the debate."]

By Jules and Maxwell Boykoff

With Al Gore's recently released book and film on global warming -- "An Inconvenient Truth" -- the former vice president has managed to deliver a one-two punch that is both staggering and, well, chilling.

"An Inconvenient Truth" brings global warming into high relief, demonstrating its far-reaching implications for the world-as-we-know- it. Gore also attempts to re-frame global warming as a moral issue that must be dealt with collectively and immediately.

Along the way, Gore makes use of a study we conducted in 2004, which found that the U.S. mass media were playing a problematic role in the global warming discussion simply by offering balanced coverage.

As he mentions in his film and book, our research revealed that 53% of articles appearing in major U.S. newspapers over a fourteen year period gave equal weight to the findings of the most reputable climate-change scientists from around the world who asserted that humans were having a discernible impact on the planet's temperature and the work of a small band of global-warming skeptics who denied humans contributed to changes in the climate.

Balanced coverage -- telling 'both' sides of the story -- is widely considered one of the pillars of high-quality, professional journalism. However, when applied to this critical environmental issue, balance greatly amplified the views of the skeptics, many of whom are funded by Exxon-Mobil, the Competitive Enterprise Institute, and their fossil-fuel-pushing, status-quo-desiring allies.

Therefore, through balanced reporting, the U.S. public and policymakers were presented with the misleading scenario that there was a raging debate among climate-change scientists regarding humanity's role in global warming.

While the human contributions to global warming are not seriously debated in the scientific community, what should be done to deal with this growing problem is hotly discussed. Yet, everyone agrees that unless we make sharp reductions in our greenhouse-gas emissions, global warming will significantly alter the climate -- from glaciers to coastlines to ecosystems -- in potentially irreversible ways.

This brings us to the inevitable intersection between science and political science.

In a recent interview Al Gore said the United States is in "a Category 5 denial" regarding "the seriousness of the global warming crisis." He then asserted, "Until the American people change their minds about this reality, then the politicians in both parties are going to find rough sledding when they propose the serious solutions that are needed."

If Gore is correct and legislators need strong public opinion as political cover, perhaps they should take another glimpse at the numbers.

A recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that 59 percent of those surveyed believed that action needed to be taken to combat global warming while a majority told Gallup that protection of the environment should be given priority, even if it might hamper economic growth.

Sure, global warming does not garner the attention of more immediate, headline-grabbing issues like the War in Iraq, terrorism, or national security, but it is a topic that the public is both familiar with and ready to move on.

Even if U.S. residents were not in such an open-minded mood, policymakers should nevertheless be willing to take the lead in combating global warming. In theory that's why we call them 'leaders.'

This brings us to an inconvenient principle that U.S. legislators should consider: the precautionary principle.

In 1992 the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development concluded by issuing the Rio Declaration. Principle 15 of the declaration stated: "Where there are threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation."

Translated into the philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi, this precautionary principle means if you don't know what you're doing, at least don't do anything harmful.

When risks of alternative policy choices are difficult to calculate, as they are with global warming, the precautionary principle requires choosing the option that minimizes harm. This principle provides a basis for acting before one has full information. Therefore it is relevant to the global-warming crisis since waiting for full information may mean postponing action beyond the climate-change tipping point.

Regrettably, the precautionary principle -- a simple, sensible concept -- has surreptitiously slipped out of the global-warming discussion. It is time for it to be concertedly reinserted into the debate.

As "An Inconvenient Truth" points out, our geological clock is ticking. Even if we do not feel the hot hand of global warming at our collective throat, we need to take action now -- before it's too late.

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Jules Boykoff (boykoff@pacificu.edu)is an assistant professor of political science at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon. Maxwell Boykoff (maxwell.boykoff@eci.ox.ac.uk) is a research fellow at the University of Oxford's Environmental Change Institute in Oxford, England.

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Rachel's Precaution Reporter offers news, views and practical examples of the Precautionary Principle, or Foresight Principle, in action. The Precautionary Principle is a modern way of making decisions, to minimize harm. Rachel's Precaution Reporter tries to answer such questions as, Why do we need the precautionary principle? Who is using precaution? Who is opposing precaution?

We often include attacks on the precautionary principle because we believe it is essential for advocates of precaution to know what their adversaries are saying, just as abolitionists in 1830 needed to know the arguments used by slaveholders.

Rachel's Precaution Reporter is published as often as necessary to provide readers with up-to-date coverage of the subject.

As you come across stories that illustrate the precautionary principle -- or the need for the precautionary principle -- please Email them to us at rpr@rachel.org.

Editors:
Peter Montague - peter@rachel.org
Tim Montague - tim@rachel.org

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