Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability

Tanzania’s wealth per capita has declined because its rapid population growth has outpaced investment. This decline in wealth is almost entirely accounted for by its “renewable natural capital” loss, consisting of the country’s agricultural land, cropland, forests, forest products, and protected areas. The country’s human capital per capita is stable while its physical capital per capita has risen by 13 percent. Yet its degrading natural capital base clearly illustrates the magnitude of its sustainability problem: the total renewable natural capital per capita has fallen by 35 percent over the past 20 years, whereas the non-land renewable natural capital per capita has declined by 47 percent (that is, almost halved in 20 years). Tanzania cannot afford another 10 years of the same negative trends in resource degradation. The opportunity Tanzania faces is to reconcile the use of natural resources to meet the demands of the population and economy with the need to maintain functioning ecosystems. Reaching this balance will catalyze sustained growth. However, the current trend in the use of natural resources is not sustainable, leading to persistent degradation and loss of ecosystems, which constitute the main cause of the natural capital. This CEA has identified spatially and temporally differentiated approaches and solutions toward ensuring sustainable resource management for long-term use.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019-05
Subjects:NATURAL RESOURCES, ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, DEFORESTATION, LAND DEGRADATION, WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, BIODIVERSITY, FISHERIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, AIR POLLUTION, WATER POLLUTION, INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION, SOLID WASTE, MINING, ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT, CLIMATE RESILIENCE, URBANIZATION, INSTITUTIONS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/356211556727592882/Tanzania-Country-Environmental-Analysis-Environmental-Trends-and-Threats-and-Pathways-to-Improved-Sustainability
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31643
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spelling dig-okr-10986316432021-09-16T13:32:40Z Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability World Bank Group NATURAL RESOURCES ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT DEFORESTATION LAND DEGRADATION WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT BIODIVERSITY FISHERIES CLIMATE CHANGE AIR POLLUTION WATER POLLUTION INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION SOLID WASTE MINING ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT CLIMATE RESILIENCE URBANIZATION INSTITUTIONS Tanzania’s wealth per capita has declined because its rapid population growth has outpaced investment. This decline in wealth is almost entirely accounted for by its “renewable natural capital” loss, consisting of the country’s agricultural land, cropland, forests, forest products, and protected areas. The country’s human capital per capita is stable while its physical capital per capita has risen by 13 percent. Yet its degrading natural capital base clearly illustrates the magnitude of its sustainability problem: the total renewable natural capital per capita has fallen by 35 percent over the past 20 years, whereas the non-land renewable natural capital per capita has declined by 47 percent (that is, almost halved in 20 years). Tanzania cannot afford another 10 years of the same negative trends in resource degradation. The opportunity Tanzania faces is to reconcile the use of natural resources to meet the demands of the population and economy with the need to maintain functioning ecosystems. Reaching this balance will catalyze sustained growth. However, the current trend in the use of natural resources is not sustainable, leading to persistent degradation and loss of ecosystems, which constitute the main cause of the natural capital. This CEA has identified spatially and temporally differentiated approaches and solutions toward ensuring sustainable resource management for long-term use. 2019-05-07T15:23:19Z 2019-05-07T15:23:19Z 2019-05 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/356211556727592882/Tanzania-Country-Environmental-Analysis-Environmental-Trends-and-Threats-and-Pathways-to-Improved-Sustainability http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31643 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Country Environmental Analysis Africa Tanzania
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic NATURAL RESOURCES
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
DEFORESTATION
LAND DEGRADATION
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
BIODIVERSITY
FISHERIES
CLIMATE CHANGE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER POLLUTION
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
SOLID WASTE
MINING
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
URBANIZATION
INSTITUTIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
DEFORESTATION
LAND DEGRADATION
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
BIODIVERSITY
FISHERIES
CLIMATE CHANGE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER POLLUTION
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
SOLID WASTE
MINING
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
URBANIZATION
INSTITUTIONS
spellingShingle NATURAL RESOURCES
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
DEFORESTATION
LAND DEGRADATION
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
BIODIVERSITY
FISHERIES
CLIMATE CHANGE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER POLLUTION
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
SOLID WASTE
MINING
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
URBANIZATION
INSTITUTIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
DEFORESTATION
LAND DEGRADATION
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
BIODIVERSITY
FISHERIES
CLIMATE CHANGE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER POLLUTION
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
SOLID WASTE
MINING
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
URBANIZATION
INSTITUTIONS
World Bank Group
Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability
description Tanzania’s wealth per capita has declined because its rapid population growth has outpaced investment. This decline in wealth is almost entirely accounted for by its “renewable natural capital” loss, consisting of the country’s agricultural land, cropland, forests, forest products, and protected areas. The country’s human capital per capita is stable while its physical capital per capita has risen by 13 percent. Yet its degrading natural capital base clearly illustrates the magnitude of its sustainability problem: the total renewable natural capital per capita has fallen by 35 percent over the past 20 years, whereas the non-land renewable natural capital per capita has declined by 47 percent (that is, almost halved in 20 years). Tanzania cannot afford another 10 years of the same negative trends in resource degradation. The opportunity Tanzania faces is to reconcile the use of natural resources to meet the demands of the population and economy with the need to maintain functioning ecosystems. Reaching this balance will catalyze sustained growth. However, the current trend in the use of natural resources is not sustainable, leading to persistent degradation and loss of ecosystems, which constitute the main cause of the natural capital. This CEA has identified spatially and temporally differentiated approaches and solutions toward ensuring sustainable resource management for long-term use.
format Report
topic_facet NATURAL RESOURCES
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
DEFORESTATION
LAND DEGRADATION
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
BIODIVERSITY
FISHERIES
CLIMATE CHANGE
AIR POLLUTION
WATER POLLUTION
INDUSTRIAL POLLUTION
SOLID WASTE
MINING
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION
RESILIENT DEVELOPMENT
CLIMATE RESILIENCE
URBANIZATION
INSTITUTIONS
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability
title_short Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability
title_full Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability
title_fullStr Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Tanzania 2019 Country Environmental Analysis : Environmental Trends and Threats, and Pathways to Improved Sustainability
title_sort tanzania 2019 country environmental analysis : environmental trends and threats, and pathways to improved sustainability
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019-05
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/356211556727592882/Tanzania-Country-Environmental-Analysis-Environmental-Trends-and-Threats-and-Pathways-to-Improved-Sustainability
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31643
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbankgroup tanzania2019countryenvironmentalanalysisenvironmentaltrendsandthreatsandpathwaystoimprovedsustainability
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