Bhutan hits out at impact of consumerism on scarce natural resources

Last updated: September 27, 2008

New York, NY (BBN)- Bhutan’s Prime Minister warned on Friday at the General Assembly that consumerism is draining the world of key natural resources and helping spark or exacerbate recent crises over fuel prices, water reserves and the financial markets.

Too much of the global population had developed a “way of life that is just not rational and sustainable,” Jigmi Y. Thinley told the fourth day of the annual General Debate at the Assembly, a UN press statement said.

“It is not difficult to see how all these crises are the outcomes of a way of life that is dictated by the powerful ethics of consumerism in a world of finite resources. Our life is all about fear of not having enough, about wanting more and doing better than our dear neighbour and friend. We spend and consume beyond our means and those of generations unborn, bringing upon ourselves the kind of crises that were inevitable," Mr. Thinley added.

He also said the problems caused by over-consumption have been made worse by the impact of climate change, especially the apparent rise in extreme weather phenomena.

He warned against a tendency towards private profiteering and socializing risks, adding that “unfortunately, the possible solution seems to lie in transferring our debt to future generations who are not here to argue against it.”

The prime minister of the Himalayan country noted that since the early 1970s, Bhutan has pursued a philosophy of working towards gross national happiness as a marker of success, rather than gross domestic product (GDP).

BBN/SI/SS/AD-27September08-4:43 PM (BST)

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