
What People Are Saying
“This
report is going to mean a great deal for our environment. Environmental
indicators are clearly the tools we need to do our job well.”
—Christine Todd Whitman, Administrator, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
“This
report is . . . a road map of what we need to do to gather adequate
data.”
—Sherwood Boehlert, Chairman, Science Committee, U.S. House
of Representatives
“This authoritative
report is what both the public and policymakers most need. Factual,
comprehensive, balanced, and written in minimally technical language, it
documents point by point what is known about America’s ecosystems,
what is not yet known (but should be), and the many reasons why the
information is important to the nation’s environmental future.”
—Edward O. Wilson, University Research Professor Emeritus,
Harvard University
“Reliable, high-quality
information about the state of our environment forms a foundation for
our ability to make sound public policy, and for Americans to assess our
progress and chart our course of action in the years ahead. The State
of the Nation’s Ecosystems is an outstanding contribution to this
effort, providing valuable information for both policymakers and
concerned citizens who want to know what we’ve accomplished and what
we still need to do.”
—James L. Connaughton, Chairman, White House Council on
Environmental Quality
“Simply put, if we are to
succeed in creating sustainable societies, we need to understand how the
natural ecosystems on which they depend are faring. The State of the
Nation’s Ecosystems is an excellent model for identifying what
decision makers and the public need to know about the condition of
ecosystems and their benefits to society. This book takes a clear-eyed
approach to evaluating whether that information is available, and, in
doing so, highlights what we know and what we don't know. This report is
required reading for business, environmental, and policy leaders.
Regular updates are a must.”
—Timothy Wirth, President, The United Nations Foundation,
former U.S. Senator and former Undersecretary of State for Global
Affairs
“Americans of all
political stripes overwhelmingly support laws and policies that protect
our environment. Yet, inexplicably, we don't now have a regular,
credible means of assessing our progress. Are our lakes and rivers
cleaner? Are native wildlife disappearing? Are wildfires consuming more
of our forests and grasslands? The State of the Nation’s Ecosystems meets this need by taking the pulse of our nation’s environment. It
provides policymakers and citizens with a set of unbiased indicators on
the condition of nature and the resources we are working hard to
protect.”
—William K. Reilly, President and CEO of Aqua International
Partners, Chairman of the Board and former President of World Wildlife
Fund, and former Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
“Solid data on
environmental trends are surprisingly scarce, and The Heinz Center
deserves everyone’s gratitude for its serious and systematic effort to
discover what we know and don’t know about the condition of U.S.
ecosystems. The State of the Nation’s Ecosystems won’t end
every argument, and will probably start some new ones, but it will be an
important baseline to consult as we decide where to go from here.”
—Steven Hayward, F. K. Weyerhaeuser Fellow, American
Enterprise Institute
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Living on Earth (NPR Radio)© (transcript) (audio)
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Science© (September 27, 2002)
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American Enterprise Institute Environmental Policy Outlook© (November 1, 2002)
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Consultative Group on Biological Diversity© (Autumn 2002)
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Environment (June 2003)
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American Association for the Advancement of Science (May 9, 2003)
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Electronic Green Journal ( Earth Day 2003)
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Common Ground 2.1 (2003)
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BioScience (July 2003)
Environment (May 2003) Robin O'Malley, Kent Cavender-Bares and William C. Clark
September 24, 2002 Press Release
Complete Listing (as of 7/21/03)
