2006 Environmental Performance Index Ranks
Countries, New Zealand #1
New Zealand ranks first in the world in environmental performance,
according to the new 2006 Environmental Performance Index (EPI) produced
by a team of environmental experts at the environment school at Yale
University and the Earth Institute at Columbia University.
The 2006 EPI, to be released in Davos, Switzerland, at the World
Economic Forum on January 26, ranks Sweden, Finland, Czech Republic, and
the United Kingdom two to five respectively. The top-ranked countries
all commit significant resources and effort to environmental protection,
resulting in strong performance across most of the policy categories.
The EPI identifies targets for environmental performance and measures
how close each country comes to these goals. It ranks 133 countries on
16 indicators tracked in six established policy categories:
Environmental Health, Air Quality, Water Resources, Biodiversity and
Habitat, Productive Natural Resources, and Sustainable Energy. As a
quantitative gauge of pollution control and natural resource management
results, the Index provides a powerful tool for improving policymaking
and shifting environmental decisionmaking onto firmer analytic
foundations.
The Index provides “peer group” rankings for each country showing how
its performance stacks up against others facing similar environmental
challenges. These benchmarks allow easy tracking of leaders and laggards
on an issue-by-issue and aggregate basis. The data also supports effort
to identify “best practices” in the environmental realm.
The lowest-ranked countries--Ethiopia, Mali, Mauritania, Chad and
Niger--are underdeveloped nations with little capacity to invest in
environmental infrastructure (such as drinking water and sanitation
systems) and weak regulatory systems.
The 2006 EPI generates a number of policy conclusions. A country’s
wealth emerges as a significant determinant of environmental outcomes.
But at every level of development, some countries achieve environmental
results that far exceed their peers, demonstrating that policy choices
also affect performance. For example, the Dominican Republic (54)
significantly outperforms Haiti (114) even though the countries share an
island. Likewise, Sweden (2) produces much better environmental results
than Belgium (39).
The Environmental Performance Index reveals that effective policymaking
is critical to successful pollution control and sound natural resource
management. “Policy choices matter,” said Daniel C. Esty, Director of
the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy and Hillhouse Professor
of Environmental Law and Policy. “Good governance emerges as a critical
driver of environmental performance.”
The Index reveals that nations at all levels of economic development
face serious environmental challenges. Industrialized countries often
suffer from pollution and degraded ecosystems. Developing countries must
confront the additional challenge of managing environmental health
stresses such as water-borne diseases and indoor air pollution.
The United States placed 28th in the rankings--significantly below other
highly-developed nations like the United Kingdom (5) and Canada (8).
This score reflects top-tier performance on environmental health issues,
but also indicates that the United States is underperforming on critical
issues such as renewable energy, greenhouse gas emissions, and water
resources.
“The lagging performance of the United States on environmental
issues--particularly on energy and climate change--signals trouble not
only for the American people, but for the whole world,” said Gus Speth,
dean of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. “Perhaps
this ranking will serve as a wake up call to the American public and
particularly to leaders in Washington.”
The Environmental Performance Index aims to promote data-driven and
analytically rigorous environmental decisionmaking. Yet, serious data
gaps limit the ability to measure performance on a number of important
issues. Incomplete data excluded 60 countries from the 2006 EPI. “A more
empirically grounded, fact-based approach to environmental policymaking
will require investments in data collection on a global level,” observed
Esty.
The full text of the 2006 EPI and a six-page Summary for Policymakers is
available at Yale University's Web
site.
Published 01/27/2006
©
2005 Greenmedia Publishing Ltd. |