Vladimir Gurman, Renat Perelet and Paul Safonov
(Russian Academy of Sciences)
ISEE Newsletter (January, 1994)
The ISEE Russian Chapter, Institute of Control Sciences (ICS) and Program Systems Institute (PSI) of the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), and the Russian Ministry for Environment and Natural Resources organized an International Interdisciplinary Meeting on «The Role of Information Sciences in Regional Development » that was held in Moscow and Pereslavl-Zalessky (near Moscow) on July 20-24, 1993.
The
Meeting was attended by more than 40 scientists and ministerial experts
mostly from Russia as well as from USA, Sweden, Germany and the Netherlands,
and focused mainly on the following topics:
In his greeting to the Meeting participants Russian Minister of
Environment and Natural Resources preofessor Victor Danilov-Danilian stressed
the necessity of systems approach to economic, population, natural resources
and ecosystems issues in order to get effective results at the regional
level. Information science was viewed as an effective tool for such integration.
In its turn, informatics should itself become less « technocratic » and
more « humanitarian », move its orientation from technosphere to biosphere.
The establishment of science/technoparks and "ecopolices" in different
regions of Russia was encouraged by the minister who considered them as
important growth points of new, environmentally sound and sustainable socio-economic
systems based on ecological economics principles, monitoring of the natural
environment and socio-economic processes.
Professor
Ann-Mari Jansson (Stockholm University)
discussed the emergence of the ecological economics paradigm in her plenary
talk and also informed the Russian participants about ISEE activities.
About
twenty plenary papers were presented. Among keynote Russian academic speakers
were professors N.Moiseev, I.Pranguishvilly, A.Ailamazian, F.Aleskerov,
S.Dubovsky,
V.Gurman, V.Burkov (on the picture from left to right),
R.Perelet and others.
The final round table discussion was devoted to elaborating specific principles
and practical recommendations on the basis of suggestions made during the
Meeting. A Concluding Document «Trend-Setting in Systems Approach to Information
Technologies for Regional Management» was adopted. In particular, it emphasized
the role of the Pereslavl-Zalessky Science Park as a promising example
in this field.
A separate session was also held to discuss the development of the ISEE
Russian Chapter activities, including organizing different scientific events
in future, broadening the ISEE/RC membership, initiating projects that
would deal with the translation of foreign books in ecological economics
into Russian, and other questions.
Among
activities planned by ISEE/RC is also a series of expeditions to Lake Baikal
and its basin aimed at attracting attention of the international community
to the urgency of solving ecological and economic problems of this region
which is a unique natural system of world significance. Lake Baikal is
the largest fresh water reservoir on our planet. It is a gigantic natural
source of highest quality fresh water, which is expected to become the
most important strategic water resource in the near future. However, because
of some historical, political, and cultural circumstances, the current
way of life and activity of people in the Baikal area (the lake basin measures
about 500.000 square kilometers and directly influences the life of the
lake) exacerbate environmental problems. Two large pulp and paper mills
on the Baikal shore and on the bank of its main in-flowing the Selenga
river have polluted the atmosphere and water for many years despite any
attempts to introduce reliable and effective environmental controls. A
Government decree of 1987 urging the speediest of Baikal environmental
problems has not yet been implemented. The Baikal pulp-and-paper mill continues
to operate. No real measures have been taken to convert the mill into a
furniture and wooden house construction factory, and to implement ecologically
expedient strategy for the adjoining regional development. The administrative
control-and-command system, which created the problem, has collapsed, but
the mills, which pollute Baikal, remain and continue to exist as a symbol
of the backwardness of this society, and of the victory of criminal technocratic
mentality. However, it is clear that the shortage of economic resources
for radical changes in the Baikal region (which is connected with present
social- economic crisis in Russia) makes it necessary to appeal to the
world community to take joint actions for the sake of saving and preserving
Baikal.
In the period of July 27 - August 10, 1993 the first expedition from the series planned was held with about 20 participants from Russia, USA, Germany and Austria.
The goal of the expedition was to help speed up the solution to the Baikal problem. The concrete tasks of the expedition were: