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Non-renewable resources include minerals such as coal, copper ores, and diamonds, which exist in strictly-limited quantities. Once consumed they will not be replenished within the time-span of human history. In contrast, water supplies, timber, food crops, and similar resources can, if managed properly, provide a steady yield virtually forever; they are therefore replenishable or renewable resources. Inappropriate use of renewable resources can lead to their destruction, as for example the cutting down of rainforests, with secondary effects, such as the decrease in oxygen and the increase in carbon dioxide and the resulting greenhouse effect. Some renewable resources, such as wind or solar energy, are continuous; supply is largely independent of people's actions.
Demands for resources made by rich nations are causing concern that the present and future demands of industrial societies cannot be sustained for more than a century or two, and that this will be at the expense of the developing world and the global environment. Other authorities believe that new technologies will be developed, enabling resources that are now of little importance to replace those being used up.
The flag was selected following a design competition. The waves represent the Pacific Ocean. Effective date: 12 July 1979.
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