Title: Environmental Challenge Diocesan response
1Environmental Challenge- Diocesan response
- Anglican Diocese of Newcastle Synod
Peter Scaife
17 October 2008
2International perspective
- Human activity is having a major adverse impact
on the worlds biosphere - loss of species (habitat destruction, invasive
species) - stresses on renewable resources (fresh water,
forests, fisheries) - greenhouse gas emissions (GGE), leading to
climate change - Current high consumption lifestyle in developed
countries is widely acknowledged as unsustainable - continuing population growth in developing
countries who aspire to similar consumption - rapid economic growth in China and India (37 of
world population) - if all countries consumed at USA rate, would
require 5 worlds - global fresh water consumption 7.5 million
million tonnes (1200 tonnes per
person)
3International perspective
- Greenhouse gas emissions (GGE) are a dominant
concern - only issue that affects all countries,
independent of emissions from any particular
country - global GGE of 30 billion tonnes of CO2 equivalent
in 2007 - China now produces more GGE than the USA
however, per capita emissions are much lower (4 t
CO2-e for China, 21 t CO2-e for USA) - Urbanisation is rapidly increasing, particularly
in developing countries - 19 mega-cities with 10 million or more, 22 cities
with 5-10 million, and 370 cities with 1-5
million - 90 of future global population growth will occur
in cities - In 20 years, 1.1 billion extra people in Asian
cities - Major challenge for maintaining ecosystems
4Glacier Melt
The National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)
5Australia State of Environment
- Australia faces all of the international issues,
with differences in emphasis due to climate,
geography, unique ecosystems, lifestyle, etc - High annual energy consumption/GGE emissions
(2006) - 5600 PJ (equivalent to 130 Mt of oil, or 200 Mt
of coal) Australia has major reserves of all
energy resources, except oil - 576 Mt CO2-e
- Most of Southern Australia has ongoing water
shortages - reductions in rainfall (30) in many southern
areas of Australia, leading to major reductions
in runoff (50) - particularly in Murray Darling basin, also Perth
and Melbourne - increasing use of water to support human activity
is having a devastating impact upon the natural
environment
6Australia State of Environment
- For a developed nation, comparatively high
population growth (due to immigration) - increases the challenge to reduce absolute levels
of materials consumption, GGEs and habitat
destruction - Ongoing (and increasing) impacts on habitats and
biodiversity - loss of 75 of rainforests, 50 of all forests,
90 of temperate woodlands and mallee, 99 of
south-eastern Australia's temperate lowland
grasslands, inter alia - Biodiversity loss continues as a result of
- habitat fragmentation
- weed invasion
- introduction of exotic animals (rabbits, foxes,
cane toads) - logging, farming, urban development
7Average Australian - energy
- Annual energy consumption 270 GJ (2006)
- equivalent to 10 t of coal
- 41 coal, 35 oil, 19 natural gas, 5 renewables
- solar and wind only 0.15
- fossil energy to provide the majority of energy
for next 20-30 years - Residential use 21 GJ
- 52 electricity, 30 natural gas, 14 wood
- 33 water heating, 20 refrigeration/freezer, 7
TV/Video/PC, 6 cooking, 8 lights - Transport 58 GJ
- Road transport 80, air transport 12
- Cars are 55 of all transport energy use
-
8Average Australian GGE
- Australia has a (mainly) coal based electricity
sector, high car use, and a large agricultural
sector - high level of annual emissions per person 27t
CO2-e - Sources of emissions
- 19t from stationary energy and transport
- 9.5t from electricity and gas (13 direct
consumer use) - 3.8t from transport (7 direct consumer use)
- 1.4t from industry (non-energy, eg cement
production) - 4t from agriculture
- 1.8t from land-use change and forestry
- Most emissions are from indirect sources
9Average Australian - water
- Water consumption (direct and indirect)
- 1,500,000 litres of water each year (average for
all products and services) cf USA 2,500,000, and
China 700,000 - of which 60-80,000 litres per year are for
household use - most water is used for agricultural products
- Large quantities of fresh water are used in
foods, products and services - Food (litres/kg) wheat 1000, rice 1500, beef
16000 - Other (litres) cotton t shirt 2000, 1 sheet A4
paper 10, cup
of coffee 140, 1kg steel 3-4, 1kg aluminium 36 - Important to consider water use in products and
services, as well as in household consumption
10Average Australian materials
- Uses 200 tonnes of materials each year
- excluding water, but including soil loss
- Material intensive lifestyle
- (per year) steel 360 kg, cement 500 kg, paper 180
kg, glass 40 kg - Waste generated per person annually (2002-3)
- 1.62 t (27 municipal, 29 industrial, 42
construction) - 0.75 t are recycled (only 30 of municipal waste
is recycled) - increase in waste generated, but a decline in
waste to landfill - Major e-waste challenge
- in 2006, 1.5 M computers to landfill (additional
5.3 M in storage) - each year 2.4 M computers and 1 M TVs are
purchased -
-
11Technology
- Technological development has provided the means
for our current lifestyle - New technologies are an important part of the
solution many new developments occurring,
worldwide - more efficient consumable goods, buildings, cars
- The single most frequent failure in the history
of forecasting has been grossly underestimating
the impact of technologies - Peter Schwartz from The Art of the Long View
- Costs and efficiencies of technologies depend on
learning rate ( reduction in capital cost for a
doubling of world installed capacity) - as more use of a technology occurs, improvements
are made - RD can lead to step changes
12Technology - computer chip example (1/100,000
in 30 years)
13Technology - electricity
- Increase in efficiency of coal fired electricity
generation (25 by 2020) reduces GGE and water
consumption - possible 50 improvement by 2050 (direct coal
fuel cell) - Reduction in cost of solar thermal (CST) and PV
generation - CST is predicted to compete with coal base load
power by 2020 in southern areas of USA and Europe
- PV is high cost, but has a 20 learning rate
- Wind generation already very competitive if price
of carbon dioxide emissions is gt40/tonne - wind generation has a learning rate of around 8
- Wind and PV installed capacity are growing
rapidly worldwide (25 and 40 respectively per
annum)
14Technology - transport
- Cars are still basically dependent on internal
combustion engines - well developed, fuel consumption as low as 4
litres/100 km - Hybrid cars now provide an alternative at
reasonable cost - 4 litres/100 km best fuel economy/less
pollution, in urban driving - smaller internal combustion engines - base load
- supercapacitors - acceleration
- advanced batteries - energy storage and levelling
- regenerative braking - energy recovery
- good test bed for key components of an all
electric car - Emerging technology electric cars
- By 2020, Israel plans to eliminate fossil fuelled
cars in urban areas
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16Technology - water
- Most appropriate initial response is water
efficiency - Harvest stormwater
- domestic tanks (back to the future!) 1 in 6 of
households in 2004, larger facilities for
communal use aquifer injection - Reuse treated sewage for lower grade use (eg
industrial) - could be treated to potable standard if
acceptable to community - Only 7 of sewage reused in Australia
- Increase capture of water from rivers
- Desalination of sea water
- costs decreasing, 2 year lead time, uses
electricity 3.2 kWh/kl, compared to household
average of around 14 kWh/day - Perth plant of 50G litres per year (water cost
1.20/kl)
17Technology - water
- Australia 2020 Summit
- invest in innovative technology desalination,
stormwater harvesting, recycling - water should be recycled many times, with no
single use by 2020 - Dilemma Tillegra Dam (450 G litres)
- loss of agricultural land, changes in river
ecology, offset by major increase in water
security - but many in community unconvinced that
efficiency, storm water harvesting, and reuse
options have been explored sufficiently - desalination reasonable cost option, but has
higher operating costs - climate modelling suggests that rainfall in our
catchment will not decrease significantly (could
increase) - lead time for a dam is many years, and a dam is
only effective once it fills therefore must act
earlier, rather than wait for drought
18Technology materials use (steel)
- The hierarchy is reduce, reuse and recycle.
- maximum benefit from extending the life of steel
products, and using less steel for a given
service - Direct reuse of structural steel saves
- 1.45 t of iron ore, 1.0 t of coal, 2.4 t of
water, and 2.7 t of GGEs - Recycling leads to a 50 reduction in energy and
GGEs - many products are now being designed to allow
separation of materials - Sydney steel frame building
- 8 levels added to existing 15 level building
while still functioning with 1,000 people.
19Technology - summary
- Developments in technology underpin our current
lifestyle - Technological innovation provides options for
reducing environmental impacts - allows reductions in energy and greenhouse gas
emission intensity, as well as water and
materials intensity, for services and products - improvements are constantly being made, with
learning rates determined by international uptake - But technological development will not alone be
sufficient - Behavioural change is required
20Changing Behaviour
- Church has an important role
- members with strong moral and ethical basis for
actions to support environmental improvement - cross section of socioeconomic and ethnic groups
in the community - respected politically
- good communication system
- international community including developed and
developing nations - Lambeth Conference, 5th Mark of Mission
- Safeguarding Creation
21Changing Behaviour
- Education/awareness raising is a crucial
component - needed to drive community awareness
- individuals need to understand the impacts of
purchasing and lifestyle choice decisions - avoid purchasing products which are not
sustainable, eg tropical rainforest timbers
without certification - information is available but difficult to access
and analyse for many for example - trade offs in house insulation (ceiling, walls,
windows) before installing air conditioning - whether to install a solar hot water heater or PV
panels on the roof - technical units and terms can be confusing
22Changing Behaviour
- Education would assist in dealing with
misconceptions - ban harvesting of all native forests, cf thinning
of degraded regrowth forests to restore timber
potential and improve biodiversity - classification of steel by recycled content, as a
way to promote more use of recycled steel - select building materials on embodied energy,
rather than considering energy use over the life
cycle of the building - Personal energy and water consumption, and GGE,
could be reduced by gt20 without significant
change in lifestyle - car pooling, public transport, more fuel
efficient car - solar/gas water heater
- water efficient garden, washing machine, domestic
rain water tanks - What stops us doing the obvious?
23Changing Behaviour
- Business and industry are important contributors
to the solution, and are changing behaviour - many manufacturers are redesigning products to
use less energy, eliminate hazardous materials,
and to increase ease of recycling/reuse (Extended
Producer Responsibility) - note current problem with e-waste
- current energy security/GGE issue can be seen as
a problem or as a very large opportunity - Advantage of adopting a more community/ecosystem
oriented lifestyle, with less materials use - required for an equitable distribution of the
earths resources - increasingly difficult, with growth in
urbanisation, and a focus on material standard of
living
24Way Ahead
- Newcastle Diocese is well positioned to take a
lead in the Anglican response to Safeguarding
Creation - range of ecosystems, some of which are under
threat - diverse urban and rural parishes
- a major river valley, with competition for water
(agriculture, mines, towns, industry, tourism) - Support is available from a number of existing
activities - NCC (Peter Dormand) energy/GGE, and water
program - CSIRO Energy Centre (energy technologies)
- University of Newcastle
- Prof Steffan Lehmann UNESCO Chair in
Sustainable Urban Development for Asia and
Pacific - Australias first zero carbon emission urban area
(Taree) - TOCAL, TAFE, Hunter Wetlands Centre
25Way Ahead
- Walk the talk lead by example
- eg audit for Bishopscourt and diocesan facilities
- Set targets
- short term must be realistic and achievable
- aspirational (not too prescriptive)
- do a little, learn a little approach
- Church leaders for the church community
- communicate progress against targets
- exchange best practices with other dioceses and
churches - celebrate achievements
26Way Ahead
- Initiatives within parishes
- guest speakers
- audits of churches, halls and rectories,
- specific projects (eg solar lighting, bird
attractive gardens) - Individual actions by parishioners
- improve home energy and water consumption, and
GGE - choose products which are more environmentally
friendly in manufacture, as well as in use - reduce packaging and increase recycling
- back to the future
- participate in community environmental
initiatives
27Way Ahead
- Church as an example to the general community
- start by addressing energy/GGE, and water use in
church buildings and operations - measure and then implement most cost effective
actions - many members available with required skills
- financial savings , coupled with environmental
improvements - Improve the ecosystem performance on church
property, and foster improvements in nearby
bushland areas (St Albans Church, Charlestown, is
a good example) - collaborate with other groups in the region to
facilitate new version of Pathways to
Sustainability conferences (say, from 2010) - demonstrate lifestyle quality with lower
materials consumption - Consistent communication required
28Way Ahead
- From an established sound environmental base
within the diocese, move to collective action on
broader issues, eg biodiversity - contribute to community debate on habitat
protection (bushland, wetlands, etc) in the
region - participate in the debate on contentious issues,
particularly those that have moral aspects for
example - Coal mining benefits and impacts in Hunter Valley
communities and ecosystems (Regional) - Nuclear energy to reduce GGEs (National)
- Assist technology transfer to developing
countries - eg biogas generators in Africa
- perhaps the diocese could adopt a diocese in a
developing country and provide ongoing support
29The effort of religious groups, based on moral
conviction, rather than immediate self interest,
is likely to have a disproportionate effect in
the political arena on behalf of the
environment.
Dr. Edward O. Wilson, Baird Professor of Science,
Harvard UniversityThe father of biodiversity