Title: Sustainable Development:
1- Sustainable Development
- Principles and Practices
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3Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society
Politics
Economy
4Principles and Practices
- Principles traditions, dominant premises,
ideologies, habits, theories, ways of thinking,
physical laws etc. that shape environmental
behaviour - Practices ways we impact the environment and
ways to change impacts on environment
5Core SusDev Principles
- inter-generational equity
- intra-generational equity
- public trust doctrine
- precautionary principle
- subsidiarity principle
- polluter pays principle (PPP)
- user pays principle (UPP)
6Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society
Politics
Economy
7Environment
- Components air, land, water and their flora and
fauna - Prevailing principles physics, biogeochemical
cycles, greenhouse effect, evolution - Challenges for susdev principles coexistence
with human use, multiple use, carrying capacity
(maximum sustainable yield). - Practices environmental impact assessment,
strategic environmental assessment
8Carrying Capacity
- The maximum number of individuals of a species
that can be sustained by an environment without
decreasing the capacity of the environment to
sustain that same amount in the future.
9Environmental Practices
- Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
- Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA)
10Environmental Assessment
11Develop now,minimize associated costs and, if
forced to, clean up later
Sustainability
Environmental Evaluation / Environmental
Assessment / Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
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13An Environmental Impact is any change to the
environment, whether adverse or beneficial,
wholly or partially resulting from human
activities
14Initial Assessment, Prevention and Checking
Initial environmental situation
Resulting environmental situation
15Environmental Status
Environmental Aspects/Activities
Environmental Impacts
Construction, Operation, and Decommissioning of
Past, Present, Future
Emissions Extractions
- Infrastructure
- Reclamation
- Public utilities
- Residential uses
- Industrial uses
- Agriculture / Fisheries
- Recreation / Tourist
- Mitigation measures
- Others
- Air quality
- Water quality
- Solid Waste
- Noise
- Ecology
- Land contamination
- Visual and landscape
- Cultural Heritage
- Others
16Screening and Scoping
- Each activity would impose different degrees of
impacts on various Environmental Aspects. - Some may be significant / not significant
- Limited financial, human time resources
- Activities with significant adverse impacts
- Set scope of environmental evaluation
17Baseline conditions
- Measurement of environmental parameters BEFORE
the project / activity in question - Conditions if the activity is not carried out
- Natural fluctuations of environment
- Data must be representative
- Form the reference point to which the actual
environmental impacts is compared
18Prediction of impacts
- Environmental acceptability of the project
- Design mitigation measure in the planning stage
- Nature and Significance of impacts
- Direct impacts, indirect impacts
- Cumulative and Synergistic impacts
- Positive impacts, negative impacts
- Short, medium and long term impacts
- Reversible and irreversible impacts
- Qualitative or quantitative predictions
- Documented (e.g. EIS / report) and reviewed
19- Baseline ecological survey
- Ecological value
- Species Plant, Mammal, Bird
- Habitat map
- Seasonality
Ecological evaluation
- Impacts evaluation
- Direct and indirect impacts
- Air water pollution
- Noise lighting disturbance
- Human activities
- Habitat loss fragmentation
- Checklist and matrices
- Maps and GIS
- Modeling
- Expert opinion
- Existing land-use and impacts
- Relevant legislations
- Cumulative impacts
- Mitigation measures
- Monitoring and audit
20Impacts of new road / widening, etc.
- Resulting from construction
- Resulting from operation (road traffic)
- Resulting from improved accessibility
21Ecological evaluation
- Impacts on existing flora, fauna and wildlife
habitats - Include both marine and terrestrial ecology
An Ecological assessment should consist of
- Ecological baseline information
- Identification and prediction of impacts
- Evaluation of impact significance
- Alternatives and mitigation measures
- Monitoring and audit programme
22Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA)
- A systematic process, with multi-stakeholder
involvement, for analysing and evaluating
environmental implications of proposed policies,
plans and programmes, for assisting in strategic
or planning decision-making and for following up
strategic or planning decisions.
23SEA Process in Hong Kong
24SEA Process in Hong Kong
25Approaches of SEA - Way Forward
- Empowerment of the community and stakeholders on
environmental choices, environmental knowledge
and environmentally responsible decision making - Internalizing environmental sustainability into
each and every major strategy or policy - Paradigm shift on evaluating the legitimacy of
needsParadigm shift on evaluating financial
viability of environmentally better choices - Interactive, continuous public involvement and
engagement, including the traditional means and
modern communication and information technologies
(3-D virtual reality with instantaneous
engagement process)
26Baseline Information
- Observation
- Printed materials, government publications
- Talking to stakeholders
27Environmental Sources
- Air, land, water, noise quality, and conservation
http//www.epd.gov.hk/epd - Biodiversity and Habitats http//www.hkbiodiversit
y.net http//www.susdev.gov.hk/html/en/su/consult
.htm - Fish http//www.hk-fish.net/eng/index.htm
28Hong Kong Habitats
Area Mapped for Area (ha) Each Habitat
Type Cover Type High Value Ecological
Habitat Fung Shui Forest 106.3 0.1 Montane
Forest 123.4 0.1 Lowland Forest 18318.3 16.5
Mixed Shrubland 15196.5 13.7 Freshwater/
Brackish Wetland 130.1 0.1 Natural
Watercourse 803.9 0.7 Mangrove 343.1 0.3 Int
ertidal Mudflat 656.1 0.6 Seagrass
Bed 5.4 0.0 Subtotal 35683 32.1 Medium
Value Ecological Habitat Plantation or
Plantation /Mixed Forest 417.0 0.4 Shrubby
Grassland 24674.8 22.2 Fishpond/Gei
wai 1031.7 0.9 Sandy Shore 179.6 0.2 Rocky
Shore 94.2 0.1 Cultivation 3838.3 3.5 Subto
tal 30236 27.2
29Hong Kong Habitats
Area Mapped for Area (ha) Each Habitat
Type Cover Type Low Value Ecological
Habitat Bare Rock or Soil 5101.8 4.6 Grassla
nd 21572.7 19.4 Modified Watercourse 2384.1
2.1 Artificial Rocky/Hard Shoreline 315.4 0.3 G
olf Course/Urban Park 1398.3 1.3 Quarry 168
.6 0.2 Subtotal 30941 27.8 Negligible
Value Ecological Habitat Rural Industrial
Storage/Containers 1379.2 1.3 Landfill 404.3
0.4 Others 12656.3 11.4 Subtotal 14440
13.0
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31http//www.netlingo.com/more/poptick.html
32Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society
Politics
Economy
33In principle why does society play the central
role in susdev?
- Inter and intra generational environmental equity
is the core of sustainability, and has
consequences for - Resource/pollution allocation
- Responsibility and action
- Mobilization for change
34In practice why does society play the central
role in susdev?
- Society shapes quantitative and qualitative
demand on environment - Directly through consumption and indirectly
through influence on technology, economy, and
politics
35Foundation Definitions
- Society large scale (nation, city) interaction
based on shared values and beliefs, but indirect
and legal relationships - Community small scale (village, town, church,
team, company) interaction based on shared
values and beliefs, but more intimate and informal
36Society
- Components individuals, households, classes,
diverse common interest groups spatial and
organizational clustering - Prevailing principles territoriality
(nationalism, regionalism), ethnicity, religions,
individualism, collectivism, consumption, social
stratification, equality - Challenges to SusDev principals changing social
trajectories population equity challenge lack
of awareness/connection/responsibility (local
global) conflict of interests - Practices social assessment, awareness building,
social movements, community building
37Social Trajectories and Environment
- We want to understand what forms of social
interaction compel society to damage the
environment and how they can be changed. - Social trajectories
- Values
- Growth
- Feedback
- Positive
- Negative
38The Threat Overshoot going beyond a limit
without intending to.
- Resources (sources) over-exploitation
- Pollution sink exceeding assimilation capacity
39The consequences of overshoot collapse
40Population
- (Demography)
- Population size,
- Structure of population
- Causes for change
41Population Projections to 2050
- High (Present) 2.6 children per woman
- 10.6 billion
- Medium (Falling to) 2.1 children per woman
- 9.1 billion
- Low (Falling to) 1.6 children per woman
- 7.6 billion
42Total Growth
Growth per Decade
43The Demographic Transition
44What are the positive and negative feedbacks
maintaining or changing these trajectories?
45Stages of Demographic Transition
- Stage 1 Stable population levels because of a
steady state of high birth and death rates (stage
1) sanitation, health care, nutrition, and
wealth are limited subsistence agriculture - Stage 2 Rapid population growth because of high
birth and low death rates primarily a decrease
in childhood deaths better agricultural
techniques, food supply, and education Nigeria,
Indonesia, Bangladesh. - Stage 3 Falling rate of increase because of
falling birth rates specialization of
agriculture, industrialization, and urbanization
government policy, contraception, female
education and rights China India. - Stage 4 Equalization of low birth and death
rates creating stable population increasing
costs of raising children and priority given to
consumption Sweden, France - Stage 5 Decreasing population because of lower
births than deaths cost of urban living and
shifting priorities Hong Kong, Japan, Italy.
46Why the difference between India and China?
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49Other Examples of Overshoot
- The ozone layer
- Global warming
- The sixth extinction
- Ocean fisheries
- Chinese desertification
50Equity (Affluence) Challenge
- How can we improve social equity without
generating greater environmental damage if equity
requires raising basic levels of - Mobility
- Infrastructure
- Health
- Education
- Housing
- Amenities (recreation, travel, etc.)?
51Affluence
- Increases throughput of resources and energy
- Private and public consumption
- Urbanization and services
- Upgrading of equity (socially conditioned)
52Global Population and Per Capita Consumption as
Drivers of Global Consumption
53OECD Trends
- Energy 36 increase 1973-98 35 increase
expected by 2020 despite efficiency gains - Transport 550 million vehicles (75 cars) grow
32 40 more miles driven global air transport
triple - Waste municipal solid waste will grow 42
1995-2020 recycling increasing but is not
keeping up - Water household water use stable in 9 countries
rising in others - Food more meat, vegetables, fish, processed,
imported and organic food eaten increase in
packaging, transportation.
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55Can the World afford both the American and
Chinese Dreams?
- For a long time the US with only 5 of worlds
population consumed closed to 1/3 of the worlds
resources, but
56Annual Consumption in China and the United States
in 2004, with Projections for China to 2031,
Compared to Current World Production
Commodity Unit China 2004 US 2004 World 2004 China 2031
Grain Kilograms 291 935 2021 1352
Meat Kilograms 48 125 239 181
Oil Barrels 2 25 79 99
Coal Kgs of oil equivalent 613 1925 2519 2823
Steel Kilograms 198 353 968 511
Paper Kilograms 27 210 157 303
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58What Explains this Constant Rise in Consumption?
59Conventional Economist
- People have an unlimited capacity to consume
economy depends on it - People rationally choose among alternative
purchases within their income - Increasing propensity to save with increase in
income, but - Increase in private consumption tracks increase
in GDP
60Social Contingency Theories
- Veblens theory of Conspicuous Consumption
- People copy the consumption practices of
wealthier members of society - Hirchs theory of Positional Goods
- When goods become scarce they become more valued
and desirable because they can be used to
differentiate people - Wachtels theory of loss of community
- People consume to compensate for lack of
interaction and intimacy in modern society - Shors theory of the work and spend cycle
- Industrialization hasnt delivered leisure to
people because business compensates them with
money rather than time, money is spent on
consumption, the patterns of which become
ingrained
61Other Contingencies
- Public goods are consumed on a different basis
than private goods (shaped by culture ability to
free ride) - Culture norms, expectations, habits
- Technology and infrastructure much of our
consumption is already predetermined (e.g.
communications, transportation, water, etc.)
62What Explains this Constant Rise in Consumption?
- affluenza, n. a painful, contagious, socially
transmitted condition of overload, debt, anxiety
and waste resulting from the dogged pursuit of
more. (de Graaf, 2002) - affluenza, n. 1. The bloated, sluggish and
unfulfilled feeling that results from efforts to
keep up with the Joneses. 2. An epidemic of
stress, overwork, waste and indebtedness caused
by dogged pursuit of the American Dream. 3. An
unsustainable addiction to economic growth. (PBS) - affluenza, n. 2. a growing and unhealthy
preoccupation with money and material things.
This illness is constantly reinforcing itself at
both the individual and the social levels,
constraining us to derive our identities and
sense of place in the world through our
consumption activity. (Hamilton and Denniss)
63Needs, Opportunity-Ability Model of Consumer
Behavior
Technology Economy Demography Institutions Culture
Needs Relations,
development, comfort, pleasure, work, health,
privacy, money, status, safety, nature, control,
leisure-time, justice
Opportunity availability,
information, prices, shops
Ability Financial, time, spatial,
cognitive, physical
Behavioral Control
Motivation
Intention
Consumer Behavior
Consequences quality of life, environmental
quality
64Society Practices
- Social assessment (defining parameters of demand)
- Awareness raising education, ecological
footprint, local environmental knowledge - Social movements informal and formal
- Social capital and community building
65Society Practices social assessment
- Demographic
- Population size (temporary and permanent)
characteristics (e.g. family size, income levels,
socio-economic/cultural groups) settlement
patterns. - Housing
- Quality diversity and prices public and private
ownership and tenancy homelessness and other
problems - Local services
- Transport network and mobility, education, health
and care services police, fire, recreation. - Social-cultural concerns
- Lifestyle choice quality of life gender
family issues community cohesion conflict - Personal consumption cars, appliances, food,
clothing, energy and water, solid waste, etc.
66Society Sources
- City Planning Consultants 1998? Study on South
East New Territories Development Review Strategy
Final Report. Hong Kong HKSAR Planning
Department. http//www.info.gov.hk/planning/index_
e.htm - Projection of population distribution (2002-2011)
and Area of HK by district Planning Department -
http//www.info.gov.hk/planning/index_e.htm--gt
look for "Information Services", then "Planning
Statistics" - Land Usage in different parts of HK Town
Planning Board - http//www.info.gov.hk/tpb/index_
e.htm --gt go for "e-staturary plans" - Demographic and social characteristics, economic
characteristics, labor/employment, household
characteristics, housing characteristics,
GDP/GNP, etc, by district or the whole territory
Census Statistics Department http//www.info.gov
.hk/censtatd/eng/hkstat/fas/01c/01c_index.html
Or, the Government's InvestHK website -
http//www.investhk.gov.hk --gt look for "Key
Statistics" - Property types (residential, office, industrial,
shop, large deals) and valuations at
http//www.info.gov.hk/landreg/eindex.htm or
Estate agents e.g. Centaline at
http//www.centanet.com/ - Consumptionw3.epd.gov.hk/epd/english/resources_pu
b/envir_info/envir_info.html http//www.emsd.gov.
hk/emsd/e_download/pee/HKEEUD2008.pdf
67Society Practices behavior change
- Awareness building
- Social movements
- Community building
68Awareness Problems
- Personal and community impacts
- Responsibilities
- Means to change
- Participation
69An Awareness Problem Disconnection between
Consumption and Environmental Exploitation
- Failure of negative feedback to change habits in
places of consumption because they are separated
from places of production and its environmental
impact - Or even disconnect of people with local
environment and impacts
70Society Practices Ecological Footprint Analysis
- Ecological footprint analysis is an accounting
tool that enables us to estimate the resource
consumption and waste assimilation requirements
of a defined human population or economy in terms
of a corresponding productive land area.
71The Ecological Footprint
- Standard for sustainability achieving the
environmental efficiency that allows us to live
within the earths carrying capacity
72Hong Kongs Ecological Footprint
- What is Hong Kongs per capita ecological
footprint? - How dependent is Hong Kong for its food, fuel,
and material supplies? Or for its sewage impact? - How does Hong Kongs per capita ecological
footprint compare to world average and to the
worlds per capita ecologically productive land
and sea allowance?
73Hong Kongs Ecological Dependency
Appropriated Land/Sea Area Km2 Local Production Km2 China (Guangdong) Km2 Rest of World Km2 Total
Food 1040 26240 42070 69350
Forest -- -- 13900 13900
Fish and Seafood 14220 68080 125010 207310
Assimilation of CO2 90100 to 236250
Total Area Demands 15260 94320 275300 332150 to 478300
Nitrogen Discharges 51435 tonnes 37785 tonnes 53820 tonnes 143040 tonnes
74Hong Kongs Per Capita Footprint in Comparison
Country Per Capita Footprint Rank
Worlds per capita allowance 2.0-2.2 average
Worlds per capita share 2.85 overshoot
Hong Kong 7.14 13
China 1.8 79
United States 12.22 3
Singapore 12.35 2
Japan 5.94 21
Philippines 1.42 90
Taiwan 4.34 41
75http//www.myfootprint.org/en/visitor_information/
76Society Practices Social Movements
- Informal, grassroots
- Based on environmental pressures, education,
value changes (livelihood and post-materialist
movements lifestyle) - Changes in behavior
- can lead to
77Livelihood and Post-Materialist Issues
- Livelihood issues are needs for basic
requirements such as food, shelter, fuel and
employment. - Post-materialist issues are changes to lifestyle
because of concern for biodiversity, natural
beauty, impact of consumption on quality of life
etc.
78Non-Governmental Organization and Political
Parties
- Formal organizations with committed and paid
participants - Local to global concerns and organization
- Different strategies and politics demonstrations
to collaboration - Impacts on government, business and public policy
and behavior - Environmental NGOs balanced by other NGOs and
business associations
79Society Practices Community Building
- Combining strengths of local relations and sense
of belonging with benefits of social freedoms,
transparency, and tolerance. - Community members work toward common goal, while
taking care and respecting each other. - Depends on and creates social capital (shared
networks, values, trust)
80Social Capital
- Relationships have value enhancing productivity
and quality of life - Some benefits go directly to individuals others
are shared by society (externalities) - Creates norms of trust and reciprocity that
reduce cheating and other forms of opportunism - Bonding SC creates exclusive binds exclusive
groups into strong identities (e.g. ethnic
groups, families). - Bridging SC creates inclusive ties bringing
people from different backgrounds together (e.g.
professions, politics).
81Benefits of Social Capital
- social capital allows people to resolve
collective problems more easilyovercome
collective action problems, free-rider problems,
tragedy of commons, prisoners dilemma, etc. - social capital greases the wheels that allow
communities to advance smoothlytrust and
confidence enable more efficient exchange. - social capital widens our awareness of the many
ways our fates are interlinked and help to foster
good behaviour. - social capital is a conduit for information and
contacts - social capital as connectiveness is
psychologically and physiologically good for us.
82Sustainable Communities
- Local Agenda 21 thousands of villages, towns,
cities and regions implementing sustainability
programs - Activities include recycling programs,
buildings, energy, habitat restoration, product
design, water quality, etc. - Indicators for feedback on progress
- Global community needed
83Society Practices means of change
- Social movements informal, formal
- Community initiatives
- Expert contribution and mediation
- Government policy
- Market incentives
84Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society
Politics
Economy
85Technology complex, pervasive systems with great
social inertia
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87Technology
- Components product parts and subsystems,
products, physical and social infrastructures - Prevailing principles linear industrial system,
functional performance, cost efficiency, waste - Challenges of susdev principles product
stewardship, shared information and
responsibility, value exchange - Practices Life-cycle analysis, design for
environment, distributed infrastructures
88Government seeks to pave way for introduction of
electric cars
- Feb 26, 2009
- The government will promote the use of electric
cars in Hong Kong by testing the vehicles in the
city, while the financial secretary will head a
body to overcome hurdles to their early
introduction here.
89Industrial Ecology Systems Hierarchy of the
Automobile
Social infrastructure
Cultural norms, political and economic policies
and regulations
Landuse
90The Linear Industrial System
Energy material input
Waste pollution output
91Industrial Ecology integration of product,
material, energy flow to eliminate waste
92Product, Material, Energy Flow in an Industry
Value
93The Service Economy
- Meaning sell services rather than products.
Value is created by offering customers a
consistent flow of satisfaction rather than an
accumulation of goods. - Manufacturing companies capture benefits of
increased resource productivity and closed-loop
activities. - Service companies compound downstream savings and
avoid stocking and labor costs.
94An Example of Servicizing
95Technology Practices Assessment
- Life-cycle analysis
- Focus on a product
- Trace the product through each stage of its
lifecycle - Determine the different processes at each stage
- Measure the inputs and outputs of materials and
energy at each stage - Impact assessment
96Technology Practices Assessment
- Life-cycle analysis
- Focus on a product
- Trace the product through each stage of its
lifecycle - Determine the different processes at each stage
- Measure the inputs and outputs of materials and
energy at each stage - Impact assessment
97Model for Lifecycle inputs into Any Industry
98Life Cycle of Paper With four levels of analysis
99LCA Flowchart Computer
100LCA analysis of a stage
Energy Water
Product Coproduct A Coproduct C
Raw materials Intermediate materials
Stage processes
Waterborne wastes
Airborne wastes
Solid wastes
101Technology Practices Design for Environment
- Practices the range of ways that energy and
material reduction, recycling and safe disposal
can be designed into the product - Whole system designoptimizing the performance of
all the parts working together. - Product design teams
102Examples of DfE Practices
- Reduce device power consumption (for consumer
use) energy star appliances efficient lighting - Design for material recovery Color coding of
disposable camera plastic parts printed codes on
computer parts - Design for component recovery photocopy toner
and printer cartridges have been made to be
remanufacturable with equal performance of new
cartridges - Design for disassembly electronic devices and
automobiles are being designed so that they can
be easily taken apart in disassembly plants and
the parts recycled - Design for waste minimization soaps, detergents
etc. have been concentrated boxes and other
large packaging have been eliminated - Design for waste recovery flyash from coal
burning is turned into wallboard building
materials are made to be reusable or recyclable - Design reusable containers reusing steel and
plastic drums and pallets folding shipping
crates - Avoid undesirable substances elimination of CFCs
from refrigerators and air conditioning
elimination of phosphates from soaps and
detergents and elimination of VOCs from some
paints, glues and building materials
103How are these products designed wholistically?
104Prius Integration
- Life-cycle design focus on consumption stage
upstream and downstream advances - Physical infrastructure dependent on existing
roads and supply potential change in supply - Social infrastructure driven by regulatory
change and particularities capitalize on
cultural shift - Value image, expanded sales, patents
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106The Erotic Gherkin Integration
- Life-cycle design focus on consumption stage
upstream and downstream unknown - Physical infrastructure access to transit
bicycle and changing rooms - Social infrastructure sightlines exception to
preservation zoning bevel shape accommodates
footprint - Value low return on energy image productivity
price
107Distributed infrastructures because of
environmental impacts of centralized
infrastructures
- pollution and energy loss involved with the
transportation of fuels, materials, solid waste,
and sewage - the landscape and habitat damage resulting from
more roads, pipelines, power lines, canals,
ports, bridges etc. - the materials, energy, and pollution costs of
building infrastructure - the energy and pollution costs resulting from
demolition,remediation, and disposal.
108Alternative (Distributed) Infrastructures
- Energy biomass, solar, wind, fuel cells, gas
turbines, tidal, geothermal, waste generated gas
storage devices (e.g. flywheels, water,
hydrogen), waste heat and cool air - Water and sewage wetland, biological sewage and
brown water treatment, water recycling - Telecommunications wireless communications
(mobiles, wi-fi) - Solid waste collecting facilities, recycling
facilities, waste exchanges - Transportation mixed land use, walking, cycling,
public transport - Regulatory reform, cooperation, institution
building
109The Social Construction of Overshoot
- The IPAT Equation
- IMPACT POPULATION x AFFLUENCE x TECHNOLOGY
110IPAT and Growth
1995 Level of Technology Impact
Population Affluence Technology CO2
emissions 6 billion x .1 cars x 5.4 tons
CO2 Per year
person x car per year 3 billion tons CO2
per year
111IPAT and Growth
2050 Constant (1995 level) Technology Impact
Population Affluence
Technology CO2 emissions 11 billion x .4
cars x 5.4 tons CO2 Per year
person x car per
year 24 billion tons CO2 per year 2050
Factor 2 Technology Substitution Impact
Population Affluence Technology CO2
emissions 11 billion x .4 cars x 2.7
tons CO2 Per year
person x car per year 12 billion
tons CO2 per year
112IPAT and Growth
2050 Factor 4 Technology Substitution Impact
Population Affluence
Technology CO2 emissions 11 billion x .4
cars x 1.35 tons CO2 Per year
person x car per
year 5.94 billion tons CO2 per year 2050
Factor 10 Technology Substitution Impact
Population Affluence Technology CO2
emissions 11 billion x .4 cars x .54
tons CO2 Per year
person x car per year 2.4 billion
tons CO2 per year
113Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society
Politics
Economy
114Economy
- Components businesses, government, NGOs,
voluntarism - Prevailing principles market economics
(capitalism neoclassical economics), aggregate
economic welfare (pareto optimality), discount
rate, common access resources, externalities,
failure to value environment anti-environment
subsidies - Challenges of susdev principles internalization
of externalities closure of open access
resources proper valuation of environment - Practices new valuation methods, market-based
policy guidelines, green accounting methods,
environmental management
115Environmental Market Failures
- Failure to place a value on the environment not
priced use values option values existence
values bequest values - Lack of information
- Externalities
- Common Access Resources
- Discounting the future
- Allowance of subsidies and monopolies
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117Externalities
- An unintended cost or benefit of production or
consumption that is not reflected in the price of
the related transactions. Externalities are
often borne by people who are not parties to the
transactions that create them.
118Social and Private Costs of Exchange
Deadweight loss
119Discounting the Future with Net Present Value
(NPV)
NPV x/(1.10)nyrs X your present money
value .10 the discount rate nyrs the power of
how many years down the future you are looking
at NPV of 100 dollars in five years with a
discount rate of 10 is 100/(1.10)5 or 62.09
120Economic Practices Conventional Assessment
- Direct Economic
- GNP and tax income growth land values local and
non-local employment characteristics of
employment labour supply and training wage
levels - Indirect/wider economic expenditure
- Employees retail expenditure suppliers to main
development labour market pressures wider
multiplier effects
121Economic Practices alternative assessment
- New national accounts green GNP, index of
sustainable economic welfare, net national
product - Organizational total cost accounting
122Policy Influences from Ecological Economics
- Strict demands for environmental protection
reflected in - Environmental impact assessment
- Natural preservation areas (parks, reserves)
- Absolute limitations on chemicals
123Policy Guidelines from Ecological Economics
- 1. Daly Rule
- 2. Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW)
- 3. Ecological tariffs on free trade
- 4. Community based sustainability through
self-sufficiency and diversification
124Policy Guidelines from Ecological Economics
- 1. Daly Rule "Never reduce the stock of natural
capital below a level that generates a sustained
yield unless good substitutes are available for
the services generated."
125Economic Tools Example of assessment including
environmental and social factors
Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare
(ISEW) total output unpaid work -
environmental destruction and degradation -
environmental improvement measures -
depreciation of human-made capital /- welfare
distribution effect
126Genuine Progress Indicatorhttp//www.rprogress.or
g/newprograms/sustIndi/gpi/index.shtml
- Crime Family Breakdown
- Household Volunteer Work
- Income Distribution
- Resource Depletion
- Pollution
- Long-Term Environmental Damage
- Changes in Leisure Time
- Defensive Expenditures?
- Lifespan of Consumer Durables Public
Infrastructure - Dependence on Foreign Assets
127Genuine Progress Indicator vs Gross Domestic
Product in the US
Per Capita Income US
128New Economics Foundations Measure of Domestic
Progress http//www.neweconomics.org/gen/z_sys_pub
licationdetail.aspx?pid176
129(No Transcript)
130Gross Domestic Product vs Measure of Domestic
Progress UK
131(No Transcript)
132How would HK do on the GPI or MDP?
133Conceptual Model of Social Development Indicators
2000
Traditions
History
Contemporary Socio-Political Forces
Contemporary Economic Forces
Self Actualization
Love and Affection Needs
Safety and Security Needs
Physiological Needs
Environmental Pressures and Constraints
Values
Norms
134Hong Kong Social Development Indicators
2000Subindices
135Hong Kong Social Development Indicators
2000Vulnerable Population
136Hong Kong Social Development Indicators 20005
year Breakdown
137Economic Practices Better Valuation of
Non-market Valued Assets
1. Financial Costs 2. Averting Behavior 3. Travel
Cost Method 4. Hedonic Pricing 5. Contingent
Evaluation
For Better Cost-Benefit Analysis, regulations,
fines
138- Financial Costs Some actions of firms will lead
to costs that are measurable by conventional
means. These include the impacts on peoples'
health which result in the need to compensate for
medical costs, loss of working time, and other
compensation the impacts on resources such as
water, timber or agriculture leading to loss of
resource, degradation of the resource and costs
to restore them to a useful state or to
compensate for the loss. - Averting Behavior People will pay to reduce the
impact of pollution on their lives, such as
installing double-glazing on windows to reduce
noise, use water filters, or move away from
pollution. These costs can be measured. - Travel Cost Method People will travel to gain
access to an amenity not present in or destroyed
in their area. The cost of this travel is
translated as the cost of the environmental
impact that eliminated the amenity in the
peoples' own environment. The loss of Hong
Kong's coral reefs can be evaluated in terms of
how far Hong Kong people are willing to go to
snorkel and scuba dive on similar reefs. - Hedonic Pricing The valuation of equivalent
objects or amenities in different areas is
compared to determine the lower value incurred by
the environmental impact on one of the pair. A
house that has had its property value degraded by
the elimination of a close-by park can have its
market price compared to a similar house that is
close to a park. - Contingent Evaluation People are asked how
either their willingness-to-pay (WTP) for an
amenity or their willingness to accept payment
(WTA) for losing the amenity. People could be
asked for example how much they would pay to have
a park built in their neighborhood, or
conversely, they could be asked how much they
would accept as compensation for losing their
park to development. Contingent valuation is
open to a great deal of subjective
decision-making on the part of those being asked.
139Economic Practices Market-based policy
guidelines (as opposed to CAC)
1. Cost effectiveness example, emission trading
credits 2. Substitution and technological
advance example, green taxes 3. Other market
based schemes deposit refund schemes,
environmental bonds, transferable quotas,
transfer of development rights.
140- Cost effectiveness is achieving the greatest
overall environmental improvement for the least
overall cost. This approach usually entails
giving companies that can reduce environmental
impacts cheaply more incentive to do so. For
example in a town with two polluting companies,
if the government's objective is to reduce sulfur
pollution by 20 tons, it will cost less overall
if a company that can reduce its pollution with
the least cost undertake reduction. Thus if it
costs a refinery 1 dollar to save one ton of
sulfur emitted to the air while it would cost a
coal burning electricity producer 5 dollars. The
area would reduce its emissions and save money if
the refinery undertook most of the reductions.
Often the government or another institution must
create the conditions necessary for firms to
achieve these changes by imposing costs on all
firms for environmentally damaging behavior and
by allowing them to trade the benefits. - Substitution and technological advance The
market has proven itself to an extremely
effective promoter of new technologies by
encouraging people and companies to cut costs and
develop products to meet unmet needs. The
promise of the market is to use the same forces
to encourage technologies that will reduce
consumption of resources (thereby reducing
costs), provide alternative and cleaner use of
resources, or substitute the use of resources
entirely. Again, often the government or another
institution must create the incentives necessary
for firms to seek out these changes by imposing
costs on all firms for environmentally damaging
behavior. The key however, is that it remains up
to the discretion of any one firm how they are
going to achieve the improvement.
141Economic Practices environmental management
- Sustainable Strategies pollution prevention,
product stewardship, clean technologies,
sustainability visions - Environmental Organization and Management Systems
(ISO14000) policy, organizational integration,
programs and continuous improvement - Marketing advertising, market analysis,
substantiation, pricing - Accounting cost identification, cost allocation,
expanded time horizon - Purchasing supplier criteria, product criteria
- Design for Environment lifecycle analysis,
practices, metrics, analysis
142Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society
Politics
Economy
143Politics
- Components International, national, regional
local levels (executive, legislative, judicial,
administrative functions) Constituents Interest
Groups - Prevailing principles democracy, paternalism,
authoritarianism, property rights, redistribution
(socialism), etc. - Challenges to susdev principles jurisdictional
limitations to authority, interdepartmental
integration, capacity building, participation,
conflicts of interest, property rights regime - Practices environmental policies, plans and
strategies, coordinating councils/authorities,
participation systems, indicators
144Property Rights Regimes
- Private property
- Limited private property
- Public domain
- Common pool resources
- Open access resources
145Forms of Governance
- Representation or lack thereof (various levels of
democracy paternalism plutocracy etc.) - Planning participation or lack thereof
- Policies and practices
146Policy and Practices two basic types
- Binding or legal governance
- Guidance
147Policies and Practices
- Moral persuasion (guidelines, principles,
purchasing, publicity) - Command and Control (emission standards, bans,
BAT best available technology, EIAs) - Market mechanisms
- Monetary(taxes and fees subsidies licenses
deposits quotas emissions trading removal of
subsidies, monopolies and other distortions). - Information (Emissions release inventory, product
labeling, materials imprinting) - Extended Product Responsibility (product
stewardship voluntary/subsidized recycling and
compulsory EPR laws) - Government investment (prevention, regeneration,
information dissemination, research, education) - Public-private agreements are designed to bring
together stakeholders from different areas of
societybusiness, government, environmental
groups, local communityto design a collective
plan to deal with environmental problems.
148Moral persuasion
- Governments, NGOs and industry associations
- Convince industry and consumers of moral and
social duty - Guidelines and principles
- Product
- Publicity good and bad
149Command and Control (CC)
- Bans on chemicals or materials (e.g. lead,
asbestos) - Emission standards (e.g. limitations on sulfur
from petrol) - Specifying equipment to cleanup pollution (e.g.
waste water treatment) often requiring best
available technology (BAT) - Environmental impact assessments (EIAs)
150Market Mechanisms and Monetary Incentives
- Taxes are imposed for greater amounts of
emissions, waste or resource use. - Subsidies are paid out to encourage the use of
new technologies or undertake training for new
practices. - Licenses to pollute or extract a resource are
only sold only to a limited number of people thus
encouraging substitution. - Deposits are required before an action is taken
to make sure the remediation of impact can be
paid for and to encourage recycling (e.g. bonds
for land development or deposits on bottles
etc.). - Quotas are sold to give a limited number of
people the right to extract a resource and to
trade the right, thus creating the private
property conditions for maintaining the yield of
the resource. - Emission trading rights or credits can be gained
by firms under a regime set up by the government
that limits the overall amount of emissions and
the amount each firm is allowed to emit. - Deregulation of monopolistic or other controlled
industries to encourage more competition and
substitution.
151Information
- Product labelling requirements force companies in
industries from chemicals to electronics to food
to disclose the information such as types of
materials, source of raw materials, toxicity, and
other environmental characteristics. - Emissions release information is required by some
governments in order to force companies to tell
the public what dangerous chemicals they use and
produce or what other environment or health
threats they may pose. - Materials imprinting is used to permanently
indicate on a plastic, metal or other material
what is in order to aid recycling.
152Extended Product Responsibility
Requiring a company to deal with its product or
packaging at the end of its product life.
- Forces companies to reuse, recycle, or dispose of
their products and/or packaging or pay someone
else to do it - Gives companies the incentive to design for
reduction of product materials,packaging, and
toxins, and to otherwise make reusing, recycling,
and disposal easier and cheaper. - Producer (brand owner, importer or manufacturer)
has primary responsibility because of greater
influence on design. - In practice, responsibility shared by
stakeholders in product cycle consumers,
government, waste sorters, and recyclers.
153Government Investment
- Investment in environmental facilities may result
in companies being expected to pay for the use of
the facility. For example sewage treatment
plants, landfills, incinerators, pollution
monitors and so on are investments in prevention
that (under the polluter pays principle)
businesses will be expected to pay for and use. - Regeneration of damaged areas, may be undertaken
by government and responsible parties indirectly
or directly charged for it. - Research and information dissemination builds up
government and the publics capacity to
understand environmental impacts. - Investments in environmental education are likely
to have the widest and greatest impact on
changing market business and consumer
expectations environmental performance.
154Public-Private Agreements
- Public-private agreements are designed to bring
together stakeholders from different areas of
societybusiness, government, environmental
groups, local communityto design a collective
plan to deal with environmental problems industry
sectors and conservation land issues. In HK - Rechargable battery recycling program (EPD, NGOs,
companies) - Construction Industry waste reduction task force
(Govt, Academics, Industry associations) - Mai Po Wetlands (WWF, AFCD, Companies)
155Hong Kongs Environmental Policy Process
156Sustainable Development Policy Making in Hong Kong
Chief Executive
SusDev Unit
Public Officials
Exco
Council on SusDev
Central Policy Unit
Policy Committee (Chief Secretary)
Forums
Commission on Strategic Devt
Policy
Advisory Council on Env.
Bureaus
AFCD (consultation)
Planning Dept. (consultation)
EPD (consultation)
157Chinas SusDev Structure
State Council
Policy and Law
Supreme Court
Other Ministries
SPC and SSTC
SEPA
Lower Courts
Provinces Counties Cities Towns
Local EPBs
Center for Agenda 21
Domestic NGOs and International NGOs and UN etc
Organizations
Financial control
Political control
Social/political influence
158International Policy Regulation
- Identification and definition of global or
trans-boundary problems - Politicization and agenda setting by national and
international advocacy groups - Policy formation through negotiations
- Establishment of binding agreements, conventions
and protocols, action plans - Implementation by national governments
159International Environmental Policy-making Process
160Green Plans/Strategies
161Sustainable Development as Integration
Science Technology
Environment
Environment
Society/Nation Integrating plan/strategy
Politics
Economy
162An International Framework
- Creating conventions and protocols to govern the
international commons - Establishing principles and practices of
sustainable development for implementation at
national and local levels
163The International Framework Agenda 21
- Preamble
- Agenda 21 addresses the pressing problems of
today and also aims at preparing the world for
the challenges of the next century. It reflects a
global consensus and political commitment at the
highest level on development and environment
cooperation. Its successful implementation is
first and foremost the responsibility of
Governments. National strategies, plans, policies
and processes are crucial in achieving this.
International cooperation should support and
supplement such national efforts. In this
context, the United Nations system has a key role
to play. Other international, regional and
subregional organizations are also called upon to
contribute to this effort. The broadest public
participation and the active involvement of the
non-governmental organizations and other groups
should also be encouraged.
164Other Important Agreements for the International
Framework for SusDev
- Biodiversity Convention on Biological Diversity
1992 - Climate Change Convention on Climate Change
1992 Kyoto Protocol 1997 - Desertification UN Convention to Combat
Desertification in those Countries Experiencing
Serious Drought and/or Desertification,
Particularly Africa 1994 - Endangered Species Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and
Fauna (CITES) 1973 - Hazardous Waste Basel Convention on the
Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Waste and
their Disposal 1989 - Heritage Convention Concerning the Protection of
the World Cultural and Natural Heritage 1927 - Others Ozone (Montreal Protocol 1987) Oceans
(Law of the Sea 1982) Wetlands (Ramsar 1973) - International Development Goals (OECD 1997)
Millenium Development Goals (UN 2000)
165- Agenda 21 - Table of Contents
- Preamble
- Section 1 Social and Economic Dimensions
- Section 2 Conservation and Management of
Resources for Development - Section 3 Strengthening the Role of Major
Groups - Section 4 Means of Implementation
166Agenda 21 - Table of Contents Chapter Paragraphs 1
. Preamble SECTION I. SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC
DIMENSIONS 2. International cooperation to
accelerate sustainable development in developing
countries and related domestic policies 3.
Combating poverty 4. Changing consumption
patterns 5. Demographic dynamics and
sustainability 6. Protecting and promoting human
health conditions 7. Promoting sustainable human
settlement development 8. Integrating environment
and development in decision-making
167SECTION II. CONSERVATION AND MGT OF RESOURCES FOR
DEVELOPMENT 9. Protection of the atmosphere 10.
Integrated approach to the planning and
management of land resources11. Combating
deforestation 12. Managing fragile ecosystems
combating desertification and drought 13.
Managing fragile ecosystems sustainable mountain
development 14. Promoting sustainable agriculture
and rural development 15. Conservation of
biological diversity 16. Environmentally sound
management of biotechnology 17. Protection of the
oceans, all kinds of seas, including enclosed and
semi-enclosed seas, and coastal areas and the
protection, rational use and development of their
living resources 18. Protection of the quality
and supply of freshwater resources application
of integrated approaches to the development,
management and use of water resources 19.
Environmentally sound management of toxic
chemicals, including prevention of illegal
international traffic in toxic and dangerous
products 20. Environmentally sound management of
hazardous wastes, in hazardous wastes 21.
Environmentally sound management of solid wastes
and sewage-related issues 22. Safe and
environmentally sound management of radioactive
wastes
168SECTION III. STRENGTHENING THE ROLE OF MAJOR
GROUPS 23. Preamble 24. Global action for women
towards sustainable and equitable development 25.
Children and youth in sustainable development 26.
Recognizing and strengthening the role of
indigenous people and their communities 27.
Strengthening the role of non-governmental
organizations partners for sustainable
development 28. Local authorities' initiatives in
support of Agenda 21 29. Strengthening the role
of workers and their trade unions 30.
Strengthening the role of business and
industry 31. Scientific and technological
community 32. Strengthening the role of farmers
169SECTION IV. MEANS OF IMPLEMENTATION 33.
Financial resources and mechanisms 34. Transfer
of environmentally sound technology, cooperation
and capacity-building 35. Science for sustainable
development 36. Promoting education, public
awareness and training 37. National mechanisms
and international cooperation for
capacity-building in developing countries 38.
International institutional arrangements 39.
International legal instruments and
mechanisms 40. Information for decision-making
170Agenda 21 National Plans
- 8.7. Governments, in cooperation, where
appropriate, with international organizations,
should adopt a national strategy for sustainable
development based on, inter alia, the
implementation of decisions taken at the
Conference, particularly in respect of Agenda 21.
This strategy should build upon and harmonize the
various sectoral economic, social and
environmental policies and plans that are
operating in the country. The experience gained
through existing planning exercises such as
national reports for the Conference, national
conservation strategies and environment action
plans should be fully used and incorporated into
a country-driven sustainable development
strategy. Its goals should be to ensure socially
responsible economic development while protecting
the resource base and the environment for the
benefit of future generations. It should be
developed through the widest possible
participation. It should be based on a thorough
assessment of the current situation and
initiatives.
171Local Strategies (Local Agenda 21) Agenda 21
 Chapter 28 LOCAL AUTHORITIES' INITIATIVES IN
SUPPORT OF AGENDA 21 PROGRAMME AREA Basis for
action 28.1. Because so many of the problems and
solutions being addressed by Agenda 21 have their
roots in local activities, the participation and
cooperation of local authorities will be a
determining factor in fulfilling its objectives.
Local authorities construct, operate and maintain
economic, social and environmental
infrastructure, oversee planning processes,
establish local environmental policies and
regulations, and assist in implementing national
and subnational environmental policies. As the
level of governance closest to the people, they
play a vital role in educating, mobilizing and
responding to the public to promote sustainable
development.
17228.3. Each local authority should enter into a
dialogue with its citizens, local organizations
and private enterprises and adopt "a local Agenda
21". Through consultation and consensus-building,
local authorities would learn from citizens and
from local, civic, community, business and
industrial organizations and acquire the
information needed for formulating the best
strategies. T