Title: Introduction to Sustainable Development
1Introduction to Sustainable Development
2Purpose of the Course
- Introduce the Concept of Sustainability as the
Foundation of Future Society - Provide a Foundation for Understanding and
Implementing Sustainability Principles - Show the Importance of a Sustainable Community as
the Key Concept - Indicate Methods for Implementing Sustainability
in Various Social and Economic Sectors
3Reasons for this Course
- Humankind is profoundly affecting the Earth
- Destruction of ecosystems and biodiversity
- Global environmental problems greenhouse
warming, ozone depletion, toxification, soil
erosion, emissions - Mass movements of materials
- Introduction of biological agents estrogen
mimickers, genetically engineered products - Humankind does not understand or appreciate the
role of ecosystems for our health and in our
economy - Humanity may be crashing the critical planetary
ecosystems - How do we change direction at this critical point
in time? Globally? In Poland?
4Proposed Solution -Briefly
- Sustainable development or sustainability
- Development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs World
Commission on Environment and Development, 1987
Our Common Future (Brundtland Report) - Balancing environment, economy, and societys
needs - Sustainability Clarified Satisfying lives for
all within the means of naturenow and in the
future. Redefining Progress, 2002,
www.rprogress.org
5Some New Vocabulary
- Sustainability
- Substitutability
- Deep Ecology
- Factor 4 and Factor 10
- Carrying Capacity
- Ecological Footprint
- Ecological Rucksack
- Adaptive Management
- Ecological Economics
- Environmental Ethics
- Clean Production
- Industrial Ecology
- Eco-efficiency
- MIPS
6The Twin Problems Population and Consumption
- Human population has been growing exponentially
since the beginning of the industrial revolution
(1.7/year) - Industrial production has also been growing at an
exponential rate (3.5/year 1970-2000) - World fertilizer consumption is doubling every 15
years. Total use now is 15 times greater than
the end of WWII. - In this century, consumption of energy and
materials will increase by a Factor of 12
(2000-2100) if growth in population continues at
the same rates
Beyond the Limits to Growth, Meadows, Meadows,
and Rander
7World Population Growth
8World Demographic Transition
9Population Growth over Time
- 1650 0.5 billion 0.3/year DT250 yrs
- 1900 1.6 billion 0.5/year DT140 yrs
- 1970 3.6 billion 2.1/year DT 34 yrs
- Result Superexponential growth, the rate of
increase is increasing - 1990 5.4 billion 1.7/year DT 42 yrs
- 2000 6.0 billion 1.7/year DT 42 yrs
10World Industrial Production
11Percent Change in Industrial Production from
Previous Year
12 World Fertilizer Use 1950-2000
13Worldwide Growth in Selected Activities 1970-2000
1970 2000 Population 3.6
billion 6.1 billion Automobile Production 22.5
million 40.9 million Oil consumption 2,189
MTOE 3,332 MTOE Natural gas consumption 1,022
MTOE 2,277 MTOE Coal consumption 1,635
MTOE 2,034 MTOE Wind Energy Capacity(MW) approx
0 18,100 GDP (-1999) 16.3 trillion 43.2
trillion GDP (-1999/capita 4,407 7,102 AIDS
Deaths approx 0 21.8 million
14Key Lesson about Growth Rates
- Apparently small growth rates have massive
consequences - World population growth rate is only 1.7
- Buy means 78 million new people per year
- World population doubled since 1960!
- Why?
15Doubling Times
Growth Rate, /year Doubling Time
(years) 0.1 700 0.5 140 1.0
70 2.0 35 3.0 23 4.0
18 5.0 14 6.0 10 7.0 7
16Example Nigerias Population
- Population growth rate 2.7/year
Year Population (millions) 1990
118 2014 236 2038 472 2062
944 2086 1,888
17Rule of 72
72/Growth Rate in /year Doubling Time in
Years Nigerian Example 72/2.7 26.7 years
18One more example Paper!
- Double a sheet of paper the thickness is
doubled. - Double the sheet of paper 40 times how thick is
it?
Thickness 0.5 mm x 240 0.5 x 1.1 x 1012 5.5
x1011 mm
550,000,000,000 mm 550,000 km distance
from the Earth to the Moon!
19IPAT Formula
ImpactPopulation x Affluence x Technology
I P x A x T Impact
(throughput) of a population on the planets
sources and sinks equals the population times its
affluence times the damage done by the
technologies supporting the affluence.
Environmental impact/person Source Paul
Ehrlich
20Affecting IPAT Outcomes
- Population (P) family planning, female
literacy, social welfare, role of women, land
tenure - Affluence (A)
- Capital stock/person values, prices, full
costing, what do we want?, What is enough? - Material throughput/capital stock product
longevity, material choice, minimum materials
design, recycling/reuse/recovery, scrap recovery - Technology (T)
- Energy/material throughput End-use efficiency,
conversion efficiency, distribution efficiency,
system integration, process redesign - Environmental impact/Energy Benign sources,
scale, siting, technical mitigation, offsets
21Some Evidence of Real Problems
- Humans are coopting 40 of terrestrial and 30 of
aquatic Net Primary Production (NPP) (Vitousek et
al 1986)) - Humans are coopting 26 of all evapotranspiration
and 54 of available water runoff, a net of about
30 of all the solar powered hydrologic cycle
(Postel 1997) - Humans are moving 2x more material than all
natural forces combined (Schmidt-Bleek 1997) - Atmospheric CO2 has risen from 290 ppm (early
1880s) to 315 ppm in 1958, 345 ppm in 1990, 369
ppm in 2000 - Falling grain production
22World Grain Production 1950-2000
23What is Sustainable Development?
- Sustainable development is development that meets
the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own
needs World Commission on Environment and
Development, 1987 Our Common Future (Brundtland
Report) - Agenda 21 In order to meet the challenges of
environment and development, States decided to
engage in a new global partnership ...
sustainable development should become a priority
item on the agenda of the international community
UN Conf on Env Dev, Rio de Janeiro, June 1992 - ... is nondeclining human well-being over time
David Pearce, Economics of Sustainable
Development, 1994
24More on Sustainable Development
- A particular system that when considered in
isolation has a positive balance in relation to
its own costs and benefits (Ravetz 1992) - Improving the quality of life within the carrying
capacity or supporting ecosystems (WCU 1991) - The use of energy and materials in an urban area
in balance with what the region can supply
continuously through natural processes such as
photosynthesis, biological decomposition, and the
biochemical processes which sustain life (Lyle
1994) - Something is 'sustainable' if it has the capacity
to continue. (Sustainable London)
25Lester Brown (Worldwatch Institute)
- Over the long term for sustainability
- Species Extinction lt Species Evolution
- Soil Erosion lt Soil Formation
- Forest Destruction lt Forest Regeneration
- Carbon Emissions lt Carbon Fixation
- Fish Catches lt Regeneration Capacity of
Fisheries - Human Births lt Human Deaths
26Key Points
- Sustainability is concerned with future
generations, intergenerational justice,
resources, environment - Three systems must be maintained in healthy a
healthy relationship ecological, social, and
economic - Natural systems hold the key to human
sustainability
27The Systems
Natural (N)
Social (S)
Economic (E)
28Proto-Sustainable Systems
29Truly Sustainable Systems
N
S
E
30Paradigm Shifts
31- Social problems
- erosion of the family
- educational system quality
- crime and prisoners
- decaying cities
- Economic problems
- unequal distribution of wealth
- shift of productivity income, workers to capital
owners - technology driven creative destruction
- Environmental problems
- loss of natural capital rainforest
- greenhouse warming and ozone depletion
- loss of soil, over-fishing, over-grazing,
over-foresting
What is the connection between...?
32Thinking Sustainably Observe Nature
- There is no such thing as waste
- Live off current solar income
- Respect and foster diversity
A key lesson from this course!
33General Sustainability Principles
- minimize resource consumption, use of
non-renewables, pollution, toxics, waste - maximize efficiency, reuse, recycling, renewable
resource use - foster conservation, understanding of natural
systems functions, economic justice - focus on quality v. quantity, needs v. wants
- redesign the economy and artifacts to mimic
natural systems
34Waste Pollution Inefficiency Lost
- Positive Correlation environmentalism economic
prosperity - Germany
- environmental technologies
- environmental policy economic policy
- improved environmental quality improved
competitiveness - Japan
- 40 less energy in steel production than US, far
less air pollution - defy conventional wisdom
- Research Agency of Innovative Technology for the
Earth international competitiveness
35Perverse Economics
- Environmental damage actually add to GNP
- Depletion of natural resources adds to GNP ( tax
credits!!) - The polluter hardly pays
- Waste disposal is heavily subsidized
- Maximum ROI drives corporate decisions
- Discount rate maximizes todays
consumption/depletion
36Strong vs. Weak Sustainability
- Refers to different schools of thought
- Strong natural capital is irreplaceable
- Weak natural capital is substitutable by
manmade capital - More discussion when we cover economic concepts
37Summary
- Extraction of resource and environmental damage
continuing and even accelerating - We are rapidly destroying adapted, diverse
ecosystems crucial to both our economy and our
survival - Growth as a basic assumption of the economic
system is mathematically and physically
impossible - Sustainability can help us change course to live
within the constraints of nature with a high
quality of life, to change our thinking.
38The significant problems we face cannot be
solved at the same level of thinking we were at
when we created them. - Albert Einstein