Title: 2005 VCE Environmental Studies Review Lecture
12005 VCE Environmental Studies Review Lecture
- Victorian Association of Environmental Education
- Presenter Francis Jeon-Ellis
2Exam Breakdown
- 90 points total
- 20 Multiple Choice
- 70 Short answer
48 points guarenteed
348 Points Guaranteed
- Description of pollutant and management options
13 points - Description of ecologically sustainable
development 16 points - Reading graphs 8 point (5 mc, 3 sa)
- Calculations 11 points
4Description of Pollutant
- Name of pollutant
- Diffuse or point source
- Transport mechanism
- source -gt sink
- Fate in environment
- bioaccumulation?
- Effect or Impact on organism and environment
- Strategies for mitigation
5- Properties
- Solid /liquid gas
- Melting / Boiling Points
- Flammability
- Solubility
- Fate
- Persistence
- Elimination
- Mobility
- Transport mechanisms
- Impact
- Effects on Organisms and Environment
Source
Strategies to mitigate effects
6Point-Source Pollution
- Pollutants released from specific points that may
be collected, treated or controlled. - eg
- domestic waste water
- industrial wastes
- sewage treatment effluent
7Non-point / Diffuse sources of Pollution
- a diffuse source of pollution that cannot be
attributed to a clearly identifiable, specific
physical location or a defined discharge channel. - eg
- general runoff of sediments
- pesticide spraying
- fertilisers from farms and urban areas
8Transport Mechanism
- How does your pollutant move through the
environment? - Transport mechanism effects risk to organisms and
environment - Effects fate and persistence of pollutant
9Transport Mechanism
- Dispersed by air / wind currents are likely to
be inhaled, absorbed through dermal (skin)
contact and ingested. - Dissolve in and are dispersed by water are
likely to be ingested, absorbed through dermal
contact but are less likely to be inhaled by
terrestrial organisms. - Compounds that are fat soluble are likely to
biomagnify and therefore pass through the food
web and be ingested.
10Persistence and Fate
- How long the pollutant lasts in the environment
- The fate of pollutants depends on
- Transport Mechanism
- Chemical Stability
- Photo-degradability
- Bio-degradability
- Bioaccumulation
11Fate of oil spilled at sea showing the main
weathering processes
12Fate Pollutant sinks
- Sink a process or place that removes, stores or
absorbs a pollutant. - Carbon dioxide sequestration
- by dissolving water.
- in plants, by photosynthesis.
- Phosphates
- adhering to particulate matter which settles out
in bottom sediments. - in organisms.
13Bioaccumulation
- an increase in the concentration of a chemical or
nuitrient over time in a biological organism
compared to the chemical's concentration in the
environment. - Compounds accumulate in living things any time
they are taken up and stored faster than they are
broken down (metabolised) or excreted. - Vitamins A,D and K bioaccumulate.
14Biomagnification
- a process that results in the accumulation of a
chemical in an organism at higher levels than are
found in its own food. - Concern is concentration increases exponentially
as it moves up the food chain
15Biomagnification
16Examples of Biomagnifying Pollutants
- DDT
- Mercury
- Many heavy metals
17Bioconcentration
- The specific process by which chemical sbustances
accumulate and concentrate in an organism. - Usually applies to chemicals that are foreign to
the organism.
18Effect of Pollutant on Organism and Environment
- What is the concern about the pollutant?
- Affects human/animal health?
- Obstructs waterways?
- Alters habitat?
- Changes atmosphere?
19Health Effects of Chemical Pollutants
- Toxic Substances
- Hazardous substances
- Carcinogens
- Mutagens
- Teratogens
20Terminology
Exposure How much of a pollutant an organism
is exposed to over a specific period of time.
Dosage The amount of a chemical absorbed per
unit body weight.
Toxicity A measure of the harm a substance can
cause an organism.
21Effects on organism and environment
- In Maine USA the USDA recommended that no more
than two wild fish from rivers be eaten each
month - Exposure - fish per month
- Eating more than two fish was found to expose
people to dioxin levels greater than the
recommended 30 pg Dioxin/ kg body weight - Dosage pg Dioxin per kg body weight
22Toxicity
- Acute toxicity
- the adverse health effects from a single dose or
exposure to a toxic chemical or substance.
- Chronic toxicity
- the adverse health effects of repeated doses or
exposure to a chemical or substance over a
relatively prolonged period.
- Threshold
- the level of the exposure below which there is no
adverse effect and above which there is a
significant toxicological effect.
23LD50 test - Acute toxicity
- LD50 Lethal Dose 50
- the dose of a substance that will kill half the
test animals. - usually expressed as mg/kg.
- eg
- if it took 400 milligrams of a test substance to
kill half the rabbits weighing 4 kilograms, then
the LD50 is 100mg/kg. - Oral LD50(rat) - 100mg/kg
24 Synergistic action
2 2 8
- The phenomenon in which two factors acting
together have a much greater effect than would be
indicated by the sum of their effects separately. - eg the impact of a low dose of toxin A and B
administered together has a far greater effect
than the sum of the toxins administered
individually.
25Stratagies for Mitigation
- Specific
- Relate it back to main characteristics of
pollutants life cycle. - Source
- Transport mechanism
- Persistence and fate
- Acute/chronic effects
- Individual, societal, industry strategies
26- Properties
- Solid /liquid gas
- Melting / Boiling Points
- Flammability
- Solubility
- Fate
- Persistence
- Elimination
- Mobility
- Transport mechanisms
- Impact
- Effects on Organisms and Environment
Source
Strategies to mitigate effects
27Specifics
- Point vs. diffuse source
- Bioaccumulation/biomagnification
- Exposure, dosage
- LD50
- Chronic vs acute toxicity
- Synergistic effect
48 4 52 points
2848 Points Guaranteed
- Description of pollutant and management options
13 points - Description of ecologically sustainable
development 16 points - Reading graphs 8 point (5 mc, 3 sa)
- Simple calculations 11 points
29Ecologically Sustainable Development
- What is sustainable development?
- What are the potential impacts/risks of the
project? - Who are stakeholders involved, what are their
concerns? - What environmental management tools were used?
- Assess risk/impacts before project began
- Address, minimize impacts as project continues
- How well did the project address impacts/risks
and stakeholder concerns?
30What is ESD
- Development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs. - Not just about now
- Not just about money
31What is ESD?
- Considers values other than immediate financial
gain. - ie. Clear-cut timber harvest vs. selective
logging
32Ecologically Sustainable Development
- Triple Bottom Line
- Economic
- Monetary gain
- Social
- Community benefit
- Environmental
- Ecological enhancement
33ESD
- Shift in burden of proof
- Traditional Unless harm is proven, development
will continue - ESD Development should not be done unless it
can be shown to be safe (Precautionary Principle) - Scientific uncertainty
- If not everything is known, err on the side of
safety - eg. GMOs, Carbon Sequestration
34Precautionary principle
- Where there are threats of serious or
irreversible environmental damage, lack of full
scientific certainty should not be used as a
reason for postponing measures to prevent
environmental degradation. - In the application of the Precautionary
Principle, public and private decisions should be
guided by - careful evaluation to avoid, wherever
practicable, serious or irreversible damage to
the environment and - an assessment of the risk-weighted consequences
of various options."
35Potential Impacts
- Environmental, social, financial impacts.
- Local, national, international
- Immediate, long-term
36Stakeholders
- Who has responsibility?
- Who has an interest/investment in the resources?
- Individual, community, industry
- Public versus private ownership
37Environmental Management Tools
- Before project begins
- Risk Assessment Pollutants, introductions
- Environmental Impact Assessment Development,
building - Life-Cycle analysis - Products
38Environmental Risk Assessment
- Provides detail of the potential adverse effects
of substances or activities on humans and the
environment. - Risk assessment integrates
- Toxicological data,
- Human experience,
- Exposure information,
- Fate of a chemical,
- Transportation data,
- Statistics and probability.
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40Environmental Risk Assessment
- Steps involved
- Hazard Identification what are the problem
chemicals and what problems might they cause. - Exposure Assessment how long will the exposure
occur, what dosage will be received. - Risk Estimation what is the probability of the
chemicals causing harm, is the risk acceptable. - Risk Prevention plans to manage or remove the
risks identified. - Risk Communication Communication of the issues
to stakeholders and community.
41ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENTEIA(National)/
EES (Victoria)
- A decision making tool required which determines
the environmental effects of a construction or
project prior to it's implementation.
42Environmental Impact Statement
- Description of the proposed action and
alternatives. - Prediction of the nature and magnitude of the
likely environmental changes. - Identification of the relevant human concerns and
social impacts. - Definition of criteria to be used in measuring
the significance of environmental changes,
including relative weightings given to different
changes.
43EIS
- Estimation of the significance of predicted
environmental changes , and - Recommendation regarding acceptance or rejection
of the project. - Description of mitigation measures to be adopted.
- Recommend monitoring procedures to be followed
after the action is completed. - Evaluate of the implications of not proceeding
with the project
44Life cycle analysis (LCA)
- An analysis of all the environmental impacts of a
product during it's entire life cycle. - aims to quantify the level of energy and raw
materials used as well as the solid, liquid and
gaseous wastes produced at every stage of a
products life or process including - Materials acquisition
- Manufacture
- Use
- Transport
- Disposal
45Life Cycle Analysis of Glass vs. Polycarbonate
Sidelights on a Motor Vehicle
System Overview
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47Environmental Management Tools
- As project continues (during project)
- Risk Management
- Environmental management system
- Continual monitoring and improvement
- Can include many tools
48Risk Management
- involves the intelligent anticipation of events
that could have harmful consequences and the
adoption of courses of action aimed at either
stopping the feared events or minimising their
impact. - Includes strategies to
- Prohibit the use of a potentially damaging
process/object/substance. - Regulating or modifying activities.
- Reducing the vulnerability of those threatened.
- Regular ongoing monitoring of environmental
impacts. - Development and implementation of post -event
emergency response procedures. - Institution of compensation schemes.
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51Environmental Management System
- An Environmental Management System is a
management system that is - based on environmental criteria, standards and
performance. - aimed at continual environmental improvement
performance and ecological sustainable
development.
52Environmental Management Systems
- The principles of EMS
- Environment policy
- Implementation
- Environment audit
- Review and improvement
- EMS ensure
- environmental and safety risks are identified,
- progress is made towards reducing risks,
- a process is in place to ensure that procedures
are monitored and reviewed. - The basic framework of EMS is a risk management
tool based on - Risk Identification
- Risk Assessment and
- Risk Control
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54To be awarded ISO14001 Certification
organisations must
- Be committed to comply with all legislative
requirements. - Have defined and documented corporate environment
policy. - Be committed to continual environmental
improvement. - Have a management representative with
responsibility for implementing and maintaining
the system. - Specify environmental objectives at all levels
within an organisation.
55ISO14001 Key elements cont
- Monitor compliance with requirements and
achievement of objectives. - Implement a procedure for corrective action and
dealing with emergencies. - Establish an environmental management program
(ie. EMS). - Designate responsibilities clearly.
- Outline approach for implementing and time
frames. - Employee awareness and training.
- Establishment and maintenance of an audit program.
56Review Environmental Management Plan/System
- Relate answer back to ALL stakeholder concerns
- Triple bottom line
- Consider whole life of project. Stakeholders at
all levels of project - Did they use the precautionary principle?
- Be specific
57Ecotourism
- Ecologically sensitive tourism ventures
- Benefits
- may be very effective for raising awareness about
ecological issues - May promote conservation/ESD elsewhere
- Concerns
- There is no compulsory requirement for ecotourism
ventures to be accredited as environmentally
sustainable - Tourism ventures inevitably has an impact
- Needs ecological benefit/cost analysis
58Specifics
52 5 57 points
- Ecologically sustainable development
- Triple bottom line
- Precautionary principle
- Risk vs hazard
- Life cycle analysis
- Assessment vs. management
59Points Guaranteed
- Description of pollutant and management options
13 points - Description of ecologically sustainable
development 16 points - Reading graphs 8 point (5 mc, 3 sa)
- Simple calculations 11 points
60Figure 156 Annual average total suspended
particulates (TSP) monitoring results from 1994
to 1996. Source from BPEM (1998).
61Reading Graphs
- Look at title
- What is the measure on each axis
- What does each data point/bar represent exactly
- Average, maximum, minimum, total amount
- What exactly is question asking?
62Figure 156 Annual average total suspended
particulates (TSP) monitoring results from 1994
to 1996. Source from BPEM (1998).
In which years was the annual average total
suspended dust particle higher than the Target of
90 ug m-3 Which site had the highest average TSP
in 1995
63Figure 64 Greenhouse gas emissions per capita
from 1990 to 1998.Source AGO (2000a
64Figure 66 Emissions by gas, excluding forest and
grassland conversion, 1990 to 1998
65Points Guaranteed
- Description of pollutant and management options
13 points - Description of ecologically sustainable
development 16 points - Reading graphs 8 point (5 mc, 3 sa)
- Calculations 11 points
66Calculations
- Percentages and Ratios
- What percentage of Total emissions in 1990 was
non-energy emissions - 5/25 x/100
- 25x 500
- X 20 percent
- Or 5/25 100 20
67Calculations
- What percent increase in greenhouse has emissions
between 1996 and 1990 - New original change
- (450 390) 60
- (Change/ original) 100 change
- (60/ 390) 100 15.38 increase
68The Rest of the points
- 60 points walking into the exam
- The other 30
- 15 related to scientific study sampling,
monitoring of pollutants - 15 discriminating/challenging question