Title: Environmental Problems, Their Causes and Sustainability
1CHAPTER 1
- Environmental Problems, Their Causes and
Sustainability
2Living in an Exponential Age
- Exponential growth - a quantity increases by a
fixed percentage of the whole in a given time - Environmental problems are interconnected
- population growth
- wasteful use of resources
- destruction and degradation of wildlife habitats
- extinction of plants and animal
- poverty
- pollution
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4Living Sustainably
- Sustainability - ability of specified system to
survive and function over time - Natural resources are our natural capital
depletion of capital is living unsustainably - Our demands on earths resources and natural
processes is increasing exponentially
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6Growth and the Wealth Gap
- Doubling time (70 / growth rate) related to
exponential growth - Human activities have disturbed 73 of habitable
area of planet - Gross national product (GNP) is a measure of
countrys economic growth
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9Growth and the Wealth Gap - 2
- Economically developed countries
- are highly industrialized and have high GNP
- have 20 of population and 85 of wealth
- use 88 of resources produce 75 of waste
- Developing countries
- are low to moderately industrialized and have low
GNP - have 80 of population and 15 of wealth
- use 12 of resources
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13Is Current Economic Growth Sustainable?
- Not sustainable because
- limits imposed by earths finite supplies of
resources - environments capacity to absorb, detoxify and
recycle wastes - Sustainable development - environment can
continue to - supply and renew resources
- absorb or break down wastes
14What is Wealth Gap
- Large families in developing countries b/c
- children are seen as economic security
- many children die early
- Their habitats are polluted and dangerous
- 49,000 premature deaths / day
- Many die from malnutrition and contaminated
drinking water
15Resources
- Ecological resources habitat, food, water and
shelter - Resources classified as
- renewable, potentially renewable or nonrenewable
- some are directly available e.g. air some are
available only with technological ingenuity
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17Potentially renewable resources
- Replenished in hours to decades
- Living organisms, water, air, and soil
- Biological diversity (biodiversity) types
- genetic diversity - variation in genetic makeup
among individuals in species - species diversity - variation among organisms in
habitat - ecological diversity - variation of biomes
18Potentially renewable resources
- Sustainable yield - rate at which resource can be
used w/o reducing available supply - Otherwise - environmental degradation
- urbanization of productive land
- waterlogging salt buildup in soil
- excessive topsoil erosion
- deforestation habitat destruction
- pollution
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20What are nonrenewable resources?
- Energy resources cannot be recycled
- coal, oil, natural gas and uranium
- Metallic mineral (hard, usually crystalline,
naturally formed) resources - can be recycled - iron, copper, and aluminum
- Nonmetallic mineral resources - difficult or
costly to recycle - salt, sand, clay, and phosphates
21What are nonrenewable resources? - 2
- Economic depletion - cost of extraction and use
exceed economic value - leads to - effort to find more
- recycle or reuse existing supplies
- use and waste less
- effort to develop substitute
- wait for more to be produced
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23What are nonrenewable resources? - 3
- Recycle - collect and reprocess a resource
- Reuse - use over and over in same form
- Reserves - known deposits of a given nonrenewable
resource from which usable mineral can be
extracted profitable at current prices
24Pollution
- Pollution is anything added to air, water, soil
or food that threatens living organisms - Pollution sources
- some are natural
- most are anthropogenic
- point sources are single and identifiable, e.g,
smokestack - nonpoint sources
25Harm Caused by Pollutants
- Disruption of life-support systems
- Damage to wildlife, human health and property
- Nuisances - e.g. loud sounds
- Factors determine severity
- chemical nature - how active or harmful
- concentration
- persistance
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27Persistence of pollutants
- Nonpersistent or degradable by natural physical,
chemical or biological processes e.g. sewage - Persistent and slowly degradable, e.g. DDT and
plastics - Persistent and nondegradable e.g. lead and mercury
28What can be done about pollution
- Prevent pollutants from reaching environment
(input pollution control) - two incentive approaches carrot and stick
- Pollution cleanup (output pollution control)
three problems - temporary bandage
- often just transfers pollutant
- often expensive
29Environmental and Resource Problems
- Underlying causes
- rapid population growth
- little pollution prevention and waste reduction
- simplification of degradation of earths natural
life-support systems - poverty --gt resource use for survival
- economic political systems fail to encourage
earth-sustaining economic development - failure to consider environmental cost
- domination and managing of nature
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31Environmental Problems and Root causes
- Three factor model - impact of population on a
given area depends upon - population size - P
- average of units of resources used / individual
- amount of environmental degradation and pollution
produced - Population x affluence x technonlogy
environmental impact (technology may have
positive or negative impact)
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35Cultural changes and sustainability
- Human cultural changes
- Hunter-gatherer societies - earlier ones survived
through environmental wisdom advanced
hunter-gatherer impacted environment more - Agricultural revolution - cultivation of plants
animals slash burn and shifting cultivation - Industrial revolution - machines depended on
nonrenewable fossil fuels --gt urbanization - Information revolution
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37Present Course - Sustainable?
- Will ingenuity and technology lead to
- pollution cleanup
- substitutes for scarce resources
- expansion of earths ability to support humans
- Instead - focus on
- pollution and waste prevention
- protection of habitats (not just species)
- environmental restoration
- resource conservation