Title: MODULE 3
1Teachers Resource
2(No Transcript)
3Learning from the past
- The Mayans
- Easter Island
- Mesopotamia
- Biosphere 2
1.3
4WHY IS SUSTAINABILITY AN ISSUE?
1.4
5State of the world - social
- In 2000
- Global population 6.1 billion, up from 2.5
billion in 1950 - 95 of population growth in developing countries
- 1.2 billion in severe poverty (lt1/day)
- More than 1 billion people overweight (in the US,
61 adults overweight, 27 obese) - 1.1 billion without access to safe water
- 3 million people died of AIDS (cumulative total
now almost 22 million) and 58 million had HIV - On average a person was infected with HIV every
six seconds - In Botswana, one in three adults was infected
with HIV
1.5
6State of the world - social
(continued)
- United States
- Fordham University index of social health 44
lower in 1996 than in 1973, despite stock market
highs - Now the worlds largest penal colony (nearly five
million men in the US awaiting trial, in prison,
on probation or on parole) - There is no cost difference between incarceration
and an Ivy League education - Australia
- In 1996, 2 million lived below the poverty line
- Top 20 percent of households had 44 percent of
private income while the bottom 20 percent had
just 3 percent - Now one of the most unequal of all developed
countries (having slipped from 7th to 15th on the
UN Index of Human Development)
1.6
7State of the world - environment
- 12 of 9,900 bird species in the world threatened
with extinction - Over the last 200 years, 103 bird extinctions
have been already documented rate more than 50
times background rates of extinction - 27 of the worlds coral reefs were severely
damaged by 2000, compared to only 10 in 1992 - In the last 100 years, Earth has lost over half
its wetlands in South-east Australia this
figure is 89 - Aquifers are being depleted worldwide, with water
tables in many parts falling by as much as a
metre a year
1.7
8State of the world - environment
(continued)
- Atmospheric carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) is
30 higher than pre-industrial times and highest
in at least 420,000 years - Strong scientific consensus that most warming
observed over the last 50 years is attributable
to human activities - 10 decrease in snow cover since the 1960s
- Global average sea level has risen 10-20 cm
- IPCC projections - by the year 2100
- globally averaged surface temperature will warm
by 1.4 to 5.8ºC (relative to 1990) - global mean sea level will rise by 9 to 88cm
(relative to 1990)
1.8
9State of the world - economic
- In 2000, foreign debt of developing and former
Eastern bloc nations stood at US2.57 trillion
(2,570,000,000,000) (1999 dollars) - During the 1990s the economic toll of natural
disasters topped US608 billion, more than the
previous four decades combined - Of the US9 trillion spent every year in the
United States, US2 trillion is wasted
1.9
10State of the environment - Australia
- Between 1996 and 2001
- Additional 500,000 hectares of land became salt
affected (bringing total to at least 2.5 million
hectares or 5 of our cultivated land - Further 5.7 million hectares identified as having
a high potential for developing dryland salinity - Common cause of dryland salinity has been changes
to water tables from inappropriate land use
1.10
11State of the environment - Australia
(continued)
- Predicted that without significant action, within
20 years Adelaides drinking water would fail
World Health Organisation standards in two days
out of five - Predicted if nothing is done, salinity will cost
1 billion a year by 2100 - Many coastal areas have poor water quality from
sediment, resulting from soil erosion. 11.7
million tonnes/sediment/year enter Great Barrier
Reef alone. In North Queensland, grazing lands
product about 66 of estimated annual sediment to
rivers
1.11
12State of the environment - Australia
(continued)
- Air quality generally improved or remained
constant - Threatening processes to biodiversity include
salinisation, land clearing, fragmentation of
ecosystems, exotic organisms and changing
hydrological conditions - Australia has 10 of worlds endangered species,
second only to the US - Net loss in vegetative cover since 1996
- In 1999, 469,000 hectares of woody vegetation
cleared nationally (425,000 ha in Queensland) - Many heritage buildings damaged through
inappropriate development - Decline in Indigenous languages
1.12
13Valuing the environment
- Wealth is
- something that that has real value in terms of
meeting our needs and fulfilling our wants the
natural productive systems of the planet and
physical things like factories, homes, farms,
stores, actual transportation and communications
facilities, as well as the people who work to
produce the goods and services that sustain us.
Modern money is only a number on a piece of paper
or an electronic trace in a computer, that by a
social convention gives its holder a claim on
that real wealth. In our confusion, weve
concentrated on the money, to the neglect of
those things that actually sustain a good life. - David Korten
1.13
14Valuing the environment
- Ecosystem services include
- photosynthesis
- pollination
- nurseries for commercial fish species (in
mangroves and coral reefs in particular) - regulation of climate
- soil production and protection
- storage and cycling of essential nutrients
- absorption, breakdown and dispersal of organic
wastes and pollutants - control of crop and livestock pests through
predation - Services provided globally by the environment
estimated at least US36 trillion annually. In
Australia, services estimated at 1.3 billion
annually
1.14
15Measurement of the amount of raw materials
consumed in the United States (WW I World War
I, WW II World War II) Source Matos and
Wagner
1.15
16- Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,
committed citizens can change the world indeed,
its the only thing that ever has. - - Margaret Mead
1.16
17One can of cola ...
1.17
18KEY ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES A SUMMARY
19Enhanced greenhouse effect and global warming
- Atmosphere surrounding the earth a mixture of
gases - Greenhouse gases (eg water vapour, carbon dioxide
and methane) so called because they trap heat,
leading to warming lower atmosphere. This process
occurs naturally and is essential to sustaining
life on earth - Human activities in last 200 years (e.g. burning
fossil fuels) have increased concentration of
greenhouse gases, resulting in increased warming
of the lower atmosphere - the enhanced greenhouse
effect
1.19
20Enhanced greenhouse effect and global warming
(continued)
- Some gases, e.g. those used in air conditioning,
have strong global warming potential - Other sources of emissions include agriculture
(methane from animals and rice paddies), and
waste in landfills (methane) - Plants convert carbon dioxide to oxygen so land
clearing diminishes this potential
1.20
21Enhanced greenhouse effect and global warming
(continued)
1.21
22Ozone depletion
- Ozone layer is a concentration of ozone molecules
in the stratosphere (10-50km above earths
surface) - Stratospheric ozone shields earth from suns
ultraviolet (UV) rays, reducing radiation - Increased UV radiation causes skin cancer,
cataracts, weakened immune systems, reduce crop
yield and impacts on marine systems - Ozone molecules are attacked by ozone-depleting
substances, such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) - In the stratosphere, chlorine or bromine atoms
split apart from ozone-depleting substances and
destroy ozone molecules. One chlorine atom can
break apart more than 100,000 ozone molecules
1.22
23Ozone depletion
(continued)
- In the 1980s, an ozone hole was identified
above the Antarctic and concluded to be more than
natural variations in concentrations - International agreement such as Montreal Protocol
have committed nations to phase-out or reduce
ozone-depleting substances - CFC production banned in developed countries
since 1995 and alternatives have been developed
1.23
24Loss of biodiversity
- Biodiversity is defined as the variety of life on
earth, including plants, animals and
micro-organisms, along with the genetic material
they contain and the ecological systems in which
they occur - Biodiversity is being eroded globally through
native vegetation clearance, pollution of air,
land and water, inappropriate land use,
disruption of natural ecological cycles, invasion
of exotic weeds and pests and depletion of
forests, fisheries and other natural resources
1.24
25Loss of biodiversity
(continued)
- Australia is among the most biologically diverse
nations in the world - 290,000 species of
Australian flora and 200,000 species of
Australian fauna. Currently 1,478 species and 27
ecological communities currently listed at the
national level as either endangered or vulnerable - We do not even know all species we are
endangering or their potential for humans - We do not know what overall impact steady
degradation of ecosystems will have - the thin
end of the wedge?
1.25
26Soil degradation
- Threatens global ability to continue to produce
food. - By 1990, poor agricultural practices had
contributed to degradation of 562 million
hectares, (38 of the roughly 1.5 billion
hectares in cropland worldwide. - Each year, an additional 5 6 million hectares
of land estimated to be lost to soil degradation - Soil degradation includes
- soil erosion by water and wind - depleting
topsoil and causing water and wind pollution - physical degradation through mechanical tilling
- desertification - the degradation of land in
arid, semi-arid, and dry sub-humid areas, caused
primarily by inappropriate land use and climatic
variations. salinisation and waterlogging of soil - depletion of soil nutrients through application
of fertilisers - loss of beneficial soil organisms through
over-application of agricultural chemicals
1.26
27Soil degradation
(continued)
- Major causes of soil degradation include
overworking soil mechanically, land clearing and
deforestation, overgrazing, irrigation, and
over-application of agricultural chemicals - Soil erosion is expected to severely reduce
agricultural production in regions including
southeast Nigeria, Haiti and the Himalayan
foothills, and part of southern China, Southeast
Asia and Central America - Over 250 million people are directly affected by
desertification, with one billion people in over
one hundred countries at risk - Salinity affecting enormous areas of land and
water quality in rivers. Saline areas can result
from natural processes, however, most newly
salinised areas are the result of changes in land
use and hydrological cycles. Most salinity
results from rising groundwater. Types of
salinity include dryland, irrigation, urban,
river and industrial
1.27
28Dryland salinity
1.28
- Source former NSW Department of Land and Water
Conservation
29Resource depletion
- We are steadily using up available non-renewable
resources. Non-renewable resources resources
that are not replenished, or at least not
replenished within hundreds of thousands of
years, e.g. metals and fossil fuels - We are harvesting many renewable resources at
rates greater than their rate of replenishment
(e.g. many forests) - Use of energy from fossil fuels, which are
effectively non-renewable, is of huge concern.
Fossil fuels include petrol, diesel, natural gas,
LPG, black and brown coal, oil, kerosene and
aviation gasoline - Energy use and environmental impacts are closely
linked, as the extraction, transport and use of
fuels and the production of electricity impact
the environment on local, regional and global
levels, particularly the enhanced greenhouse
effect and global warming - Global use of fossil fuel increased by over three
and a half times between 1950 and 2000
1.29
30Resource depletion
(continued)
1.30
World fossil fuel consumption, 1950-2000 Source
Worldwatch Institute (2001)
31Resource depletion
(continued)
- Australia, which compared to many countries has
large reserves in comparison to annual use, is
nonetheless facing a decline in crude oil
production over the next decade, with estimates
that self-sufficiency for this product will
decline from 85 percent in 2001 to less than 40
percent in 2010 - In Australia, the ultimate constraint to use of
non-renewable energy resources may well be the
environmental impacts of extraction and
consumption, rather than availability - Potable water another critical resource being
depleted, particularly in Australia. Australia is
the worlds driest inhabited continent, yet in
1996/97 used 24,058 gigalitres (approx. 24
billion cubic metres) annually an increase of
65 percent since 1985. There was a 75 percent
increase in the annual volume of water used for
irrigation between 1985 and 1996/97
1.31
32Resource depletion
(continued)
- About one-third of the worlds population lives
in regions with moderate to high water stress. If
present consumption trends continue, two thirds
of people in the world will live in
water-stressed conditions by the year 2025 - Extraction of non-renewable resources has many
environmental impacts, but is also a social issue
- current wasteful practices reduce the
opportunities for future generations to access
these resources to satisfy their own needs.
Within current generations, there is enormous
inequity in how resources are distributed,
leading to increasing global tensions
1.32
33Waste generation
- Each year, every Australian contributes about one
tonne of waste to landfill - Of the 21.2 million tonnes of waste disposed of
at landfills in 1996/97, approx. 40 domestic
waste, 23 commercial and industrial waste, and
37 construction and demolition waste - Waste is a problem not only because raw materials
are not used to their full potential, but also
because of disposal challenges
1.33
34Waste generation
(continued)
- Traditional approaches to waste management rely
on the natural environment to absorb and
assimilate unwanted by-products. Environmental
impacts associated with waste disposal include
land contamination, methane emissions, leachate
discharges, odour, flammability, toxicity, and
consumption of land resources - Landfill has been the most common method of
dealing with solid waste in Australia. In large
cities, and increasingly in towns, existing
landfills are filling up and it is difficult to
find new sites. Waste disposal costs have also
risen substantially in recent decades - Hazardous waste creates additional problems, as
it is difficult and costly to safely treat, or
store, such materials
1.34
35Pollution
- Impacts of pollution to air, land and water
include harm to human health, degradation of
natural ecosystems, and loss of productive land
resources - In developed countries, pollution is now
relatively well-regulated with significant
penalties and industry has significantly improved
its practices. However, we still have the burden
of cleaning up many of the problems that have
been caused from the polluting practices of many
past industrial processes
1.35
36Pollution
(continued)
- Some pollutants are extremely persistent, and do
not readily break down in the environment. As a
consequence, they can bioaccumulate - Minamata in Japan suffered one of the worst cases
of industrial pollution in history - Non-point source pollution, such as oil and
litter in stormwater, still an environmental
problem in Australia - In many developing countries, where env.
legislation non-existent or not enforced,
industrial pollution remains a serious problem
1.36
37DEFINITIONS OF SUSTAINABILITY
1.37
38Sustainable development is ...
- development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs - - 1987 World Commission on Environment and
Development Report Our Common Future (The
Brundtland Report)
1.38
39Ecologically sustainable development
- using, conserving and enhancing the communitys
resources so that ecological processes, on which
life depends, are maintained and the total
quality of life, now and in the future, can be
increased - National Strategy for Ecologically Sustainable
Development (1992)
1.39
40Sustainability
- in scientific terms, it means a system state
that can endure indefinitely - (AtKisson, 2001)
- has come to mean long-term survival and
well-being in general, both for human
civilization and the rest of nature - (AtKisson, 2001)
1.40
41Conceptual approach of sustainability
1.41
42Alternative conceptual approach
1.42
43Interrelationship between social, environmental
and economic aspects. Source National Centre
for Sustainability, Swinburne University of
Technology
1.43
44Sustainable growth vs sustainable development
- growth the increase in human population,
resource use, and the emission of waste - development improvements in human technology
and advances in the human condition, including
health, education, intelligence, wisdom, freedom,
and the capacityto love (AtKisson, 1999)
1.44
45- Sustainable development has become one of
the politically-correct theses of our era.
Everybody is in favour of it - and everybody
defines the term, on Humpty Dumptys principle,
to mean what they want it to mean - (Sir
Martin Holdgate)
1.45
46- Sustainable development a term so misapplied
as to be nearly beyond rescue is not
development-as-usual with a few green-looking
additions or nods to social equity but that is
what is has often been reduced to in practice
(AtKisson, 2001)
1.46
47Sustainability
- as a wordis dying because of misuse, and
dryness, and reduction to buzzword. It is dying
because it is attached to too many initiatives
that are failing to achieve their stated goals
or even, in many cases, to make any significant
progress in that direction. - (AtKisson, 2001)
1.47
48CONCEPTS RELATED TO SUSTAINABILITY
1.48
49Triple-bottom line
- The triple bottom line focuses corporations not
just on the economic value they add, but also on
the environmental and social value they add and
destroy. At its narrowest, the term triple
bottom line is used as a framework for measuring
and reporting corporate performance against
economic, social and environmental parameters. - (Elkington, 1980)
1.49
50Ecological footprints
- A means of quantifying the environmental impacts
of various lifestyles - Summarises into a single value the level of
sustainability of an individual, organisation,
region, State or country - Allows for estimation of the area of land needed
to support a household, a school, a business or
society as they currently operate - Provides a simple way of identifying whether or
not lifestyles and activities fit within the
carrying capacity of the earth - If everyone else in the world consumed resources
and energy and produced wastes the way Victorians
currently do, we would need at least three earths
to support such behaviours
1.50
51Ecological Footprints
1.51
52Ecological rucksacks
- A German concept defined by the European
Environment Agency (1999) as - The material input of a product (service) minus
the weight of the product itself. The material
input is defined as the life cycle wide total
quantity (in kg) of natural material moved
(physically displaced) by humans in order to
generate a good. - A semiconductor chip generates over 100,000 times
its weight in waste during production - A laptop computer generates close to 4,000 times
its weight in waste
1.52
53Cleaner production
- an overall approach to business management to
reduce the use of energy, water and material
resources and to minimise waste and pollution. It
involves a shift in environmental protection from
an end-of-pipe approach where pollution is
managed after it is created, to a
front-of-process approach where the creation of
pollution is avoided or minimised at the
sourceit involves changing attitudes and
rethinking products and processes. However,
cleaner production is not only about
manufacturing and production. It covers all
processes, products and services and their
impacts, including planning and design - (former NSW Environment Protection Authority)
1.53
54Life cycle assessment
- Sometimes called life cycle analysis
- A tool that assesses a range of environmental
impacts of a product or material across its whole
life cycle that is from the extraction of raw
materials through to manufacturing,
transportation, use and eventual disposal - Useful in making more informed decisions about
appropriate choices of products and materials
1.54
55Extended producer responsibility
- States that the manufacturer of a particular
product should be responsible for that product
during its use and at the time of disposal - The rationale is that this will encourage
manufacturers to design products that are less
hazardous, easier to dismantle and recycle, and
so forth - This concept has been most explored in Europe,
where it has been considered for example for
adoption by white goods and automobile
manufacturers
1.55
56Eco-labelling
- A means of rating a product or service in terms
of its environmental credentials according to
agreed sets of guidelines and products. Most
eco-labelling schemes require the use of a
third-party to verify claims prior to certain
labels being used - The energy-rating scheme for white goods is a
form of eco-labelling - For more information see the Australian
Environmental Labelling Association, Inc. at
http//www.aela.org.au/StandardsDirections.htm
1.56
57Greenwash
- The term given to a claim that a product or
service is environmentally-friendly or otherwise
superior to its competitors, when in fact this is
not the case - Greenwash hurts organisations that are
legitimately trying to do the right thing, by
making it harder for consumers to differentiate,
while potentially also increasing consumer
cynicism - It is hoped that as eco-labelling of products and
services is increasingly adopted and refined,
greenwash will be less of a problem
1.57
58CASE STYUDY CORAL REEFS
59The state of coral reefs
- Coral reefs cover less than 0.2 of ocean area,
but are among Earths most complex and productive
ecosystems - In late 2000, 27 of the worlds coral reefs were
severely damaged. In 1992 this figure was only
10 which demonstrates the speed with which the
health of reefs is deteriorating - The greatest losses have occurred in the Indian
Ocean, the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf, and in
Southeast Asia
1.59
60The state of coral reefs
(continued)
- In 1998, a survey of reefs in some 40 countries
found that many high-value species such as
lobster, grouper and giant clams, were missing
from areas where they were once abundant - Live reef fish exports in South-east Asia
increased nearly 13-fold between 1989 and 1995,
then dropped 22 percent in 1996 a crash
attributed to overfishing
1.60
61The state of coral reefs
(continued)
- Coral reefs offer a number of essential goods and
services that have been valued at some 375
billion per year. These goods and services
include - shelter to coastlines from storm damage, erosion
and flooding (estimated to globally provide such
protection for half a billion people) - habitat for as many as a million species,
including more than a quarter of all known marine
fish species - important feeding and breeding grounds for
commercial fisheries, producing about a tenth of
the global fish catch and a quarter of the catch
in the developing world - significant tourism revenue, with the Carribean
reefs alone estimated to bring in some 140
billion annually - potential medicines. Reef-derived molecules have
been used to develop medicines from antibiotics
to HIV drugs
1.61
62The state of coral reefs
(continued)
- An estimated 11 of the worlds coral reefs have
been lost, and a further 60 are threatened, as a
result of direct human pressures, including - overfishing (for food and for aquariums)
- trawling, with a single pass removing up to a
quarter of seabed life - coral mining
- coastal development
- waste dumping
- vessel collision
- nutrients and sediments resulting from inland
deforestation and farming - blasting of reefs, with up to 10 separate
explosions to obtain 1 ton of fish, shattering up
to 20 square meters of reef per blast. This
practice has degraded an estimated 75 of
Indonesias reefs - cyanide injection. In the Philippines, more than
a million kilograms of cyanide have been injected
into reefs since the 1960s a procedure that stuns
or kills many non-target species as well
1.62
63The state of coral reefs
(continued)
- The greatest threat to coral reefs today is from
global warming - Coral are inhabited by microscopic plants that
provide food and colour. Warming by as little as
one degree Celsius can stress these plants, and
if the stress endures, the coral will expel the
plants and turn white (coral bleaching), often
eventually dying
1.63
64The state of coral reefs
(continued)
- Coral bleaching events have increased in
frequency and intensity since the early 1980s.
1997-98 saw the worst episode on record,
affecting some 16 of the worlds reefs, in at
least 60 countries. Indian Ocean reefs alone
suffered damages estimated as high as 8.2
billion. In some areas, 1,000-year old corals
died and losses neared 90, at depths nearing 40
meters - It is estimated that about half of coral affected
by bleaching could rebound in the next 20-50
years, but only if ocean temperatures remain
steady and human pressures are low. If global
warming continues it is predicted that as many as
60 of all reefs could be lost by 2030
1.64
65(No Transcript)
66IMPLEMENTING SUSTAINABLE PRACTICE
2.2
67What do we need to do?
- If there is little consensus on definitions of
sustainability and sustainable development, there
is even less about the path that should be taken
to get there. - In a transition to a sustainable society, efforts
will be required at both the individual and
collective levels. - Different interpretations of living sustainably
- one extreme - renouncing all possessions and
living in communes - or are we now committed to a high-technology
future?)
2.3
68- some of the very products of our technology
plutonium, for instance, require of us that we
maintain a very high degree of cultural
continuity, economic and political stability, and
technological capacity and sophistication, far
into the future. To ensure our safety and the
safety of all forms of life, we must always be
able to store, clean up, and contain poisons like
plutonium and persistent organic toxins.
Eventually we must be able to eliminate them
safelyIn the case of certain creations, like
nuclear materials and some artificially
constructed or genetically modified organisms,
our secure custodianship must be maintained for
thousands of years. (AtKisson, 2001)
2.4
69The great tasks of our time?
- to change energy systems
- to phase out the use of certain chemicals and
metals that nature cannot assimilate - to manage the life-supportive ecosystems in a
sustainable way fresh water flows, forest,
fields and fishing waters - to heal the battered and broken cultures around
the world - (Robèrt, 2001)
2.5
70Objectives and principles of ecologically
sustainable development
- Integration of economic and environmental goals
in policies and activities - Intergenerational equity (that is, equity between
one generation and the next) - Conservation of biodiversity and ecological
integrity - Recognising the global dimension
- Dealing cautiously with risk and irreversibility
(anticipatory and precautionary policy approach).
Anticipatory approach - to be cautious of
actions that may have serious/irreversible
environmental damage. Precautionary approach -
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.
2.6
71Objectives and principles of ecologically
sustainable development
(continued)
- Ensuring that environmental assets are properly
valued - Constant natural capital and sustainable income
- Social equity (intragenerational equity)
- Limits on natural resource use
- Qualitative development. Economic development
that also develops the quality of life
cultural, social, ethical - Efficiency in use of resources
- A resilient economy that has an increased
capacity for environmental protection - International competitiveness in an
environmentallysound manner external trade
balance in favour ofsustainable development - Community participation
2.7
72Objectives and principles of ecologically
sustainable development
(continued)
- International competitiveness in an
environmentally sound manner external trade
balance in favour of sustainable development - Community participation
- Harding, 1998, derived from the National Strategy
for Ecologically Sustainable Development and the
four largest environmental groups in Australia
2.8
73The Natural Step System Conditions
- 50 scientists, including ecologists, chemists,
physicists and medical doctors wrote a consensus
statement about the conditions that are essential
to life as a basis for sound decision-making. - Agreed on four system conditions for
sustainability - In a sustainable society nature is not subject to
systematically increasing - concentrations of substances extracted from the
earths crust - concentrations of substances produced by society
- degradation by physical means
- and in that society
- human needs are met worldwide
2.9
74The Natural Step System Conditions
(continued)
- eliminate our contribution to systematic
increases in concentrations of substances from
the Earths crust - eliminate our contribution to systematic
increases in concentrations of substances
produced by society - eliminate our contribution to systematic physical
degradation of nature through over-harvesting,
depletion, foreign introductions and other forms
of modification - contribute as much as we can to the goal of
meeting human needs in our society and worldwide,
going over and above all the substitution and
dematerialization measures taken in meeting the
first three objectives
2.10
75The Hannover Principles
- Developed by green architect William McDonough
but apply equally to non-architectural work - Insist on rights of humanity and nature to
co-exist in a healthy, supportive, diverse and
sustainable condition - Recognize interdependence the elements of human
design interact with and depend upon the natural
world, with broad and diverse implications at
every scale. Expand design considerations to
recognize even distant effects - Respect relationships between spirit and matter
consider all aspects of human settlement
including community, dwelling, industry and trade
in terms of existing and evolving connections
between spiritual and material consciousness
2.11
76The Hannover Principles
(continued)
- Accept responsibility for the consequences of
design decisions upon human well-being, the
viability of natural systems and their right to
co-exist - Create safe objects of long-term value do not
burden future generations with requirements for
maintenance or vigilant administration of
potential danger due to the careless creation of
products, processes or standards - Eliminate the concept of waste evaluate and
optimise the full life-cycle of products and
processes to approach the state of natural
systems in which there is no waste - Rely on natural energy flows human designs
should, like the living world, derive their
creative forces from perpetual solar income.
Incorporate this energy efficiently and safely
for responsible use
2.12
77The Hannover Principles
(continued)
- Understand the limitations of design no human
creation lasts forever and design does not solve
all problems. Those who create and plan should
practice humility in the face of nature. Treat
nature as a model and mentor, not as an
inconvenience to be evaded or controlled - Seek constant improvement by the sharing of
knowledge encourage direct and open
communication between colleagues, patrons,
manufacturers and users to link long term
sustainable considerations with ethical
responsibility, and re-establish the integral
relationship between natural processes and human
activity
2.13
78Guiding Steps
- Develop an environment which supports human
dignity through gender and racial equality and
promotes intergenerational respect - Develop honesty and integrity in daily life
- Encourage the fair distribution of wealth
- Work to strengthen local communities and
safeguard the health and safety of all - Commit to maintaining and enhancing the integrity
and biodiversity of the natural environment - Use natural resources, such as water and land
wisely and aim to reduce consumption - Refuse, reduce, reuse, repair and recycle
2.14
79Guiding Steps
(continued)
- Where possible buy green products, locally
produced with reduced packaging. - Understand the synergies between advances in
technology and behavioural change to achieve
sustainability. - Encourage ethical business practices
- Develop business strategies which promote good
corporate governance. - Encourage financial success through openness and
transparency. - (Source the National Centre for Sustainability
at Swinburne University of Technology)
2.15
80- In terms of a business, sustainability can be
evaluated by a wide range of factors. Examples
include energy efficiency community relations
eco design materials efficiency product
recyclability and employee relations. All relate
back to the bottom line and to intangible asset
management such as brand and reputation. - (Mays, 2003, p. 10)
2.16
81Benefits of sustainable practice
- improved environmental performance
- reduced occupational health and safety risk
- financial savings
- market advantages
- development of new product lines
- enhanced reputation
- better community relationships
- more efficient processes
- reduced liability and insurance premiums
- improved working environment for staff
2.17
82Barriers to sustainability
- Vested interests in maintaining the status quo
- Pressure upon people to consume more
- Emphasis upon entertainment
- Mental models - including subconscious and
unspoken assumptions that - the Earth is infinite
- that there is an away where you can throw
things - materials from the Earths crust can be removed
and re-emitted almost anywhere without a problem
(e.g. metals, burnt fossil fuels, arsenic,
asbestos etc) - the individual is powerless to effect change
within large and complex systems - (Sharp, 2002)
2.18
83Barriers to sustainability
(continued)
- people are conditioned to conform to group
perceptions and to doubt and withhold their
individual perceptions if they are in conflict
with the shared reality of those around themhas
enormous significance when considering how people
are currently responding to the demise of the
planetary systems that support human life. The
degree of inaction around this profoundly life
threatening situation can perhaps best be
explained by viewing our state as a massive
absurd consensus that is the product of our
social conditioning which has enforced our
subservience to, and blind confidence in, shared
societal constructs of reality. - (Sharp, 2002)
2.19
84Framework for Integration
- You need to identify exactly what a successful
sustainability literate graduate will be able to
do as a result of your course.
- Graduates are likely to have developed
- Professional specialist elements (eg accountancy,
business, plumbing) - Professional but transferable elements (eg
book-keeping, management) - Personal elements (eg interpersonal skills,
critical evaluation, reflective learning).
2.20
85What is sustainability literacy?
- The best possible characteristics for a person
who is sustainability literate, would be
demonstrated through - Recognising the need to become more sustainable
in their behaviour - A person who recognises the need for sustainable
approaches will be able to articulate the need to
support this behaviour, draw examples from their
own lives and will be able to transfer this
knowledge to various situations and environments.
- Having sufficient skills and knowledge to be able
to decide and act in a sustainable way - A person with these skills will be equipped with
a number of tools and strategies that enable them
to make informed decisions that are likely to
contribute to a more sustainable society. - Encouraging and rewarding sustainable behaviour
in others Recognition of sustainable behaviour
and rewarding and reinforcing this approach
2.21
86Sphere of Influence
2.22
87The Matrix
2.23
88Business
- Other influences could include
- Money
- Financiers
- Creditors
- Customers
- Insurance
- Electricity
- GST
- Taxes
- Computers
- IT Resources
- Paper
- Buildings
- Others?
2.24
89Trades
- Other influences could include
- Money
- Suppliers
- Creditors
- Customers
- Insurance
- Electricity
- GST
- Taxes
- Natural resources
- Computers
- Training
- Paper
- Professional associations
- Buildings
- Landscapes
- Community
- Manufacturers
- Others?
2.25
90Engineering
- Other influences could include
- Research
- Suppliers
- Creditors
- Customers
- Insurance
- Energy consumption
- GST
- Natural resources
- Computers
- Paper/ water
- Professional associations
- Buildings
- Bridges
- Community
- Contractors
- Others?
2.26
91Service Industry
- Other influences could include
- Food
- Suppliers
- Creditors
- Food safety
- Insurance
- Energy consumption
- GST
- Natural resources
- Computers
- Paper/ water
- Professional associations
- Disposables
- Biodiversity
- Community
- Contractors
- Others?
2.27
92Natural Resources
- Other influences could include
- Plants
- Suppliers
- Creditors
- Urban design
- Insurance
- Water use
- GST
- Natural resources
- Computers
- Paper
- Professional associations
- Land
- Biodiversity
- Community
- Contractors
- Wildlife
- Oceans
- Others?
2.28
93Science
- Other influences could include
- Plants
- Suppliers
- Radioactive material
- Dangerous goods
- Insurance
- Water use
- GST
- Natural resources
- Computers
- Paper
- Professional associations
- Land
- Biodiversity
- Community
- Contractors
- Wildlife
- Oceans
- Others?
2.29
94Social Sciences
- Other influences could include
- Staff
- Suppliers
- Tax benefits
- Government
- Insurance
- Caring
- GST
- Donations
- Computers
- Paper
- Professional associations
- Philanthropy
- Grants
- Community
- Contractors
- Disabled
- Children
- Others?
2.30
95Arts
- Other influences could include
- Money
- Suppliers
- Tax benefits
- Government
- Insurance
- Creativity
- GST
- Sponsors
- Computers
- Paper
- Professional associations
- IT Software
- Grants
- Community
- Contractors
- Canvases
- Art groups
- Others?
2.31
96Research
- Other influences could include
- Staff
- Suppliers
- Tax benefits
- Government
- Insurance
- Caring
- Ethics
- GST
- Donations
- Computers
- Paper
- Professional associations
- Philanthropy
- Grants
- Community
- Contractors
- Disabled
- Children
2.32
97Matrix of the learning environment
What should the learner be good at to be able to
manage relationships in their sphere of influence
which
encourages and maintains resources, ethics and
values?
Areas
which need to
Suggested Competency
Examples of issues to explore with students
supported to ensure a
beneficial flow
Natural Capital
The resources and services
provided by the natural
world
Social capital
Relationship building,
health, social groupings
(families, universities,
TAFEs)
Financial capital
The money and value
placed on objects and how
they can be more
accurately represented and
measured.
2.33
98A manufacturing example
Areas which need to be supported to ensure a
benefit
Suggested Competency
Examples of issues to explore with students
Examine the benefits of lean manufacturing
Identify opportunities to design for reduced
environmental impacts
Natural Capital The resources and services
provided by the natural world
Social capital Relationship building, health,
social groupings
Discuss the value of stakeholder consultation in
the engineering/ manufacturing sector
Role playing examining the importance of
community-based decision making
Describe concepts of eco-design, eco-efficiency
and lean manufacturing.
Examine case studies on lean manufacturing
practises
Financial capital The money and value placed on
objects
2.34
99Getting there ...
- Countless possible ways to operate more
sustainably - There is no silver bullet everyone has to
figure out their own path - Can be either a series of incremental steps, with
a goal of continuous improvement, or can be a
quantum leap, where entire processes and
products are completely re-evaluated and may
change radically - Do we have time for incremental improvements?
- eg current global agreements for carbon emissions
for modest reductions are hard to reach,
impossible to enforce, and virtually without
effect and even if they were successful, they
would have a negligible impact on the critical
trend
2.35
100Additional Resources
- http//www.ecorecycle.vic.gov.au/www/default.asp?c
asid2799 Ecorecycle Victoria site with
information on reducing waste in the office - http//www.epa.nsw.gov.au/cleaner_production/selfh
elptool.pdf - Profits from Cleaner Production A
Self-Help Tool for Small to Medium-Sized
Businesses (NSW Dept State Regional Development
and the former NSW EPA) - http//www.greenhouse.gov.au/community_household.h
tml - an AGO site with information on greenhouse
gas issues, eg energy efficiency and tips for
reducing emissions - http//www.energy.unsw.edu.au/unswitch/experts.htm
l - dispels some of the myths about turning off
your computer monitor - Russell (2003) lists numerous additional
websites
2.36