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Module 3

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Title: Module 3


1
Module 3
  •  Population, Resources Environment
  • Too many people? Too much consumption?

2
OUTLINE
  • Population Growth
  • Current Population Trends
  • Developed and Developing countries
  • Demographic Transition
  • A materializing economy
  • Growth in consumption
  • Materials and energy
  • Economies need ecosystems
  • Humans need Nature

3
Sustainable Development
  • Sustainable development integrates economic
    progress, social development and environmental
    concerns.
  • The goals of economic and social development must
    be defined in terms of environmental
    sustainability in all countries of the world
    developed and developing (Our Common Future,
    WCED, 1987).

4
Agenda 21 Principles
  • 1 Human beings are at the centre of concerns for
    sustainable development. They are entitled to a
    healthy and productive life in harmony with
    nature. 
  • 4 In order to achieve sustainable development,
    environmental protection shall constitute an
    integral part of the development process and
    cannot be considered in isolation from it. 

5
Agenda 21 Principles
  • 7 States shall cooperate in a global partnership
    to conserve, protect and restore the health and
    integrity of the Earth's ecosystems.
  • The developed countries acknowledge the
    particular pressures that they place on the
    global environment.
  • 8 To achieve sustainable development and a
    higher quality of life for all people, States
    should
  • reduce and eliminate unsustainable patterns of
    production and consumption and
  • promote appropriate demographic policies. 

6
Scarcity and Abundance
  • 200 years ago, there were abundant resources and
    scarce people
  • Today, there are abundant people and scarce
    resources

7
Population and Consumption
  • Is Overpopulation the root cause of most
    environmental problems?
  • Is the population growth in developing countries
    causing most of the world's environmental
    problems?
  • The global environmental problem isn't just about
    the number of people, but the amount we all
    consume.

8
World Population - the numbers
  • 1850 - 1.26-billion 
  • 1900 - 1.65-billion 
  • 1950 - 2.52-billion 
  • 1960 - 3.02-billion 
  • 1970 - 3.70-billion 
  • 1980 - 4.44-billion 
  • 1990 - 5.27-billion 
  • 1999 - 6.00-billion
  •  
  • 2020 - 7.50-billion 
  • 2050 - 8.91-billion 

9
World Population Growth
The Logisitic Curve
10
Population and Growth Rates
11
Demographic Transition
  • A model of population growth based on historical,
    social, and economic development of Europe and N.
    America.
  • Stable pop. (high birth and death rates)
  • Death rate falls, population grows
  • Industrialization (economic development) - birth
    rate falls
  • Death rates and birth rates equilibrate

12
(No Transcript)
13
Population Growth Slowing Down?
  • In 1998, the United Nations released its
    population update, reducing the projected world
    population for 2050 from 9.4 billion to 8.9
    billion.
  • Of the 500 million drop, roughly two thirds is
    because of falling birth rates, but one third is
    the result of rising death rates.
  • Two regions where death rates are rising are
    sub-Saharan Africa and the Indian subcontinent,
    which together contain 1.9 billion people, or one
    third of humanity.

14
Current Population
  • World population stands at about 6 billion.
  • Expect 8 billion by 2025
  • Largest increase expected in developing
    countries.
  • Populations in the developed countries have
    stabilized
  • But per capita material consumption has not.

15
Human Population Impacts
  • Several factors determine the impact of a society
    on natural resources and the environment.
  • Population size
  • Population density
  • Level of materials and energy consumption

16
Standard of Living
  • Standard of living
  • The necessities and luxuries essential to a level
    of existence that is customary within a society
    or culture.
  • Standard of living appears to be closely tied to
    energy consumption
  • This is a proxy for economic development
  • Developing countries aspire to the higher
    standard of living of developed countries

17
Consumption
  • CONSUMERISM is a social and economic creed that
    encourages us to aspire to greater and greater
    consumption, regardless of the consequences
  • . but there are consequences
  • especially the environmental consequences of
    manufacturing and waste disposal

18
  • Within a span of 200 years, the per capita energy
    consumption of industrialized nations has
    increased eight-fold.

19
Per capita energy use, 1989
  • Kg of coal equivalent

20
Growth in Consumption
  • Worldwide since 1950, the per capita consumption
    of materials and energy has skyrocketed
  • Copper, meat, energy, steel, timber have doubled
  • Car ownership, cement have quadrupled
  • Plastic by 5-times
  • Aluminum by 7-times
  • Air travel by 33-times

21
Consumption of Resources

22
Human Carrying Capacity
  • The human population cannot increase indefinitely
  • In 1798, Thomas Malthus published his Essay on
    Population
  • Human population increases at a faster rate than
    the growth in the food supply
  • Therefore, the population will outgrow the
    ability of the Earth to feed us all
  • His timing might be off but many people feel that
    his original prediction is now coming true

23
Human Carrying Capacity (2)
  • In range management, carrying capacity is defined
    as the maximum population of a given species that
    can be supported indefinitely in a specified
    habitat without impairing the productivity of
    that habitat.
  • Because of our seeming ability to increase human
    carrying capacity by eliminating competing
    species, importing locally scarce resources, and
    through technology, this definition does seem so
    directly applicable to humans.

24
Humans and Nature
  • Despite our technical, economic and cultural
    accomplishments, humans remain ecological beings.
  • Like all other species, we depend for both basic
    needs and the production of artifacts on energy
    and material resources extracted from nature.
  • Furthermore, all energy and matter is eventually
    returned to the ecosphere as waste, where it must
    be assimilated.

25
The secret life of a cup of coffee
  • From Colombia
  • Forest clearance
  • Pesticides
  • Local Pollution, water use, etc
  • To New Orleans
  • By freighter
  • Processing
  • Packaging, etc
  • To you
  • Transportation, merchandising, preparation, waste

26
Stuff The Secret Lives of Everyday Things
  • by John Ryan and Alan Durning


27
Ecological Footprint
  • The land (and water) area required to support a
    defined human population and material standard
    indefinitely.
  • The index is expressed in terms of the area of
    ecologically-productive land used per capita by a
    population.
  • The global fair share of eco-productive land is
    1.5 hectares per person
  • The average North Americans footprint is 8 to 10
    hectares

28
Ecosystem Services
  • The Earth's human economies would soon collapse
    without fertile soil, fresh water, breathable
    air, and an amenable climate
  • These are Nature's life-support services
  • The human economy depends on ecosystems
  • Its not the other way around

29
Natural Capital
  • Natural capital consists of three major
    components 
  • non-renewable resources such as oil and minerals
    that are extracted from ecosystems, 
  • renewable resources such as fish, wood, and
    drinking water that are produced and maintained
    by the processes and functions of ecosystems, 

30
Natural Capital (cont.)
  • environmental services such as maintenance of the
    quality of the atmosphere, climate, operation of
    the hydrological cycle including flood controls
    and drinking water supply, waste assimilation,
    recycling of nutrients, generation of soils,
    pollination of crops, provision of food from the
    sea, and the maintenance of genetic diversity
    (biodiversity). 
  • All these crucial services are generated and
    sustained by the functioning of ecosystems

31
Forest Ecosystems
  • Goods Services

32
Global Forests
33
Sustainability Two Sides
  • Ecological sustainability underpins socioeconomic
    sustainability
  • The necessary conditions for developing
    sustainability
  • Securing a satisfactory quality of life for all
    (socioeconomic imperative). While
  • Reducing the Ecological Footprints of the
    industrialized countries (ecological imperative).

34
Sustainability Gap
  • While the residents of the developed world
    consume on average three-times their fair share
    of sustainable global output, the basic needs of
    the worlds billion plus chronically poor are not
    being met.
  • More material growth, at least in the poor
    countries, seems essential for socioeconomic
    sustainability.

35
Ecology Gap
  • According to Ecological Footprint analysis, the
    current level of global human consumption already
    exceeds the available ecological capacity of the
    Earth by 30.
  • From this, any global increase in material and
    waste throughput seems ecologically unsustainable.

36
The Sustainability Challenge
  • If we rely on conventional economic strategies
    and technologies to fix development problems, the
    additional material growth would further degrade
    already stressed global ecosystems.
  • Sustainable development is more than simple
    economic reform.
  • How can we decrease humanitys total ecological
    impact while providing adequately for the needs
    of all humankind?

37
Summary
  • Conventional wisdom
  • Global population cannot grow indefinitely
  • Unconventional wisdom
  • Material consumption cannot grow indefinitely
  • Carrying capacity is limited by ecological
    resources
  • Sustainability means finding an ecological
    footprint that doesnt stamp out global ecosystems
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