Title: Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability
1Chapter 1
- Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and
Sustainability
2Chapter Overview Questions
- What are the main themes of this book?
- What keeps us alive? What is an environmentally
sustainable society? - How fast is the human population growing?
- What is the difference between economic growth,
economic development, and environmentally
sustainable economic development?
3Chapter Overview Questions (contd)
- What are the harmful environmental effects of
poverty and affluence? - What three major human cultural changes have
taken place since humans arrived? - What are the four scientific principles of
sustainability and how can we use them and shared
visions to build more environmentally sustainable
and just societies during this century?
4OBJ 1.1
?
Billions of people
Black Deaththe Plague
Time
Industrial Revolution
Hunting and Gathering
Agricultural revolution
5CHECKPOINT
- What is exponential growth?
- Why is living in an exponential age a concern for
everyone living on the planet?
6ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Human Culturesphere
Earth's Life-Support System
Water (hydrosphere)
Air (atmosphere)
Population Size
Worldviews and ethics
Soil and rocks (lithosphere)
Life (biosphere)
Politics
Economics
7What Keeps Us Alive?
OBJ 1.2
Fig. 1-2, p. 7
8Natural capital degradation
- The exponential increasing flow of material
resources through the worlds economic systems
depletes, degrades and pollutes the environment.
Figure 1-11
9CHECKPOINT
- Explain the terms natural capital, natural
resources, natural services, solar capital and
natural capital degradation.
10Sustainability The Integrative Theme
OBJ 1.3
- Sustainability, is the ability of earths various
systems to survive and adapt to environmental
conditions indefinitely. - The steps to sustainability must be supported by
sound science.
11Environmentally Sustainable Societies
- meets basic needs of its people in a just
and equitable manner without degrading the
natural capital that supplies these resources.
12CHECKPOINT
- Describe an environmentally sustainable society.
- List three ways in which you could make your
lifestyle more environmentally sustainable.
13GROWTH DEVELOPMENT
OBJ 1.4
- Economic growth provides people with more goods
and services. - Measured in gross domestic product (GDP) and
purchasing power parity (PPP). - Economic development uses economic growth to
improve living standards. - The worlds countries economic status (developed
vs. developing) are based on their degree of
industrialization and GDP-PPP.
14Global Outlook
- Comparison of developed and developing countries.
Figures 1-5 and 1-6
15Fig. 1-6, p. 11
16CHECKPOINT
- Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of
globalization.
17RESOURCES
OBJ 1.5
- Perpetual On a human time scale are continuous.
- Renewable On a human time scale can be
replenished rapidly (e.g. hours to several
decades). - Nonrenewable On a human time scale are in fixed
supply. - LINK http//videos.howstuffworks.com/hsw/11891-co
nservation-of-natural-resources-introduction-video
.htm
18CHECKPOINT
- Create a concept map showing a connection between
the following terms perpetual, renewable and
nonrenewable energy. - Give examples of each type of resource.
19(No Transcript)
20Our Ecological Footprint
- Humanitys ecological footprint has exceeded
earths ecological capacity.
Figure 1-7
21The Tragedy of the Commons Or the
challenge of common-pool resourcesOr why the
sum total of individual rational choices can
lead to perverse (and socially sub-optimal)
outcomes
OBJ 1.6
Credits cow images from http//www.woodyjackson.
com/
22Imagine a field of grass shared by 6 farmers,
each with one cow
23A few facts Each cow currently produces 20
liters of milk per day The carrying capacity of
the commons is 8 cows. For each cow above 8, the
milk production declines by 2 liters (due to
overgrazing, there is less grass for each cow
less grass, less milk!).
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 120
liters
24Do the farmers sit back and stay at 6 cows? Not
if they are individual profit maximizers (here
simplified as milk production maximizers)
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 120
liters (6 cows)
25Do the farmers sit back and stay at 6 cows? Not
if they are individual profit maximizers (here
simplified as milk production maximizers)
Ill get another cow
40 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 140
liters (7 cows)
26We are now at the carrying capacity -- do they
stop? No.
Then Ill get another cow too
40 liters
40 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 160
liters (8 cows)
27They are now at the maximum total milk
production. But do they stop? No
36 liters
36 liters
Ill get another cow
18 liters
36 liters
18 liters
18 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 162
liters (9 cows)
2832 liters
32 liters
16 liters
32 liters
16 liters
My cow is now less productive, but 2 will
improve my situation
32 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 160
liters (10 cows)
2928 liters
28 liters
14 liters
28 liters
Ill get another cow
28 liters
28 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 154
liters (11 cows)
30Well, everyone else is getting one, so me too!
24 liters
24 liters
24 liters
24 liters
24 liters
24 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 144
liters (12 cows)
31Well, I can still increase milk production if I
get a third cow
30 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
20 liters
Total daily milk production for the commons 130
liters (10 cows)
32CHECKPOINT
- How can environmentalists solve the issue of
tragedy of the commons?
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341-4 Pollution
- What is pollution?
- - Presence of substances at high level in air,
water, food that can threaten the health,
survival, activities of organisms
- Effects of Pollution
- disrupt/degrade life-support systems
- Damage wildlife, human health, property
- Nuisances such as noise, unpleasant smells
Sources
- Point single, identifiable sources
- - EX Smokestack of a coal-burning power plant
- Nonpoint dispersed, difficult to identify
- - EX pesticides sprayed in air
35- Pollutants can have three types of unwanted
effects - Can disrupt / degrade life-support systems.
- Can damage health and property.
- Can create nuisances such as noise and unpleasant
smells, tastes, and sights.
36CHECKPOINT
- How is the production of pollution and waste
related to exponential growth of the worlds
population and economies? - List three things you would do to reduce the
amount of pollution and waste that we produce. - List three changes in your lifestyle that would
reduce the amount of pollution and wastes you
produce.
37Dealing With Pollution
OBJ 1.7
- Prevention (Input Control)
- - Reduce or eliminate production of pollutant
- Cleanup (Output Control)
- - Cleaning up or diluting pollutants after
they - have been produced
- Problems
- 1. temporary bandage
- 2. removes pollutant from 1 part to cause
- pollution in another
- 3. costs too much to reduce pollutants to
- acceptable levels
38Solutions Prevention vs. Cleanup
OBJ 1.7
- Problems with relying on cleanup
- Temporary bandage without improvements in control
technology. - Often removes a pollutant from one part of the
environment to cause problems in another. - Pollutants at harmful levels can cost too much to
reduce them to acceptable levels.
39CHECKPOINT
- Distinguish between pollution prevention and
pollution cleanup. - Evaluate the effectiveness of these two
approaches in decreasing pollution. - Explain how placing much greater emphasis on
pollution prevention would help reduce the
exponential growth of the human ecological
footprint and your own ecological footprint.
40OBJ 1.8
ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS CAUSES AND CONNECTIONS
- The major causes of environmental problems are
- Population growth
- Wasteful resource use
- Poverty
- Poor environmental accounting
- Ecological ignorance
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42SOLAR CAPITAL
EARTH
Goods and services
Heat
Human Economic and Cultural Systems
Human Capital
Depletion of nonrenewable resources
Degradation of renewable resources
Natural Capital
Pollution and waste
Recycling and reuse
Fig. 1-10, p. 17
43CHECKPOINT
- Identify five basic causes of the environmental
problems we face today.
44Poverty Environmental Problems
- 1 of 3 children under 5, suffer from severe
malnutrition.
Figure 1-12 and 1-13
45Resource Consumption and Environmental Problems
- Underconsumption
- Overconsumption
- Affluenza unsustainable addiction to
overconsumption and materialism.
46Connections between Environmental Problems and
Their Causes
Figure 1-14
47CHECKPOINT
- What is poverty?
- In what ways do poverty and affluence affect the
environment? - Explain the problems we face by not including the
harmful environmental costs in the prices of
goods and services.
48Implications of the Four Scientific Principles of
Sustainability
OBJ 1.9
49Reliance on Solar Energy
Biodiversity
Population Control
Nutrient Recycling
Fig. 1-16, p. 24
50CHECKPOINT
- For each of the following actions, state one or
more of the four scientific principles of
sustainability that are involved - recycling soda cans
- using a rake instead of leaf blower
- choosing to have no more than one child
- walking to class instead of driving
- taking your own reusable bags to the grocery
store to carry things home in - volunteering to restore a pine rockland
51STUDY RESOURCES
Vocabulary Flashcards http//www.brookscole.com
/cgi-wadsworth/course_products_wp.pl?fidM20bprod
uct_isbn_issn0534997295discipline_number22 Web
Quiz http//webquiz.ilrn.com/ilrn/bca/user/quiz-
public/run?session77E7CDDBB8ECCAB0B072C2689E92404
Bquestion1