Title: Eco-Industrial Development
1Eco-Industrial Development
2State of the Environment
- Increasing environmental stress caused by
pollution - Depleting of natural resources
- Threats to human health
3World Population increased from 2.6 billion in
1950 to 5.8 billion in 1995
Efficiency of Production
x
x
Population (2.6B)
Resource Use
GLOBAL IMPACT
Traditionally, efficient production means maximum
output at the least cost, and often at the
expense of a degraded environment.
4 more consumption requires increased
agricultural production
5 faster rate of extraction and use of
resources
6 need for more space that involves sacrificing
of natural ecosystems
7 to build our homes and service infrastructures,
to provide a place for business or trade.
8and to put our garbage in.
9greater demand for transportation and
electricity that means greater fuel consumption
10 and increased pollution of water and air that
can have far-reaching effects on human health.
11Rapid industrialization adverse environmental
impacts (pollution, resource depletion, etc.)
defeats Sustainable
Development meeting the needs of the present
generation without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs.
12Potential environmental impacts
Contaminated soil and lost future land use
Local nuisances such as noise, lighting and
transport
Spills
Exposure to toxic chemicals
Landscape disturbance
Risks from hazardous waste
Habitat degradation
Air pollution
Ozone-depleting and greenhouse gases
Marine pollution
Disposal of solid wastes
Freshwater pollution
13Product Life Cycle System
Closed-Loop Recycling
Remanufacturing
Recycling
Manufacture Assembly
Engineered Specialty Materials
Use Service
Reuse
Retirement
Open Loop Recycling Material downcycling Into
another product system
Bulk Processing
Treatment Disposal
Raw Material Acquisition
Transfer of materials Between stages
Earth Biosphere
Untreated residuals
14- The Human Consumption Pattern
- Mass Production Customization
- Mass Consumption Mass Disposal
15The concept of Industrial Ecology The
traditional model of industrial activity should
be transformed in a more integrated model an
industrial ecosystem. ()
R. Frosch N. Gallopoulos, General Motors
Laboratories, 1989
16Industrial Ecology as a metaphor The
industrial ecosystem would function similar to a
biological ecosystem
R. Frosch N. Gallopoulos, General Motors
Laboratories, 1989
17First idea industrial food chains In such a
system the consumption of energy and materials is
optimized and the effluents of one process serve
as the raw material for another process. R.
Frosch N. Gallopoulos, 1989
18Industrial Ecologys Approach
Upstream Production
CLOSE THE LOOP
RE-USE
RECYCLE
Downstream Production
19Kalundborg, Denmark
20(No Transcript)
21WASTE MANAGEMENT HEIRARCHY
Source Reduction
recycling
Most Desirable
Waste treatment
disposal
Least Desirable
22Industrial Ecology
- Approach to managing human activity on a
sustainable basis by - essential integration of human systems into
natural systems - Minimizing energy and materials usage
- Minimizing the ecological impact of human
activity to levels natural systems can sustain.
23What can be shared?
- Energy
- Water
- Waste/recovery/recycling/substitution
- Information
- Regulatory functions
- Transportation systems
- Marketing
- Other covenants
24Looking beyond Regional Metabolism
Industry Process
Source Erkman Ramaswamy
25Industrial Metabolism conceptual framework
Biosphere
Minerals, ores, energy carriers Water Air Harveste
d biomass, hunting, fishing
Waste deposits Waste Water Emissions to
air Fertilizer, pesticides, dissipative losses
Industrial System
Input
Output
Translocations
Source Wuppertal Institut
26 27Why participatory ? Its complicated enough!
creates
creates
creates
28(No Transcript)
29PALAWAN SEAWEED INDUSTRY Some Issues and
Opportunities
30PROBLEMS OF INDUSTRY
- Production
- Marketing
- Finance
- Other concerns
31Distribution Channels of Seaweed
Farmer
Small Traders/ Viajeros
Barangay Traders
Big Traders/ Buying Stations
Export Traders
Processors
32PRODUCTION STATISTICS
- developed area for production
- 7,748 ha - Class A
- 322 ha - Class B
- total potential area
- 9,333 ha - Class A
- 1,883 ha - Class B
- 1,150 ha - Class C
33BIOLOGY OF SEAWEED
- Seaweed is a mass of marine algae
- simple structured organisms with no true leaves,
stems, roots and wood vessels - reproduces through spore production
34PRODUCTION AREA
- Palawan as main Philippine producer
- 8,070 ha developed for production
- 12,366 ha potential area
- Productions annual increase of 16.
grnweed.jpg / 216 x 254 pixels -
16.7kBcarrageenan.cebu.ph/seaweed.html
35PRODUCTION
- 1998 production
- Province - 141,301 MT
- Total Philippines - 643,043 MT
- Major markets are Manila and Cebu
36Annual production of dried seaweed in Palawan in
Palawan by municipality
MUNICIPALITY ANNUAL PRODUCTION (TONS) ANNUAL PRODUCTION (TONS) ANNUAL PRODUCTION (TONS) ANNUAL PRODUCTION (TONS) ANNUAL PRODUCTION (TONS)
MUNICIPALITY 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
Agutaya 7,200 8,385 9,766 11,374 13,247
Araceli 180 210 246 286 334
Balabac 600 699 814 948 1,104
Busuanga 60 71 83 97 114
Cagayancillo 4,800 5,591 6,512 7,584 8,834
Culion 30 35 41 48 57
Cuyo 840 978 1,140 1,329 1,548
Linapacan 18 21 24 28 33
Quezon 60 71 83 97 114
Roxas 480 559 651 759 884
Taytay 360 420 489 570 665
TOTAL 14,628 17,040 19,849 23,120 26,934
37PALAWAN SEAWEED INDUSTRY
- Two largest producing municipalities
- Agutaya share - 49.2
- Cagayancillo share -32.8
-
38PALAWAN SEAWEED INDUSTRY
- Classification of municipalities based on number
of months of production - Class A
- Class B
- Class C
39PRODUCTION STATISTICS
- developed area for production
- 7,748 ha - Class A
- 322 ha - Class B
- total potential area
- 9,333 ha - Class A
- 1,883 ha - Class B
- 1,150 ha - Class C
40Systems make it possible, People make it happen.