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Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability

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Title: Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability


1
Chapter 1
  • Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and
    Sustainability

2
What is Environmental Science?
  • The goals of environmental science are to learn
  • Ecology- how nature works.
  • Ecos means house or home in Greek
  • Humans-
  • how the environment effects us.
  • how we effect the environment.
  • Sustainability- how human society can thrive
    indefinitely without degrading our life-support
    system.

3
One Key to the 21st CenturyHuman Population
Sao Paulo, Brasil
city
favela a.k.a. slum
4
Global Human Population Trend
Time to ? ? 200,000 years 130 years 30
years 14 years 13 years 12 years
12 years 12 years
Year Human Pop. Earth 1800 1 billion 1930 2
billion 1960 3 billion 1974 4
billion 1987 5 billion 1999 6
billion 2011 7 billion
What would a line graph of this data look like?
5
Core Case Study Living in an Exponential Age
  • Human population growth J-shaped curve

Next
6
(No Transcript)
7
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Earth's Life-Support System
Human Culturesphere
Water (hydrosphere)
Air (atmosphere)
Population Size
Worldviews and ethics
Soil and rocks (lithosphere)
Life (biosphere)
Politics
Economics
Fig. 1-2, p. 7
8
Ethics
Ecology
Philosophy
Political science
Biology
Environmental Science
Economics
Chemistry
Demography
Physics
Geology
Anthropology
Geography
Fig. 1-2, p. 7
9
Environmentally Sustainable Societies
  • meets basic needs of its people in a just and
    equitable manner without degrading the natural
    capital that supplies these resources.
  • Natural capital can be thought of as stuff you
    can use

See book Figure 1-3 p. 8
Next
10
Environmentally Sustainable Societies
See book Figure 1-3 p. 8
  • Write the heading Natural Capital, then make
    two columns under that called Natural Resources
    Natural Services
  • List all of the natural resources natural
    services in figure 1-3 under the appropriate
    heading. (10 min)

Next
11
Sustainability The Integrative Theme
  • 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.

Next
12
A Path to Sustainability
Natural Capital Degradation
Individuals Matter
Trade-Offs
Solutions
Natural Capital
Sound Science
Supported by
Fig. 1-3, p. 8
13
Global Outlook
  • Comparison of developed and developing countries.

Next
14
Developed vs Developing Countries
Developed Developing The BRIC (rich)__
(poor) (in the middle) N.
America Africa Brazil W. Europe most of
Asia Russia Japan most of S. India Australia
C. America China Mexico
S. Korea
15
Developed vs Developing Countries
Developed Nations 1.2 billion people 3 of
pop growth by 2050 use 88 of worlds
resources Developing Nations 5.8 billion
people 97 of pop growth by 2050 use 12
of worlds resources
16
Fig. 1-9b, p. 14
17
Fig. 1-9a, p. 14
18
Fig. 1-6, p. 11
19
Percentage of World's
18
Population
82
0.1
Population Growth
1.5
85
Wealth and Income
15
88
Resource use
12
Pollution and waste
75
25
Developing countries
Developed countries
Fig. 1-5, p. 11
20
Fig. 1-6, p. 11
21
Key Terms GDP GDP-PPP
  • GDP Gross Domestic Product
  • Total dollar value of all goods and services in
    one country in one year
  • GDP per capita Average value of all goods
    services per person in a country
  • GDP/population
  • PPP Purchasing Power Parity
  • An adjustment that reflects the fact that some
    things cost WAY less in developing nations
  • Per capita GDP-PPP The average amount of goods
    services in one country per person, adjusted for
    differences in price

22
POPULATION GROWTH, ECONOMIC GROWTH, AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
  • 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.

23
NATURAL RESOURCES
  • Perpetual On a human time scale are continuous.
  • Example solar energy
  • Renewable On a human time scale can be
    replenished rapidly (e.g. hours to several
    decades).
  • Examples trees, water, fish, soil
  • Nonrenewable On a human time scale are in fixed
    supply.
  • Examples copper ore, fossil fuels,
    uranium

24
NONRENEWABLE RESOURCES
  • 3 types of non-renewable resources
  • 1. metals 2. non-metalS 3.
    energy

  • -coal

  • -oil

  • -natural gas
  • -nuclear fission

gypsum
copper ore
25
RESOURCES The Tragedy of the Commons
  • Common property or Free access Resources clean
    air, open ocean fish, migratory birds, gasses
    of the lower atmosphere (troposphere)
  • Tragedy of the Commons- If I do not use this
    resource, someon else will. The little bit I use
    or pollute is not enough to matter, and such
    resources are renewable
  • The original Commons -the common fields that were
    in the middle of each midieval town

26
Solutions to The Tragedy of the Commons
  • Use free-access resources well below their
    estimated sustainable yields
  • Reduce population
  • Regulate access (government regulations)
  • Both
  • Convert free-access resources to private
    ownership
  • Logic- people take better care of things they own
  • Fallacy- companies may degrade the resource for
    short-term profits (forests, mining, etc.)

27
Nonrenewable Resources
  • Exist as fixed quantity
  • Becomes economically depleted.
  • Recycling and reusing extends supply
  • Recycling processes waste material into new
    material.
  • Reuse is using a resource over again in the same
    form.

Figure 1-8
28
Our Ecological Footprint
  • Humanitys ecological footprint has exceeded
    earths ecological capacity.

Next
29
Total Footprint (million hectares) and Share of
Global Ecological Capacity ()
2,810 (25)
United States
2,160 (19)
European Union
2,050 (18)
China
780 (7)
India
Japan
540 (5)
Fig. 1-7a, p. 13
30
Footprint Per Person (hectares per person)
9.7
United States
4.7
European Union
1.6
China
0.8
India
4.8
Japan
Fig. 1-7b, p. 13
31
Earths Ecological Capacity
Number of Earths
Humanity's Ecological Footprint
If everyone consumed resources at US rates, we
would need five more planets!
Year
Fig. 1-7c, p. 13
32
POLLUTION
  • Anything found at high enough levels in the
    environment to cause harm to organisms.
  • Point source
  • Nonpoint source

Figure 1-9
33
Point Source PollutionPollution from a single,
identifiable source
34
Non-Point Source PollutionPollution from
diffuse, widespread sources.
35
Non-Point Source PollutionPollution from
diffuse, widespread sources.
36
SOURCES OF POLLUTION FOR TEXAS RIVERS, STREAMS, RESERVOIRS AND BAYS 
                                                                                                                                            
37
Pollution
  • Pollutants can have three types of unwanted
    effects
  • Can disrupt / degrade life-support systems.
  • Example Soil salinization
  • Can damage health and property.
  • Examples Breathing ground-level ozone
  • Stream pollution from mining
  • Can create nuisances such as noise and unpleasant
    smells, tastes, and sights.
  • Examples Hercules wood chip pile smell
  • Light Pollution

38
3 Greatest Environmental Impacts, in order
  1. Agriculture
  2. Transportation
  3. Heating cooling buildings

39
ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS CAUSES AND CONNECTIONS
40
Environmental Problems Causes Connections
SOLAR 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
Red Unintended Consequences!
Fig. 1-10, p. 17
41
ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS CAUSES AND CONNECTIONS
  • The major causes of environmental problems are
  • Population growth- Global (2011) 1.2
  • Unsustainable resource use
  • Poverty
  • Poor environmental accounting not paying the
    true cost of using environmental capital
  • Ecological ignorance we dont deeply understand
    how the earth works

42
Natural capital degradation
  • The exponential increasing flow of material
    resources through the worlds economic systems
    depletes, degrades and pollutes the environment.

Next
43
Causes of Environmental Problems
Ecological Ignorance Trying to manage and
simplify nature with too little knowledge
about how it works
Poor Environmental Accounting Not including
the environmental costs of economic goods and
services in their market prices
Poverty
Unsustainable resource use
Population growth
Fig. 1-11, p. 17
44
Solutions Pollution Prevention vs. Pollution
Cleanup
  • Problems with relying on cleanup
  • Temporary bandage without improvements in
    pollution control technology.
  • Often just moves 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.

45
Solutions Pollution Prevention vs. Pollution
Cleanup
  • Old sayings that support pollution prevention
    over cleanup
  • A stitch in time saves nine
  • An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure

46
Poverty and Environmental Problems
  • 1 of 3 children under 5, suffer from severe
    malnutrition.

Next
47
Number of people( of world's population)
Lack ofaccess to
Adequate Sanitation
2.4 billion (37)
Enough fuel for heating and cooking
2 billion (31)
Electricity
1.6 billion (25)
Clean drinking Water
1.1 billion (17)
Adequate health care
1.1 billion (17)
Enough food for good health
1.1 billion (17)
Fig. 1-12, p. 18
48
Resource Consumption and Environmental Problems
  • Underconsumption- Globally, about 50 live on
    less than 2 per day
  • Overconsumption
  • Affluenza unsustainable addiction to
    overconsumption and materialism.

The Hungry Ghost
49
CULTURAL CHANGES AND THE ENVIRONMENT
  • Agricultural revolution (8,000 to 10,000 years
    ago)
  • Allowed people to stay in one place (first
    villages cities).
  • Industrial-medical revolution (mid-1700s)
  • Led shift from rural villages to urban society.
  • Science improved sanitation and disease control.
  • Greatly decreased death rate (effect on
    population?)
  • Information-globalization revolution (late 1900s)
  • Rapid access to information.

50
Trade-Offs
Industrial-Medical Revolution
Advantages
DIsadvantages
Mass production of useful and affordable products
Increased air pollution
Increased water pollution
Higher standard of living for many
Increased waste pollution
Greatly increased agricultural production
Soil depletion and degradation
Lower infant mortality
Groundwater depletion
Longer life expectancy
Habitat destruction and degradation
Increased urbanization
Lower rate of population growth
Biodiversity depletion
Fig. 1-15, p. 23
51
SUSTAINABILITY ANDENVIRONMENTAL PARADIGMS
  • Technological optimists
  • suggest that human ingenuity will keep the
    environment sustainable, no matter what.
  • Environmental pessimists
  • overstate the problems where our environmental
    situation seems hopeless.

52
SUSTAINABILITY ANDENVIRONMENTAL WORLDVIEWS
  • Planetary Management Worldview- We are separate
    from nature, and nature exists to serve our
    increasing needs and wants.
  • economic growth is seen as unlimited.
  • all environmental challenges will be easily met
    via new technologies.

53
SUSTAINABILITY ANDENVIRONMENTAL WORLDVIEWS
  • Stewardship Worldview- We can manage the earth
    for our own benefit, but we have an ethical
    responsibility to be caring and responsible
    stewards of the earth.
  • Encourage beneficial forms of economic growth
  • Discourage earth-degrading forms of economic
    growth

54
SUSTAINABILITY ANDENVIRONMENTAL WORLDVIEWS
  • Environmental Wisdom Worldview-
  • We are part of and totally dependent on nature
    nature exists for all species.
  • Encourage earth-sustaining forms of economic
    growth
  • Discourage earth-degrading forms of economic
    growth
  • Our success depends on learning how the earth
    sustains itself and basing how we think and act
    on this knowledge

55
Aldo Leopolds Environmental Ethics
  • Individuals matter.
  • land is to be loved and respected is an
    extension of ethics.
  • We abuse land because we regard it as a
    commodity
  • anything is right when it tends to preserve the
    integrity, stability,and beauty of the biotic
    community

(Which worldview is this?)
56
Four Scientific Principles of Sustainability
Copy Nature
Next
57
Reliance on Solar Energy
Biodiversity
Population Control
Nutrient Recycling
Fig. 1-16, p. 24
58
2
Solutions
Principles of Sustainability
How Nature Works
Lessons for Us
Runs on renewable solar energy.
Rely mostly on renewable solar energy.
Recycles nutrients and wastes. There is little
waste in nature.
Prevent and reduce pollution and recycle and
reuse resources.
Preserve biodiversity by protecting ecosystem
services and habitats and preventing premature
extinction of species.
Uses biodiversity to maintain itself and adapt
to new environ- mental conditions.
Controls a species population size and
resource use by interactions with its
environment and other species.
Reduce human births and wasteful resource use to
prevent environmental overload and depletion and
degradation of resources.
Fig. 1-17, p. 25
59
Current Emphasis
Sustainability Emphasis
Good news It only takes 5-10 of a population to
bring about major social change
Pollution cleanup
Pollution prevention
Bad news This change in emphasis is going to be
very challenging
Waste disposal (bury or burn)
Waste prevention
Protecting species
Protecting habitat
Environmental degradation
Environmental restoration
More good news the change is already starting to
happen very rapidly.
Increasing resource use
Less resource waste
Population growth
Population stabilization
Depleting and degrading natural capital
Protecting natural capital
Fig. 1-18, p. 24
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