Title: Sustainable Development Indicators for Island Taiwan
1Sustainable Development Indicators for Island
Taiwan
Jiunn-Rong Yeh Professor of Law, National Taiwan
University
2www.law.ntu.edu.tw/sustain
3- Jiunn-Rong Yeh
- Professor of Law, National Taiwan University
- Shang-Lien Lo Professor of Environmental
Engineering, National Taiwan University - Ling-Ling Lee Professor of Zoology, National
Taiwan University - Jin-Tan Liu Professor of Economics, National
Taiwan University - Chin-Shou Wang Professor of Sociology,
National Tsing-Hua University - Shu-Li Huang Professor of Urban Planning,
National Taipei University - Hui-Min Tsai
- Professor of Environmental Education,
National Taiwan Normal - University
- Wen-Chen Shih
- Professor of Environmental Policy,
National Dong-Hwa University
4Sustainable Development Indicators for Taiwan
5Scenario B
Scenario A
Scenario C
Business As Usual
Towards SD
Not Towards SD
Taiwan 2000
6Developing Sustainable Development Indicators for
Island Taiwan
Institutional Capacity-building
Extended PSR System
In Reference to UN Framework
Incorporating Taiwans Salient Features
Goal and Functions
Criteria for Selection
Process
Demonstration
Interpretation and Policy Incorporation
7General Construction of SD
Taiwans Salient Features
PSR Framework
Institutional Capacity-Building for SD
SD Indicators for Taiwan
8Beyond Definition Four Conceptional Models for
Sustainable Development
- Intergenerational Justice Model (Brundtland
Report) development that meets the needs of the
present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs - Carrying Capacity Model (IUCN) improving the
quality of life while staying within the carrying
capacity of supporting system - Economic Internalization Model (D. Pearce) a
maximization of the net benefits of economic
development, subject to maintaining the services
and quality of natural resources over time, where
economic development is broadly construed to
include all elements of social welfare - Institutional Capacity-building Model (J. Yeh,
and others) the dynamics of social capacity
building, through which the ex post regret of
collective decisions can be minimized.
9Sustainable Taiwan
Probability
Capacity building
Indigenization
Internationalization
Process
Taiwan 2000
10Institutional Capacity-building
- Policy, Behavior, and the Environment
- Capacity, Institution and Performance
- Risk, Learning, and Minimization
11Institutional Capacity-building
- Probability
- Capability
- Empowerment
- Processes
- Values
12Taiwan as a Showcase to Sustainable Development
- Island Status
- Transitional Society and Profound Change
- Multidimensional Interactions
- Regional and International Status
13Five Stages of Development in Taiwan 1945-
14Paradigmatic Change and Taiwans Development Path
Sustainable Development
Environmental Awareness
Inner-renewal Development
Instrumentalism Milk Cow
15Island Characteristics (1)
- Insularity and Interconnectedness
- Physical, biological and cultural insularity
- Scarce natural resources
- Colonial legacy
- High population density and pressure in spatial
allocation - Trade dependent economy
16Island Characteristics (2)
- Vulnerability and Fast Changing
- Natural disaster prone ecology
- Environmentally sensitive areas
- High turn over rate
- Constant changing society
- Transitional society
- Vulnerable to external influence
- Struggling for identity
17Criteria in evaluating sustainability under
institutional capacity-building
Sustainable Development
18Dynamics of an Extended PSR System
State
Environment Resources
Pressure
Social Structure Economic Activities
Response
Institutional Environment Implementation
Mechanism
19Water As An Example
State
Water Quantity/Quality
Pressure
Ratio of High Water Dependency Industries
Response
Water Price reflecting actual costs
20Goal and Functions
- Policy Warning
- Policy Reflection
- Policy Guidance
21Criteria for Selecting Indicators
- Representation
- Feasibility
22Process
- Against Random Selection
- Deliberation
- Affiliation And Empowerment
- Revision
23Demonstration
- Weighting, Rating and Overall Grading
- Analytic Hierarchy Process, AHP
- Comparative Standardization
- Dimensional and Signaling
24Interpretation
- Collective Interpretation
- Warnings and Suggestions
25Sustainable Development Indicators and
Decision-making
- National Sustainable Development Council and
Incorporation of Suggestions - Mandatory Reference in Relevant Administrative,
Legislative and Judicial Actions - Constitutional Mandate
26Assessment of Sustainable Development of
Taiwan-Environmental State Indicators
- Shang-Lien Lo , Shiow-Mey Liou, Yu-Yun Lin
- Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering
- National Taiwan University
27Introduction
- The environmental index of Taiwan has
been proceeding by EPA for many years. - The most widely used are PSI, RPI, CTSI, etc.
- It was also monitoring the quality of environment
state, such as noise, solid waste
treatment, and drinking water quality. - Since each index is not comprehensive
enough, the whole scheme of assessment system
should be constructed to connect the
correlation between indicators and assess the
sustainability of national development.
28- The assessment of environmental quality has been
faced the problem of integrating information
while in comprehensive assessment, because it
cannot be accomplished by individual indicators. - The development of information aggregating could
be led the assessment in a big progress. - In this research, the assessment of
sustainable development was proceeding with
transferring the raw data into
sub-indices ( quality value ), classifying
each category objectively, and
eventually developing a systematic framework
of index assessment.
29Developing Process of Indicators
- In the first year, the primary system of
indicators has been completed, based on the
earlier researches, and the conceptions of
residuals, material or energy left over from
the various consumptive and productive
activities. -
- The environmental quality was divided into 9
categories climate change, air quality, acid
rain, freshwater quality, coastal areas
quality, soil quality, solid waste
management, noise, and nuclear waste. - Then 20 domestic experts and scholars were
invited to provide their suggestions of
indicators (parameters and items were included)
and these categories.
30- In the second year, the meaning and availability
of indicators have been reviewed. - The completeness of data, availability, indicator
correlation, and the possibility of
indicator combination were taken into
consideration. - Finally, the system was combined into
3 categories atmosphere quality, water
quality, and land quality, and the
indicators were revised from 19 to 13.
31Table 1. The amendment and modification of
environmental state categories
32Table 2. The amendment and modification of
environmental state indicators (1)
33Table 2. The amendment and modification of
environmental state indicators (2)
34- The rational and the information gathering
results of indicators have been examined and
revised in the third year. The coordination of
indicators and categories were built. - Moreover after seeking the recognition of
officials, experts and publics, the calculation
of the individual indicators was studied.
35Figure 1. The causality of environmental state
indicators system
36Method Framework of Indicators
- Indicators information gathers from three
sources - 1. Official data, such as Percentage of days
with PSI under 100, Environmental noise qualified
percentage. - 2. Coordinate and aggregate the relativity of
indicators, for example Solid waste recycling
and reuse, The area of soil polluted by heavy
metal. - 3. Others, assessment and integration of
parameters, for example Groundwater quality
index, Costal areas quality.
37 Table 3. The calculation feasibility(1)
38 Table 3. The calculation feasibility(2)
39Meaning present of indicatorsAtmosphere quality
40- While environmental quality was paid
much attention by publics, the government
precedes the pollution control. As the result,
the emphasis on pollution control was prior
than prevention in Taiwan. - Although PSI control and noise quantity
retain sustainable, atmosphere quality
could not maintain in an optimum state. - Atmosphere quality stands in
sustainable development, only when the pollution
prevention is prior considered.
41Water quality
42Land quality
43- Government investigated the inspection of heavy
metal concentration in soils from 1983. - The heavy metal polluted area above 4th grade
was 39,953 hectare (ha.) and above 5th grade
was 959 hectare from the record till 1997. - One set of data was not enough to assess
the whole developing tendency of soil
quality indicator, soil pollution is still an
acute problem. The soil pollution
prevention should be proceeded as soon
as possible.
44Table 4. The meaning present from the indicators
45Conclusion
- The pollution prevention of atmosphere
and water environments has not been
developing. The public conceptual are
staying at a restrict view, caused the
limitation of pollution improvement.
Moreover, the restrict view lead the
sustainable development situation hardly. - The government devoted to the establishment of
foundation and legislation since 1997 which
achieved a remarkable success on solid waste
management. From the result of analytic data
, Solid waste management (included Amount of
unwell-treatment industrial waste and
Solid waste recycling and reuse) has tended to
sustainability. It could be concluded that the
environmental policy takes effect on the quality
of environment.
46Assessment of Sustainable Development of
Taiwan- Resource State Indicators
- Ling-Ling Lee, Kuo-Jing Wong, Yu-Chang Yang
- Department of Zoology
- National Taiwan University
47Guiding Principle
- Sustainable use of renewable natural resources
- improving efficiency in the use of non-renewable
resources - re-using, recycling waste
- Maintaining ecosystem Health
- Marine and coast, forest, agriculture
48Process of selecting indicators
- International SDI model
- land use, forest, agriculture, fisheries and
marine, water, biodiversity - Taiwans natural environment and resource state
- Data feasibility
49Taiwans natural environment and resources state
- Island ? marine, coast, fisheries
- Topography ?land use, water, soil
- Diverse habitat types ? biological diversity
- Natural disaster prone ? forest, agriculture,
ecologically sensitive areas
50Data feasibility
- Preliminary set of indicators
- 8 categories, 16 indicators, 33 variables
- examples of indicators with no or not enough
data underground water supply, polluted
agricultural land, etc. - Final set of indicators
- 4 categories, 8 indicators, 14 variables
51- Indicators of States
- Natural resources and ecosystems
52Indicators of States Natural resources and
ecosystems
53Land Use
Ratio of areas depleted of natural resources
Ratio of natural coastline
54Biological Resources
Forest
Agriculture
Fisheries
55Ecologically Sensitive Area
56Water and Soil
Reduction of reservoir capacity
Siltation
57Trends of indicators
58Conclusion
- Most indicators showed trends of moving away from
the sustainable direction - Future work
- revision of indicators
- integration of indicators
- linkage with policy
59Sustainable Development Indicators for
Taiwan-Economic Indicators-Jin-Tan
LiuProfessor of Economics, National Taiwan
UniversityPresented by Wen-Chen ShihProfessor
of Environmental Policy, National Dong-Hwa
University
60How do we develop indicators?
- International SDI
- Characteristics of Taiwan Economy
- Relationship between Economy and Environment
Ecology - Establish Economic Pressure Indicators
61International SDI
62Characteristics of Taiwan Economy
- Developing with high GDP growth rate
- Export-orientation and long-term trade surplus
- Development of small- and medium-sized
enterprises - Star Industries
- (Textile, Petrochemical, Iron Steel, and
Electronics Industry) - Resource-consuming type of industry
- (Hog Raising, Forestry, Petrochemical, Iron
Steel, and Cement Industry)
63Relationship between Economy and Environment
Ecology
- ?Economic indicators analyze the influence of
economic activities to environment ecology. - ?Through these indicators we can realize the
connection between them.
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66The Trend of Indicators
A. Type of Consumption
67B. Structure of Industries
68C. Environment Energy Consumption
69Analysis of Indicators
?Polluting Industries?
70?Energy Usage Efficiency?
71?Personal Vehicles Degree?
72?Cement Consumption?
73Conclusion
- According to Environment Kuznet Curve, there is
an inverse-U relationship between the national
income and the degree of deterioration of
environment. - Now the national income per capita in Taiwan has
grown to around 12,000, according to EKC, the
quality of environment should begin to improve. - However, if we examine the relation between
emission of air pollution, amount of solid waste
collected and national income, the amount of
solid waste collected per capita per day do not
decrease as national income increases on the
contrary, it goes up year by year.
74Sustainable Development Indicators of Taiwan -
Social Pressure Indicators
Chin-Shou Wang Professor of
Sociology, National Tsing-Hua University
75Rationale for Social Sustainability
- POET (Population, Organization, Environment and
Technology) - I (Impacts)PAT (Population, Affluence,
Technology) - IPACT (Population, Affluence, Consumption,
Technology) - I(VCM)A (Value, Consumption, Market,
Amplifiers)
76Rationale for Social Sustainability
- RSf(OWP)SM (RS Risky Society, O
Organizational irresponsibility,W Wealth
distribution, P Personal reflexitivities, SM
Simple modernization) - EMf(EPI)/SI (EM Ecological Modernization E
Green Economy P Policy-oriented Prevention, I
Impact-predicting SI Super Industrialization) - SOf(PSAT)/SG (SO Social Pressure P
Population/Personality S Space A Activities
T Time SG Social Grammars)
77Sustainability Gap
- Gap on Systems
- Economy, Environment and Society
- GNP Myth
- Gross National Pollution
- Garbage, Noise and Pollution
- NG(Guns)NP(Pollution)
- Gap between GPI and ISEW
- Gap between QOL and Happy Life Expectancy
78Concentric of SD
Society
E
e
S
QOL
economy
Environment
No Justice eSgtE
No Integration egtSgtE
E Oikos
e
S
IJParadigm EgtSgte
79Cultural Luggage as Amplifying Factors Social
Grammars
- Cultural luggage and social grammars
- Father-son axis, Face
- Vertical zoning
- Feng-shui (Geomacy)
- Ecosphy
- Ecological wings with social root
- Theoretical Potential for Oriental Sustainability
- Dish-Long Theory or
- Deep Sustainability Theory
80??(?) Dish-Long Theory or Deep Sustainability
Theory
81Development and Trend of Social Indicators
- Ecological Triangle(PSAT) and PSR
- First Version(Environmental Refugee Social
Footprint Eco-Watch) - Second Version(Environmental Alienation Friction
of Space, Social Anomie, Time Compression) - Third Version (Structural upgrade)
- Fourth Version (Iceberg)
82STI Iceberg
Sustainability Category (5) Component
(18) Indicator and item (83) Data
Base(including UN 134 indicators)
public
sector
trend
national
international
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84Headline IndicatorsSocial Shortness Index (SSI)
- People Environmental Pain Index
- Space Betel-nut planting area
- Activity Pollution appeal cases
- Time Stock turnover rate
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88Sustainable Development Indicators for Taiwan
-- Institutional Response
Jiunn-Rong Yeh Professor of Law, National Taiwan
University
89Rationale Institutional Capacity-Building
- Information and Participation
- Information basis
- Local government and public participation
- Allocation of Government Expenditure
- Budget for environment
- RD expenditure
Institutional Capacity-Building
-
- Organizations and Policies
- Representation of Organizations
- Environmental rationality in policy making
Specific policies
Specific policies
Specific policies
National government level
Local and Social Level
90TrendAs Revealed by Institutional Indicators(1)
91TrendAs Revealed by Institutional Indicators(2)
92TrendAs Revealed by Institutional Indicators(3)
93TrendAs Revealed by Institutional Indicators(4)
94Example 1 RA1- Ratio of the environmental
budget to the total budget
- PSR Response
- Measurement
- environmental budget /total budget
- YEAR 83-88(1994-1999)
- Trend Analysis
- Increase since 1995
- A higher ratio of environmental budget
indicates that the government and all citizens
have shown a greater concern about environmental
issues
95Example 2 RC3 - Percentage of installation of
sewage systems
- PSR Response
- Measurement
- Service population/Total population
- YEAR 87-88(1998-1999)
- Trend Analysis
- Grows in Taipei, while the overall rate of
sewage system build-up is too low, compared to
other countries
96Example 3 RC4 - Percentage of utilization of
fishing ports
- PSR Response
- Measurement
- Areas used by registered fishing boats/total
fishery ports areas - YEAR 78-86(1989-1997)
- Trend Analysis
- The construction of the many fishery ports
has not only became a grave waste of resources
but also brought more serious impact on the
coastal environment
97Findings
- Since the establishment of the EPA in Taiwan,
there has been significant improvement in the
government institutional capacity-building. - The vitality of local governments and social
groups in their participation of environmental
policies outgrows the increase of the budget and
personnel in the national government. - However, while the total institutional capacity
has been strengthened, the decision-making and
implementation of specific policies have not
shown satisfactory results, and many policies are
in effect heading away from sustainability.
98Urban indicators as measurements of Taiwans
sustainability
- Shu-Li Huang
- Graduate Institute of Urban Planning
- National Taipei University
99Urbanization
Per Capita GNP (104US)
100Urbanization
VS.
VS.
101Urbanization
Pop 2210 6 Area 36,000 Km2
(103)
102Urban Sustainability Indicators
103Urban Sustainability Indicators
- Seattle(Indicators of Sustainable Community)
104Sustainable Development Indicator (National Level)
- Canada1. Ecological Life-support
- 2. Human Health Well-Being
- 3. Natural Resources
Sustainability - 4. Pervasive Influencing Factors
- U.K. (15 Headline Indicators)
- Economic output, Investment, Employment, Poverty,
Education, Health, Housing, Crime, Climate
change, Air, Traffic, Rivers, Wildlife, Land use,
Waste
105Taiwans Sustainability Indicator
Sustainable Taiwan
Island Taiwan
Urban Taiwan
P
S
R
Urban Development
Economic Pressure
Social Stress
Environmental Pollution
Ecological System
Institutional Response
Urban area4416.7Km2(12.26) Urban
population16,751,500(78)
106Framework of Indicators of Urban Taiwan
Economics Production
Social Living
Natural Environment
107Life
108Category of Indicators for Urban Taiwan
Driving Force
State
Response
Production
Living
Environment
Life
109Production
Environment
Living
Life
110Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Production
Ratio of service industry()
Growth rate of production()
Per capita urban productivity (US/person)
111Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Living
Urban population
Urban area
Metropolitan population density
of urban population
112Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Living
vehicle / 1000 persons
person / km
of cars
of motor cycles
efficiency of public transit (person / km)
113Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Environment
of stream length polluted
114Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Living
days (PSIgt100)
days exceeding designated noise pollution
standard
115Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Response to Urban Environmental Management
Ratio of public facility area
Park area per person
116Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
-Response to Urban Environmental Management
of waste water treated
Ratio of accessible water front
Taipei Kaoshiung Taichung Taiwan
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118Summary of Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
119Summary of Trend of Taiwans Urban Sustainability
120Island Taiwan VS. Urban Taiwan
Environmental pollution
Production
Ecological system
Institutional response
Life
Living
1988
Economic pressure
Social pressure
1997
Environment
Island Taiwan
Urban Taiwan
121Concluding Remarks
- Urban indicators ? Sustainable Taiwan
- Continuing Research
- Indicator adjustment and Target Setting
- Relationships between urban indicators
- ? policy impact study
- Trade-off analysis between indicators of urban
Taiwan and Island Taiwan
122Overall Conclusion
- Jiunn-Rong Yeh
- Professor of Law, National Taiwan University
123Research Achievements
- Completion of Sustainable Development Indicators
for Taiwan and preliminary analysis - 2. Developing sustainability indicators in
compliance with the United Nations Mandate - Characterization of sustainable development
movement in Taiwan - 4. Form a Basis for National Initiative
- 5. Part of the analysis could contribute to
public policy formation - 6. Enhancement of academic researches and
international collaboration in sustainable
development movement - 7. Concrete example of integration between
technological and humanity disciplines - 8. Publications promoting sustainable
development concepts
124Prospects
Institutionalization
comparison to other countries
central and local sustainability indicator links
Sustainable Development Indicators for Taiwan
Internationalization
integrated central and local policies
enhanced participation in international
sustainable development topics
Policy Inputs
125? ?
Thank You