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September 05, 2014 Chapter 1 Concepts • Environmental Science • Sustainability • Natural capital > Natural resources and natural services • Exponential growth • Economic growth > GDP, per capita GDP, GDP-PPP* > Economic development > developed and developing countries > environmentally sustainable economic development • Doubling time and exponential growth: Rule of 70 ** • Resources > Perpetual and renewable > sustainable yield > environmental degradation > common-property or free-access resources > tragedy of the commons > ecological footprints* > Nonrenewable resources > Pollutants > input v. output pollution control • Causes of Environmental Problems > Population growth > unsustainable resource use > poverty* > poor environmental accounting > environmental ignorance > Affluence • Culture > agricultural revolution > industrial-medical revolution > information-globalization revolution > frontier environmental worldview > conservative era • Environmental worldviews and ethics • 4 principles of sustainability: copy nature > Reliance on solar energy > biodiversity > population control > nutrient recycling September 05, 2014 Sustainability and how to get there: *Pick a specific example of natural capital and describe the five steps to reach sustainability. September 05, 2014 Natural capital = natural resources + natural services services = + Sustainability: Ability of earth's systems to survive and adapt to changing environmental conditions indefinitely. Sustainability (human practices): Using resources and services in such a way that they are not degraded and remain for future generations. September 05, 2014 Causes of Environmental Problems: September 05, 2014 Population Growth • Rate of population growth has decreased: > 2.2% 1963 > 1.23% 2006 > 1.1% 2013 September 05, 2014 Exponential Growth and The Rule of 70: Rule of 70: Calculate doubling time for some quantity (ex: population) that is growing exponentially. 70 doubling time = (in years) percentage growth rate *There are 8 million people in Los Angeles, and the population is growing exponentially at 1.12%. If the rate continues, how long until the population of Los Angeles is 16 million? doubling time = 62.5 years September 05, 2014 Economic growth and economic development • Economic growth: increase in the capacity of a county to provide people with goods and services. Need: > Population growth (producers + consumers) > More production > More consumption • Gross domestic product: annual market value of all goods/services with in a country. > Increase in GDP = economic growth > GDP per capita = GDP/total population – Per capita = "per person" September 05, 2014 Economic growth and economic development • Economic development: Improvement of human living standard by economic growth. > How does economic growth improve living standards? • Developed countries: high GDP-PPP, industrialized, higher standard of living • Developing countries: Can vary from moderately developed countries (China, India, Brazil, Mexico) to low-income countries (African countries). http://www.prb.org/Publications/Lesson-Plans/HumanPopulation/PopulationGrowth.aspx September 05, 2014 Developed v. developing countries: Distribution of poverty *What is this map lacking? Regi September 05, 2014 Economic growth and economic development: developed v. developing countries September 05, 2014 What about poverty? • Higher birth rates • Premature death > lack of clean drinking water > lack of access to medicine > air pollution • Unsustainable use of resources (education and need) September 05, 2014 What about affluence? *Please brainstorm 1-2 items for each of the categories below: • Negative environmental impact • overconsumption of resources • subsequent production of pollution • Affluent countries takes resources from other countries and outsources pollutants • Positive environmental impact • Concern for environmental quality • Money for development of technologies to reduce environmental impacts September 05, 2014 Model to quantify environmental impact: September 05, 2014 Resources • Resource: anything obtained from the environment to meet needs and wants. • Perpetual resource: renewed continuously on a human time scale. > sun: 6 billion years • Renewable resource: replenished fairly rapidly (hours - decades) through natural processes > sustainable yield! > Water, forests, air, soil. • Nonrenewable resource: exists in a fixed quantity in the earth's crust. > takes millions to billions of years to renew > Recycling and reuse! > fossil fuels, mineral resources September 05, 2014 Pollution • Pollution: presence of chemicals at high enough levels in air, water, soil, or food to threaten the health, survival, or activities of humans or other living organisms. • Source of pollution concentrated in industrialized areas > cars > factories > industrialized agriculture Steve Lonker:http://nsf.gov/news/mmg/mmg_disp.jsp?med_id=71556&from=search_list September 05, 2014 Pollution • Point sources: single, identifiable sources. > factories > car • Non-point sources: larger, dispersed > Runoff > Pesticides blown into air • Which ones are harder to identify and control? September 05, 2014 Pollution • Pollution prevention or input pollution control: reduce or eliminate production of pollutant • Pollution clean up or output pollution control: clean up or diluting pollutants > What is the problem with output control? – Temporary--consumption and population continues to grow – Clean up just puts pollutants somewhere else – Difficult + costly September 05, 2014 Model to quantify environmental impact: can be harmful (cars) or helpful (green energy) September 05, 2014 Human History and the Environment: • Agricultural revolution > Allow people to settle and increase food production • Industrial-medical revolution > Urbanization > Fossil fuels! > Science to improve sanitation + medicine • Information-globalization revolution > Gain and access lots of information September 05, 2014 2005: UN's Millenium Ecosystem Assessment Human activities are degrading or using unsustainably about 60% of the world's free natural services that sustain life on earth. September 05, 2014 Four scientific principles of sustainability: Copy Nature Reliance on Solar Energy Biodiversity Population Control Nutrient Cycling September 05, 2014 Social Capital: getting people to work together to find solutions September 05, 2014