Chapter 1-Environmental Science, Earth Capital ...



Chapter 1-Environmental Science, Earth Capital, Sustainability, & Worldviews

“What’s the use of a house if you don’t have a decent planet to put it on?” - Henry David Thoreau

The Environment

Environment: The external conditions and factors that affect living organisms

Ecology: The study of the relationships between living organisms and their environment

Environmental Science: The role humans have on the earth

Exponential Growth

Exponential Growth: a quantity increases by a fixed percentage of the whole in a given time.

Can be deceiving because it starts off slowly and grows to be enormous. Each doubling is more than the total of earlier growth.

Capitals

Solar Capital

energy from the sun

Earth Capital

air, water, soil, wildlife, minerals, recycling, and pest control processes

Sustainability

Sustainable Resource Harvest: certain quantity of that resource can be harvested each year over a specified period

Sustainable Earth: The earth’s supplies of resources and the processes that make up earth capital.

Sustainable Society: Manages its economy and population size without exceeding all of the planet’s supplies

Carrying Capacity

The maximum number of organisms an environment can support

Varies with

location

time (seasonal changes and long term global changes such as climate)

types of technology used to extract and process resources

Rule of 70

A formula derived from the basic mathematics of exponential growth

70/percentage growth rate = the doubling time in years

Percentages

48% of the earth’s total land area has been partially modified by human activities

73% including areas that have rock or ice

Economic Indicators:

Gross National Product: market value in current dollars of all goods and services produced in and outside of a country by the country’s business for final use during a year

Gross Domestic Product: The market value in current dollars of all goods produced in a country during a year

Per Capita: GNP/total population

Developed Countries

20% of the earth’s total population 85% of the world’s total wealth 75% of pollution and wastes 88% of the natural resources USA, Japan, Germany account for more than 1/2 of the world’s economic output

Developing Countries

Low GNPs mostly Africa, Asia, Latin America 80% of total population (4.7 billion) 15% wealth and income 12% natural resources

Facts

1 in 5 live in luxury 3 in 5 have enough to get by 1 in 5 struggles to get by on less than $1 a day

1 in 6 are malnourished 1 in 3 lack enough fuel to keep warm and cook

Renewable Resources

Potentially inexhaustible

Potentially renewable resource: can be replenished fairly rapidly through natural processes, (forest trees, grasslands grasses, and wild animals.)

Biological Diversity: different life forms that can best survive the variety of conditions currently found of earth

Different Kinds Include Genetic diversity Species diversity Ecological diversity

The Tragedy of the Commons

Common property resources: available to all users free of charge

#1 cause of environmental degradation

The cumulative effects of many people trying to exploit a common property eventually exhausts it

Nonrenewable Resources

Resources that exist in a fixed quantity energy resources metallic mineral resources (iron, copper, aluminum) nonmetallic mineral resources (salt, clay, sand, phosphates)

Pollution

Non degradable pollutants: cannot be broken down by natural process

Point sources

Non point sources

chemical nature (how harmful it is to living organisms) concentration persistence (how long it stays in a place)

Solutions to Pollution

Input pollution control: eliminates production of pollutants by switching to a less harmful chemical process

Output pollution control: cleaning up pollutants after they have been produced

Key Environmental Problems

1. Rapid Population growth

2. Rapid & Wasteful use of resources

3. Simplification & degradation of earth’s life-support systems

4. Poverty

5. Failure of the government to encourage economic & political systems that prevent degradation

6. Failure to include environmental costs

7. Ignorance of nature

Environmental Impacts of Populations

Population x Affluence x Technology= Environmental Impact

P x A x T= I

Human Cultural Changes

Hunter Gatherers (Agricultural Revolution(Industrial Revolution

Hunting-and-Gathering Societies

For 60,000 yr. Humans survived as hunter-gatherers.

Survived by having “earth-wisdom”

knew how to use their sources sparingly, but beneficially

3 Energy Sources for Hunter-Gatherers

1. Sunlight captured by plants 2. Fire 3. Their own muscle power

Advanced Hunter-Gatherers

Created more environmental harm improved tools used fire to hunt hunted in huge groups

caused extinction of some animals relied on potentially renewable resources

Agricultural Revolution

10,000 to 12, 000 years ago

used agroforestry, slash-and-burn cultivation, shifting cultivation, and subsistence farming

Agricultural Revolution Effects

Used domesticated animals to plow Birth rates rose larger area of land was cleared

Conflict between societies Urbanization Accumulation of material goods

Excess food

Industrial Revolution

Began in England in the mid 1700’s and moved to the United States in the 1800’s

Commerce, trade, and distribution expanded rapidly

Dependence on nonrenewable resources

Information Revolution

New technologies are enabling people to deal with information rapidly

1. Automated information collection 2. Databases store information 3. Instantaneous transmission of data

4. Information processing

Are we living sustainably?

Opinions vary on whether or not things are getting better or worse.

Economists and analysts basically say we are fine

Environmentalists say we are degrading and depleting resources too quickly

November 18, 1992

1,680 scientists signed and sent an urgent warning to government leaders of all nations

The letter basically stated that if nothing was done to save the environment, then there could be serious consequences

1992

The United States National Academy of Sciences and the Royal Society of London issued a report saying that science and technology may not be able to prevent the degradation of poverty in the world

Who Should We Side With?

Depends mostly on each individual’s opinion

There is no clear answer

Environmental Worldviews

Planetary Management Worldview

1. We are the planet’s most important species.

2. There is always more.

3. All economic growth is good.

4. Success is a directly related to how we understand, control, and manage the earth.

Earth Wisdom Worldview

1. Nature exists for all species

2. There are limited supplies.

3. Economic growth is not always beneficial.

4. Success depends on cooperation with one another.

Living More Sustainably

1. Leave the earth as good or better than we found it.

2. Take no more than what we need.

3. Try not to harm life, air, water or soil.

4. Sustain biodiversity.

5. Maintain earth’s capacity to self repair.

6. Don’t use potentially renewable resources faster than they are replenished.

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