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Case Study 1 Introduction to Global Environmental Issues

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Title: Case Study 1 Introduction to Global Environmental Issues


1
Case Study 1 Introduction to Global
Environmental Issues
  • 1 Environmental Framework
  • 2 Environmental Transition
  • 3 Environmental Issues

2
Framework
1
  • Context
  • Understand the relationships between population,
    the quantity and availability of resources and
    the quality of the environment.
  • We are notably concerned about impacts
  • Population on resources.
  • Population on the environment.
  • One concept used to express those impacts is the
    one of resource and environmental pressure.
  • The intensity of consumption of energy, water,
    land and material and the emission of pollutants
    and waste.

3
Framework
1
Resources
Population
Pressure
Environment
4
Framework
1
Demographic Processes
Population
Goods and services
Resources and services
Resources and services
Environment
Capital Stock
Economic Processes
Natural Processes
Leakage
Wastes
Waste flows
Recycling
5
Environmental Transition
2
  • Environmental transition
  • Developed countries
  • At some point of economic development, the level
    of resource and environmental pressure is
    starting to go down.
  • Not known yet to what extent the pressure will
    decrease.
  • Several events have facilitated this process in
    developed countries.
  • Pollution control
  • Several legislation were put forward to reduce
    environmental impacts, notably in the industrial
    sector.
  • The handling of hazardous materials is strictly
    enforced.

6
Environmental Transition
2
  • Process changes
  • Industrial processes generating high pollution
    levels were changed because of legislation and
    increasing efficiency.
  • CFCs are no longer permitted as coolants.
  • Pulp making rely increasingly on a mechanical
    process instead of a chemical one.
  • Using oil, natural gas and nuclear energy,
    instead of coal, have proportionally reduced
    environmental pressures.
  • Structural economic changes
  • Pollution intensive industrial activities have
    been relocated in developing countries.
  • This strategy has reduced environmental pressures
    in developed countries.

7
Environmental Transition
2
  • Simply a relocation of the problem.
  • Emergence of the information economy lies mainly
    on immaterial resources.
  • Will it contribute to alleviate environmental
    pressures?
  • Telecommuting.
  • Immaterial life.

8
Environmental Transition
2
Developing countries
Developed countries
Pollution control
Process changes and efficiency increases
Level of Environmental Pressure
Structural economic changes and dematerialization
of consumption patterns
Level of Development
9
Environmental Issues
3
  • Land
  • Greatest concern in regions where food security
    is a priority, notably in Africa and West Asia.
  • Land availability and efficient land management
    are driven by the food security demands of
    growing populations.
  • Expansion of cultivation into marginal lands.
  • Forests, woodlands, or grasslands are destroyed
    or degraded and natural ecosystems are
    fragmented.
  • Poor land management increases susceptibility to
    erosion and accelerates leaching of nutrients.
  • Degradation feeds back into a cycle of declining
    productivity, desertification or the irreversible
    degeneration of marginal lands.

10
Areas of Desertification
3
11
Tombouctou, Mali, 1976 and 1985
3
12
Environmental Issues
3
  • Forests
  • Decline of natural forest in developing regions
    has been considerable between 1980 and 1990.
  • Losses have been greatest in Latin America and
    the Caribbean, followed by those in Africa and in
    Asia and the Pacific.
  • Industrialization, population growth and
    agricultural expansion, and forest product trade
    are the main forces in reducing forest cover.
  • Remaining forests are under great pressure from
    agricultural expansion.
  • Use of wood as fuel.
  • Pressure likely to increase with rising
    population and an absence of alternatives to wood
    as fuel.

13
North American Forest
3
14
Environmental Issues
3
  • Biodiversity
  • Protect and conserve natural habitats and related
    biodiversity.
  • Competition for scarce land resources and the
    rising demand for food production represent
    important constraints.
  • Habitat loss caused by development pressure and
    the overexploitation of fisheries, ground-water
    depletion, and hunting are threatening
    biodiversity.
  • Fish stocks in parts of North America and Europe
    have been seriously depleted.
  • Effects world-wide of deforestation is
    fragmentation of habitats and the negative effect
    this has on biodiversity.

15
Environmental Issues
3
  • Water
  • The problem of water is more a case of
    distribution and quality than one of quantity.
  • All regions have some problems related to either
    ground-water or surface water resources.
  • Transboundary problems associated with water
    resources.
  • Access to adequate quantity and quality of water
    will soon become problematic.
  • Overexploitation of ground water lowers water
    tables.
  • Damage wetlands, cause ground subsidence, and
    induce salt-water intrusion in coastal aquifers.
  • Many cities depend on ground water as the primary
    water supply.
  • Problems caused by the deterioration of water
    reserves.

16
Available Water, Selected Countries, 1990-2025
(cubic meters per capita)
3
17
Aral Sea, 1973 and 1987 (Landsat Images)
3
18
Environmental Issues
3
  • Marine and Coastal Environments
  • A high proportion of the worlds population
    resides in coastal areas.
  • Many derive benefit from marine resources such as
    food, employment, or tradable commodities.
  • Marine coastal ecosystems are particularly
    vulnerable to land-based sources of
    contamination.
  • Eutrophication in the Baltic, Black, Aral and
    North seas is also a problem.
  • Overexploitation of marine fisheries.
  • Impacts of climate change on sea level.
  • Climate change may also affect ocean mixing and
    circulation patterns.

19
Status of Coral Reefs, by Region, Mid-1990s
3
20
Environmental Issues
3
  • Atmosphere
  • Polluted air has many adverse impacts
  • Human health.
  • Damaging biotic and ecosystem functions.
  • Accelerated deterioration of building materials
    (acid rain).
  • Inducing climatic disturbances.
  • Burning of fossil fuels for industry and
    transport.
  • Transboundary effects of air pollution is
    increasingly of global concern.
  • Concentration of people and activities close to
    urban and industrial areas.
  • Large cities in Asia and the Pacific, Latin
    America, and North America experience problems of
    local air pollution.

21
Sulfur Dioxide Emissions from Fossil Fuel
Burning, 1980-2010 (in millions of tons)
3
22
Environmental Issues
3
  • Urban and Industrial Environments
  • Developing and rapidly industrializing regions.
  • Urbanization in Asia, Latin America, and Africa
    has been accompanied by the proliferation of
    squatter settlements.
  • Deterioration of urban environments.
  • Poor urban and solid waste management.
  • Increasing number of single-person households.
  • Increased demands on energy resources and the
    management of wastes.
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