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Title: E-mail: donchenkovk@mail.ru


1
Improvement of education in the field of
environmental management
Prof. Vladislav Donchenko course ENVIRONMENTAL
POLICY
  • E-mail donchenkovk_at_mail.ru
  • St. Petersburg State University
  • and
  • St. Petersburg Research Centre for Ecological
    Safety of the Russian Academy of Sciences

2
Course Outline
  • Principles of environmental policy
  • II. Instruments and methods of environmental
    policy
  • III. Environmental policy for sectors, specific
    problems and issues

3
I. Principles of environmental policy
  • 1.1 Growth of environmental awareness, emergence
    and development of environmental policy from
    the Nuisance Act to Cancun
  • 1.2 Environmental threats and challenges of the
    21st century
  • 1.3 Environmental stakeholders, public
    participation, environmental justice, conflicts,
    access to environmental information
  • 1.4 International environmental policy
    international organizations, multilateral
    environmental agreements (including their status
    and implementation), non-governmental players,
    environmental politics and diplomacy
  • 1.5 Environmental governance, institutions of
    environmental governance, multilevel/polycentric
    governance, problems of scale and fit,
    environmental/resource regimes
  • 1.6 Policy transition/innovation process
  • 1.7 Environmental legislation, national
    obligations under multilateral environmental
    agreements and integration of the obligations
    into national legal systems, enforcement and
    regulatory mechanisms, access to justice
  • 1.8 Environmental legislation, enforcement and
    regulatory practices in EU, USA, Canada,
    Japan, China, and CIS
  • 1.9 International cooperation for environmental
    research and education

4
Humans and the environment a historical
perspective
  • Harmony
  • Combating environmental threats struggle to
    survive
  • Exploitation
  • Exploitation and preservation
  • Engineering and creating the environment
  • Harmony?

5
Concepts
  • Human well-being, welfare, and development are
    notions that attempt to measure individuals
    satisfaction with life in different settings
  • Human welfare depends on the services provided by
    ecosystems (MEA)
  • Natural capital is the basis of ecosystem
    services
  • Environmental security - uninterrupted provision
    of ecosystem services
  • Quality of Life - the extent to which objective
    human needs are fulfilled in relation to
    perceptions of subjective well-being (Constanza
    et al)

6
Traditional and Non-Traditional Security Types
Type Focus Concerns Threats/Vulnerabilities Responses
Traditional Security The State Sovereignty Territorial Integrity Challenges from other states and stateless actors Diplomatic intervention Economic crisis response Military intervention Humanitarian support
Environmental Security The Ecosystem Protection of Natural Infrastructure Resource scarcity/depletion Resource degradation pollution/waste Demographic changes Shocks natural, manmade Multi-national governance Conflict prevention Conflict resolution
Human Security The Individual Integrity of the Individual freedom from fear ------------------------ freedom from want Personal security violence, hazards Political security repressive state ------------------------------------------------ Economic security - poverty Food security famine, contamination Health security injury, disease Environmental security - scarcity, waste Community security cultural integrity Preventive diplomacy Disaster planning Humanitarian support Aid investment
Sustainable Security The Generational Quality of Life Global Sustainability Non-sustainable environmental, social, economic, and institutional systems Inequitable resource distributions Marginalization of the majority world Uncontrolled development/urbanization Non-adaptive and non-resilient systems Institution building Security sector reform Military professionalism Energy sector efficiencies Economic investment Focus on root causes
Sources Adapted from Liotta, 2005 Liotta and
Owen, 2006a UNDP, 1994 Khagram, et al., 2003
Abbott et al., 2006
7
Quality of Life (from Constanza et al, 2007)
8
UNDP Human Development Index
Human Development
Well-being, Welfare External World
Objective
Human basic needs
Quality of Life
Social Capital
Human Security
Human Capital
Built Capital
Subjective
Natural Capital
Ecosystem Services
Environmental Security
9
II. Instruments and methods of environmental
policy
  • 2.1 Stakeholder identification, motivation of
    stakeholder groups and their behavioral
    patterns/social practices
  • 2.2 Backcasts and forecasts
  • 2.3 Ecosystem services and their valuation
    vulnerability analysis and indices
  • 2.4 Scenario development

10
  • Environmental Assessment (EA) EIA, SEA, SA
  • Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) LCC
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA)
  • UN system EM UNEP, UNDP, UN HABITAT, Regional
    Commissions UNECE MEAs

11
  • Assessment methods used in EA
  • aggregation,
  • checklists,
  • cost-benefit analysis,
  • Delphi surveys,
  • geographic information systems,
  • life cycle assessment,
  • matrices,
  • multi-criteria analysis,
  • overlapping maps,
  • scenario development.

12
  • Environmental assessment (EA)
  • Environmental impact assessment (EIA)
  • Strategic environmental assessment (SEA)
  • Sustainability appraisal (SA)

13
EA tools
  • MCDA (AHP, ANP, MACBETH)
  • Cost-benefit analysis (CBA)
  • Contingent valuation (CV)
  • Hedonic Pricing (HP)
  • Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats
    (SWOT)
  • GIS

14
Focus Consequences of Ecosystem Change for
Human Well-being
15
Ecosystem and infrastructure services consumption
trends (major consumption)
Service to human welfare Rural areas developed countries Urban areas developing countries Urban areas developed countries
Clean air to breath E E E
Comfortable climate conditions E E E
Water level in water bodies (for shipping, amenity, biota) E E E I
Groundwater level E E I E I
Water quality to use as amenity and recreation E E E
Drinking water provision I I I
Soil formation E I E I
Waste decomposition E E I I
Biological populations control E E I I
Habitat E E I I
Food I I I
Raw materials E I I
Recreation and outdoor activities E E I E I
16
III. Environmental policy for sectors, specific
problems and issues
  • 3.1 Biodiversity conservation (including physical
    planning for biodiversity conservation and
    development of sustainable livelihoods?)
  • 3.2 Water resources (e.g. including international
    water bodies)
  • 3.3 Circulation of chemicals
  • 3.4 Radiation pollution/safety
  • 3.5 Coastal zones/marine environments
  • 3.6 Air pollution
  • 3.7 Local communities (e.g. adaptation to global
    change)
  • 3.8 Indigenous people
  • 3.9 Biosafety (e.g. alien species, GMOs etc)
  • 3.10 Cultural heritage

17
Unprecedented change Ecosystems
  • 5-10 of the area of five biomes was converted
    between 1950 and 1990
  • More than two thirds of the area of two biomes
    and more than half of the area of four others had
    been converted by 1990

18
POPs problem
  • High resolution GC-MS for dioxin analysis
  • GC-MS for PAH analysis

19
Potentially dangerous substances
  • CH2CH-CH2-S-CH2-CHCH2
  • Cl2CH-S-S-CHCl2

Cyclic, alicyclic and chlorinated polysulfides.
20 previously unknown potentially dangerous S
and Cl-containing substances were identificated
in sediment samples, collected from the Eastern
part of the Finnish Gulf. Screening is
continuing.
20
HAB and PPCP problem
  • Cyanobacterial blossom
  • Cyanobacterial metabolites
  • Neurotoxines (anatoxin a)
  • Hepatotoxines (microcystines)
  • odorants (geosmine, MIB etc.)

21
A vertical groove for installing a water barrier
at the entrances to underground stations in
Tokyo, Japan (left) and a flood barrier in
Venice, Italy (right) Source Nikolai Bobylev
Climate change and extreme weather events
22
The Netherlands combating floods using
retention areas (after Ron Cörvers (Open
University of the Netherlands / Maastricht
University ICIS) presentation, 2008)
  • 1993 1995 extremely high waters in river delta
    (flow rate gt12,000
  • m3/s at Lobith on the Rhine)

23
More infrastructure or more ecosystems? (after
Ron Cörvers (Open University of the Netherlands /
Maastricht University ICIS) presentation, 2008)
  • Current
  • situation
  • Traditional
  • solution
  • New
  • approach

24
Thank you for your attention!
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