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Sustainability, The Great Debates and the Engineer

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Title: Sustainability, The Great Debates and the Engineer


1
Sustainability, The Great Debates and the Engineer
  • Sophomore Clinic Lecture
  • 5 February 2001
  • Peter Mark Jansson PP PE MScEng
  • Institute for Manufacturing - Cambridge Centre
    for Sustainable Enterprise
  • Department of Engineering - University of
    Cambridge

2
Aims
  • A Background on Sustainable Development
  • Broaden Understanding of the Primary Debates
    Surrounding Exploitation of Natural Capital
  • Understand the Increasingly Important Role the
    Environment Plays in Sustainable Enterprise
  • Review A Few Case Studies of Progressive
    Organisations Building Competitive Advantage
  • Have Fun

3
What is Sustainable Development?
  • Development that provides economic, social and
    environmental benefits in the long term, having
    regard to the needs of living and future
    generations.
  • Defined by Brundtland Commisssion - WORLD
    COMMISION ON ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT, 1987

4
Why Is It an Issue?
  • Climate Talks Fail to Close Rift With US
  • The Guardian 20 Nov 2000 -
  • US Highlights Growing Global Warming Danger
  • The TIMES 17 Mar 2000 -
  • UK Unveils Tough Climate Change Targets
  • The TIMES 10 Mar 2000 -
  • Govt May Regulate Company Data on Environment -
    The TIMES 3 Mar 2000 -

5
HEADLINES Continued
  • National Research Council in US Finds Global
    Warming is Undoubtedly Real - 14 Jan 2000
  • Experts Warn Of Ozone Hole Over Qingha-Tibet
    Plateau, China - 12 Aug 99
  • Global Warming Advances Spring
  • The TIMES 25 Feb 1999 -
  • Europe Faces Ice Age as World Warms
  • The TIMES 17 Jan 1999 -

6
The Search for Factual Information
  • News Media
  • Governmental Agencies
  • Special Interest Groups
  • Academic Experts
  • Industry Experts

7
UK Department of Trade and Industry, LINK EPSRC
  • 20 Nov 2000 Sustainable Tech. Init. Launch
  • The central challenge of sustainable development
    is decoupling the link between economic growth
    and its unsustainable impact on the environment
    and people. Science and technology have critical
    roles to play in turning this threat into a
    strategic opportunity for the UK
  • Lord Sainsbury, UK - Minister of Science

8
Quotable Quotes
  • The pursuit of Sustainable Development is not an
    option - it is nothing more or less than a
    necessity for our economic survival Sir
    Iain Vallance - BT Chairman
  • Sustainable Development is a widely accepted
    unifying concept for policymaking and the major
    new business challenge for the next century
    Dr. Colin Hicks - Director, Environment
    Directorate DTI
  • The sustainability agenda is developing faster
    than any other part of the business agenda
    Livio Desimone - Chairman 3M
  • We are about to go through a sustainability
    revolution which will rival the agricultural and
    industrial revolutions in its impact on society
    John Battle - DTI Minister of State

9
An Important Distinction
  • Development
  • application of resources human, physical,
    natural and financial to meet effective and
    prospective market and human needs. (improved
    quality not nec. quantity)
  • Growth
  • an increase in size or quantity by the accretion
    or assimilation of materials.

10
Key Issues of Sustainability
  • Are There Limits to Growth? Resource Constraints
    vs. Substitution, Catastrophe vs. Expanding
    Horizons with Technology, Population Constraints,
  • The Limits of Natural Capital
  • Atmospheric CO2, Global Warming via Greenhouse
    Gases, Ozone Depletion
  • Land Farming vs. Housing and Urbanization,
    Fertitility, Biodiversity
  • Water Runoff, Pollution,
  • Resource Limits Oil, Food, Minerals, Water

11
Some Important Concepts
  • Exponential Growth
  • Natural Capital
  • Atmosphere
  • The Oceans Hydrosphere
  • Forests, Land Use, Resources Lithosphere
  • Global Biosphere 3 Symbiotically Integrated
  • Sustainable Levels/Rates

12
Doubling Times with Exponential Growth
13
Exponential Growth
  • A QUIZ SHOW Illustration Folding a piece of
    paper in half 40 times will create a thickness of
    paper that is
  • A) 1-12 inches thick
  • B) 1-10 feet thick
  • C) Between 10 feet and 1 mile
  • D) Other

14
Examples of Exponential Growth
  • World Population
  • World Industrial Production
  • Atmospheric CO2 Concentration

15
Recent Growth Rates 1970-1990
  • Global Human Population 2.0
  • Number of Automobiles 4.1
  • Use of Petroleum 1.7
  • Coal Consumption 4.2
  • Electric Generation Capacity 4.4
  • Aluminum Used for Cans US 15.3
  • Generation of Rubbish OECD 1.7

16
The Biosphere -Earths Natural Capital
  • The integrated natural functioning atmosphere,
    lithosphere and hydrosphere working in cyclical
    patterns to sustain life on Earth. This includes
    the plant, animal and human species as well which
    all play a role at times in concert with and
    opposition to the apparently natural, sustainable
    cycles and rhythms.

17
Sustainable Levels/Rates for
  • Renewable Resources (soil, water, forests, food,
    etc.) can be no greater than the rate of
    regeneration by the Biosphere
  • Non-Renewable Resources can be no greater than
    the rate at which renewable resources can be
    substituted for them
  • Pollutants no greater emission than the rate at
    which pollutant can be recycled, absorbed or
    rendered harmless by the Biosphere.

18
Current Great Debates
  • Are there limits to growth?
  • Is Global Warming really a problem?
  • Have we solved the Ozone crisis?
  • Is Oil running out any time soon?

19
Limits to Growth Debate
  • THERE ARE LIMITS exponential growth is not
    sustainable when we must deal with a world of
    finite resources, therefore, policy-makers must
    intervene in the system and lead the way toward a
    sustainable future.
  • LIMITS WILL BE REMOVED BY TECHNOLOGY any limits
    that exist will be removed as technology advances.

20
The Beyond the Limits Model
  • Limiting resources impact other parts of system
  • WORLD3 model shows overall state of World and
    human standard of living
  • Scenarios 1 2 - Growth is a problem
  • Scenario 10 - Population control and limiting
    emissions of pollutants, erosion and resource use
    is the solution

21
Global Warming Debate
  • THE EARTH IS HEATING UP A broad spectrum of
    scientists have agreed that human activity is
    having a deleterious impact on global
    temperature.
  • THE EARTH IS NOT HEATING UP All of the forces of
    nature make mans impact miniscule on the scale
    of things, we are observing normal fluctuations
    only.

22
Global Warming Is Real
  • Man-made pollution rate increases 10 times
    between 1890 and 1970 levels
  • CO2 levels are really rising in air
  • Other Greenhouse Gases are rising in
    concentration also NOx,CH4, CFCs,
  • H2O level in air will rise as well as temperature
    increases and compound the problem

23
Current Online QA on Global Climate Change
  • Dr. James Hansen
  • NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
  • http//www.chronicle.com/colloquylive/transcripts/
    2000/11/20001109hansen.htm

24
Ozone Problem Solved?
  • YES Action taken to eliminate CFCs from
    manufacturing in Developed Nations should reduce
    trend of ozone depletion.
  • MAYBE CFCs are only banned in some countries.
    Also, other gases high in the atmosphere,
    aircraft exhaust as well as supersonic transport
    will continue to disrupt the natural formation of
    O3 .

25
Ozone O3
  • Absorbs harmful UV-B rays in stratosphere
  • 10-50km layer above the Earth
  • Very fine balance in its creation and destruction
    pattern O2 stripped via high radiation collides
    with available O2 -gt O3
  • Very little in atmosphere

26
Quiz Show 2
  • All the atmospheric Ozone if brought to sea level
    would have the volume of
  • A) This Lecture Theatre LT0
  • B) A small refrigerator
  • C) Cover of a book
  • D) The head of a pin

27
Quotable Quote
  • It is astonishing and terrifying to contemplate
    the narrow margin of safety on which our lives
    thus depend. Were this trifling quantity of
    atmospheric ozone removed we should all perish
  • Dr. Charles Greeley Abbot of the SMITHSONIAN
    INSTITUTE quoted in NEW YORK TIMES - 30 October
    1933

28
Progress on Ozone Depletion
  • While levels of Ozone depletion will continue to
    rise until 2010, it is believed that the ban on
    CFCs phased out by developed countries in 1996
    will have the effect of ultimately reducing CFC
    concentrations in the stratosphere. Hopefully,
    subsequent Ozone destruction after 2010 will
    significantly decline bringing the atmosphere
    back to pre-1980 Ozone levels by mid next century

29
Oil is Running Out Debate
  • IT IS Our current supplies will last less than
    25 years at present growth rates and economic
    disruption is just around the corner (5yrs)
    unless we curtail use now
  • IT IS NOT Our economically extractable reserves
    are over 1 trillion barrels and they will last
    over 40 years at present use levels, let the free
    market forces work.

30
World Oil Supply
  • US Experience - Hubbert Projections
  • R. Duncan Projections - 2004 Peak
  • Petroconsultants, Ltd. - 2005 Peak
  • CJ Campbell - 2008 Peak
  • USDOE Projections - Stable through 2015
  • Intl Energy Agency 2010-2020 Peak
  • http//sepwww.stanford.edu/sep/jon/world-oil.html

31
World Oil Use to Present
  • Pre- 1988 610.1 BB
  • 1988-1998 220 BB
  • Current Rate 25 BB/year
  • Reserves 1-2.5 GB
  • Growth in Use 2.0
  • Depletion Years 20-40 years
  • Peak Year 2000 - 2015

32
Oil and the Economy
  • Supply vs. Demand
  • 1970s US Experience of Arab Oil Embargo
  • 1999-2000 Impact of OPECs 2.1M/day reduction in
    oil supply price tripled
  • Restricted Investment Capital
  • more to energy, more to food
  • less for growth, jobs, expansion, etc.
  • Increased Material Prices / Inflation

33
Threat or Opportunity?
  • Business Responses
  • Ignore
  • Watch and Wait
  • Strategise and Experiment
  • Build Competitive Advantage

34
Areas of Activity
  • Eco-Innovation
  • Profiting from Pollution Prevention
  • Eco-Efficiency by Design
  • Innovation
  • Managing Change
  • Systems, Stakeholders and Reporting
  • Financial Sector

35
Business Case Studies
  • Scancem Energy Recovery
  • Wessex Water
  • BT
  • Interface

36
Scancem Energy Recovery http//www.scancem.com/
  • Subsidiary of SCANCEM international marketer/mfgr
    of mineral based building materials
  • gt2B in revenues, gt11,000 employees
  • reduced use of fossil fuels by 70,000 tons/yr
  • Progress 6 of all energy from rdf in 1996
  • 14 acheived by 1998
  • 70 goal for 2002

37
Wessex Water http//www.wessexwater.plc.uk/
  • reduced over 10 of its energy requirements from
    its own renewable sources 18.9 Million - kWh
  • biogas from sewage sludge
  • small scale hydropower
  • committed to outperform UK govt Kyoto targets
  • by achieving 20 by 2005 and 50 by 2020

38
British Telcomm http//www.bt.com/
  • Cellular Phone - Product Take Back
  • ECTEL -group of European equipment manufacturers
  • BT Will Take Back ANY Manufacturers worn out
    cellular phone at any BT Shop
  • For either disassembly, re-use, plastic
    recycling, precious metal recover, or granulation
    and smelting

39
Interface http//216.1.140.49/us/
  • One of Worlds Leading Carpet Makers
  • Offers an innovative floor covering lease where
    customers do not own carpeting but rather lease
    it. Interface provides clean, maintained and new
    looking floor covering for a fixed annual lease.
    They recycle the fibres from worn out stock and
    keep the customer happy with a great looking
    floor.

40
Other Case Studies - WBCSD
  • http//www.wbcsd.ch/eedata/eecsindx.htm
  • another 21 companies such as
  • Xerox, Bristol Meyers Squibb, Electrolux and SC
    Johnson Wax

41
Dow-Jones Sustainability Index
  • to quantify the sustainability performance of an
    enterprise by focusing on a company's pursuit of
    sustainability opportunities
  • meeting market demand for sustainable products
    and services
  • the reduction, ideally avoidance, of
    sustainability risks and costs
  • This assessment is in line with the five
    corporate sustainability principles -
  • innovative technology
  • corporate governance
  • shareholder relations
  • industrial leadership
  • social well being
  • that are focused on the integration of economic,
    ecological and social factors into business
    strategies

42
What Does it all Mean to Engineers?
  • Keep on top of Sustainability dialogue
  • Greater volatility in material and energy prices
    and supplies
  • Compounded by more volatile weather
  • Growth in Environmental Reporting and Indices
    (35 of top 250 report now)
  • Strategic Opportunity for Early Movers

43
Take Active Role in the Future
  • Policy changes toward sustainability
  • Growth is not beneficial, development is.
  • Carbon Tax/Credit system
  • Biofuels Renewable development
  • Population stabilization, efficient resource use,
    minimize nonrenewable depletion, prevent soil
    depletion, slow all exponentials

44
Sources of Data and Further Study on
Sustainability
  • http//indexes.dowjones.com/djsgi/index.html
  • http//www.iccwbo.org/
  • Beyond the Limits, Meadows, et.al.
  • World Oil, L.F. Ivanhoe
  • Coming Oil Crisis, C.J. Campbell
  • www.wri.org

45
Additional Sources
  • http//www.wbcsd.ch/
  • http//www.law.pace.edu/env/energy
  • The Atmosphere, Lutgens/Tarbuck
  • How Soon is Now?, N. Booth
  • http//www.dieoff.org/page02.htm
  • http//dieoff.org/page133.htm
  • http//www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo
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