envi sci quiz 1
QUIZ 1 Class Notes
Human population growing exponentially ::
it might level off, or it might crash.
Poverty affects people + how they interact w/ environment: gap between rich + poor countries
highly developed countries (HDCs)::
more
more energy production + usage
more industrialization
less agriculture
service industry dominates
more international trade
more urbanization
more technology
moderately developed countries (MDCs)::
somewhere between HDC/LDC
less developed countries (LDCs)::
less
less energy production + usage
less industrialization
more agriculture
production of goods dominates
less international trade
less urbanization
less technology
overpopulation vs. overconsumption
overpopulation::
“too many” people
tends to be in LDCs
overconsumption::
people using “too many” resources
tends to be in HDCs
types of resources
potentially renewable :: resources that replenish naturally in a reasonable amount of time for humans
ex: clean water, clean air, soil, living things
nonrenewable :: resources that don’t replenish naturally or take too long to do so
ex: fossil fuels, metals (aluminum, uranium, etc.)
perpetual :: resources that are always available
ex: sunlight, tides (controlled by moon), wind + waves (controlled by sun)
how scientists measure effects of humans on the environment
ecological footprint :: how our resource use + waste production affect land (how much land is needed to provide resources + absorb/deal with waste)
could be per person, for country/region, for whole world
IPAT model :: looking at whole population’s environmental impact
I = P x A x T
I = environmental impact
P = population size (# of people)
A = affluence (resources consumed per person)
T = technology (environmental impacts of tech could be good or bad)
Direct relationships:
P up, I up
P down, I down
A up, I up
A down, I down
T: it depends
environmental sustainability
environmental sustainability :: ability to meet current needs without compromising ability to meet future needs
Tragedy of the Commons :: people don’t take good care of a common resource because they prioritize their own short-term interests
Tend to take better care of privately owned resources
Short-term needs take priority over long-term consequences
Environmentally: land, water, air, etc.
sustainable development :: economic progress that considers environmental impact (is sustainable)
true sustainability :: a compromise between 3 things:
environmental issues
economic issues
social issues
ideas about how we should use/view the environment
preservation vs. conservation
about land use
preservation :: belief in not using or minimally using natural land, keeping it pristine
conservation :: belief in using natural land carefully so humans can keep using it
environmental worldviews--on spectrums
frontier ethic vs. environmental ethic
frontier ethic:: earth has unlimited resources (or we can replace them) for human use
environmental ethic:: resources can run out, humans just part of nature
anthropocentric vs. biocentric
anthropocentric:: human-centered (humans are #1)
biocentric:: all life centered (all life equal)
utilitarian value of nature vs. intrinsic value of nature
utilitarian:: nature is useful to humans
intrinsic value of nature:: nature for nature’s sake
environmental justice :: every person has right to protection from environmental hazards + to participate in decisions about environmental laws, protection, development, etc.
precautionary principle :: if there is a potential threat to human health or environment, something must be done to correct it or stop/prevent it, even if cause + effect not fully understood or supported
QUIZ 1 Class Notes
Human population growing exponentially ::
it might level off, or it might crash.
Poverty affects people + how they interact w/ environment: gap between rich + poor countries
highly developed countries (HDCs)::
more
more energy production + usage
more industrialization
less agriculture
service industry dominates
more international trade
more urbanization
more technology
moderately developed countries (MDCs)::
somewhere between HDC/LDC
less developed countries (LDCs)::
less
less energy production + usage
less industrialization
more agriculture
production of goods dominates
less international trade
less urbanization
less technology
overpopulation vs. overconsumption
overpopulation::
“too many” people
tends to be in LDCs
overconsumption::
people using “too many” resources
tends to be in HDCs
types of resources
potentially renewable :: resources that replenish naturally in a reasonable amount of time for humans
ex: clean water, clean air, soil, living things
nonrenewable :: resources that don’t replenish naturally or take too long to do so
ex: fossil fuels, metals (aluminum, uranium, etc.)
perpetual :: resources that are always available
ex: sunlight, tides (controlled by moon), wind + waves (controlled by sun)
how scientists measure effects of humans on the environment
ecological footprint :: how our resource use + waste production affect land (how much land is needed to provide resources + absorb/deal with waste)
could be per person, for country/region, for whole world
IPAT model :: looking at whole population’s environmental impact
I = P x A x T
I = environmental impact
P = population size (# of people)
A = affluence (resources consumed per person)
T = technology (environmental impacts of tech could be good or bad)
Direct relationships:
P up, I up
P down, I down
A up, I up
A down, I down
T: it depends
environmental sustainability
environmental sustainability :: ability to meet current needs without compromising ability to meet future needs
Tragedy of the Commons :: people don’t take good care of a common resource because they prioritize their own short-term interests
Tend to take better care of privately owned resources
Short-term needs take priority over long-term consequences
Environmentally: land, water, air, etc.
sustainable development :: economic progress that considers environmental impact (is sustainable)
true sustainability :: a compromise between 3 things:
environmental issues
economic issues
social issues
ideas about how we should use/view the environment
preservation vs. conservation
about land use
preservation :: belief in not using or minimally using natural land, keeping it pristine
conservation :: belief in using natural land carefully so humans can keep using it
environmental worldviews--on spectrums
frontier ethic vs. environmental ethic
frontier ethic:: earth has unlimited resources (or we can replace them) for human use
environmental ethic:: resources can run out, humans just part of nature
anthropocentric vs. biocentric
anthropocentric:: human-centered (humans are #1)
biocentric:: all life centered (all life equal)
utilitarian value of nature vs. intrinsic value of nature
utilitarian:: nature is useful to humans
intrinsic value of nature:: nature for nature’s sake
environmental justice :: every person has right to protection from environmental hazards + to participate in decisions about environmental laws, protection, development, etc.
precautionary principle :: if there is a potential threat to human health or environment, something must be done to correct it or stop/prevent it, even if cause + effect not fully understood or supported