1.4 sustainability Flashcards
sustainability
the use of resources that allows full recovery of the resources exploited
groundwater in saudi arabia
- not sustainable long-term
- depletion rate is high
- limited renewable resources because of climate
- environmental consequence: desert irrigation changes the landscape
natural capital
- conceptualises natural resources that can provide a sustainable natural income
- conserve it: will generate an income for ever–> if it’s exploited faster that it can regenerate it will rapidly decline
natural income
the yield obtained from natural resources
ecosystem services
ecosystems that can provide services that are essential to human life and well being
sustainable development
meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs
ecological footprint
model that is used to estimate the demands that a human population places on the environment
biocapacity
total measure of the resources available within a country divided by its population
factors affecting it:
- population density
- geography and biome
earth overshoot day
calculation of how long it takes a society to exceed the sustainably available resources
environmental indicators
factors that can be studied to determine whether resources are being used sustainably
millenium ecosystem assessment (MEA)
- published in 2005: one of the first attemps to quantifiy sustainability
- found strategies to be able to use ecosystems sustainably
- 60% of the ecosystems studied = used unsustainably
criticisms for EIA
- lack of standard training for practitioners
- environmental concerns can increase cost
- ecosystems are complex –> difficult to predict what’ll happen when something’s changed