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Section 3 Where Does Industry cause Pollution? (11th Edition Book)

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1 Section 3 Where Does Industry cause Pollution? (11th Edition Book)
Chapter 11 Section 3 Where Does Industry cause Pollution? (11th Edition Book)

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3 Air Pollution – Global Scale
Global Warming Average temperature of Earth’s surface has increased 2°F since 1880 Burning fossil fuels may have contributed to this A concentration of trace gases in atmosphere can block or delay the return of some heat thereby raising Earth’s surface temperatures

4 Greenhouse effect The burning of fossil fuels release carbon dioxide that plants & oceans absorb Past 200 years of burning fossil fuels has caused an increase of the C02 to rise by more than ¼ The anticipated increase in the Earth’s temperature caused by C02 & other greenhouse gases trapping some of the radiation emitted by the surface is the greenhouse effect Misleading term Global warming of only a few degrees could melt the polar ice caps

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6 What gas is now most commonly used as a coolant instead of CFC
What gas is now most commonly used as a coolant instead of CFC? Google “what replaced CFCs?”

7 Global-Scale Ozone Damage
Stratosphere (9-30 miles above surface) Contains ozone gases that absorb UV rays from sun This layers is threatened by chlorofluorcarbons (CFCs) such as Freon In 2007 all countries in the world agreed to stop using CFCs by 2020 in developed word & 2030 in developing world

8 Air Pollution – Regional Scale
Air pollution may damage a region’s vegetation & water supply Sulfur oxides & nitrogen oxides are released when burning fossil fuels Tiny droplets of sulfuric acid & nitric acid form & return to Earth’s surface as acid deposition when dissolved in water acid may fall as acid precipitation Geographers are interested in effects of this precipitation because worst damage is not experienced at the same location as the emission of the pollutants

9 Local-Scale Air Pollution
Carbon Monoxide Hydrocarbons Particulates Worst Urban air pollution occurs when winds are slight, skies are clear & temperature inversion (air is warmer at higher elevations) exists – pollutants are trapped Sunlight provides energy for formation of smog Worst concentration of particulates is Southern California – LA WHO worldwide the 10 most pollutant cities are in developing countries 4 each in Iran & South Asia Mexico City has actually improved its air quality since 1990s

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11 Solid Waste Pollution Sanitary Landfill Shortage of space
Most common strategy for solid waster disposal iN US More than ½ of the country’s waste is buried under the soil Number of landfills has declined in US by ¾ since 1990 Shortage of space Incineration is seen as an alternate Burning trash reduces bulk by ¾ Incinerator can provide energy: heat can boil water to produce steam heat or operate a turbine that generates electricity

12 Hazardous Waste Includes heavy metals that are unwanted byproducts
3.93 billion pounds of toxic chemicals were released into the environment in 2010 Mining operations are the largest polluting firms

13 Water Pollution Water Pollution Sources
Point Source – pollution that enters a body of water at a specific location Water-using manufacturers – steel, chemicals, paper products, food processing. Need large amounts of water & generates a lot of waste Municipal sewage – sewers carry wastewater from sinks, tubs & toilets to treatment plants where it is treated Treated water is released back into river or lake US Clean Water Act

14 Nonpoint Sources – usually pollute in greater quantities & are much harder to control
Principal nonpoint source is agriculture Fertilizers & pesticides Aral sea (1975, 1989, 2003, 2009)

15 Impact of Water Pollution on Aquatic Life
Decomposing organic waste dumped in water competes for the oxygen Oxygen consumed by decomposing organic waste is called biochemical oxygen demand Too much waste water becomes oxygen starved “Pond scum” Some water may become unlivable for normal plants & animals creating a “dead” stream or lake

16 Section 3 Where is Industry Expanding?
Chapter 11 Section 3 Where is Industry Expanding?

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18 Changes Within Developed Regions
Shifts within the US Lost 6 million jobs in manufacturing between 2 million jobs were added in South & West between – California & Texas saw the most TVA Steel, Tobacco & furniture have been dispersed in small communities Right-to-work laws Requires a factory to maintain a “open-shop” and prohibits a “closed shop” which a company & a union agree that everyone must join a union to work in the factory Open shop – a union & a company may not negotiate a contract that requires workers to join a union as a condition of employment 23 states have right to work laws

19 Textile Production Opened lower-wage locations & shut down higher-wage locations Heavily concentrated in Northeast in early 20th century Later shifted to South & West Move took place during the mid-20th century Favored sites with small towns in Appalachian, Piedmont & Ozark Mountains

20 Interregional Shifts in Europe

21 New Industrial Regions
Asia Latin America

22 “Central” Europe

23 Emerging Industrial Regions
1970 – ½ of the world’s industry was in Europe 1/3 was in North America Now these two regions account for only ¼ each Share of world industry in other regions has increased from 1/6 in 1970 to ½ in 2010

24 Labor is the site factor that is changing
To minimize labor costs, manufacturers are looking for places where wage rates are low Labor-intensive industries are attracted to emerging industrial regions

25 Outsourcing Transnational corporations are looking to identify where steps can be performed by low-paid, low-skilled workers in developing countries Despite greater transportation costs corp’s can profitably transfer some work to developing countries The selective transfer of some jobs to developing countries is new international division of labor Outsourcing – turning over much of the responsibility for production to independent suppliers Contrasts with the traditional approach - vertical integration where a company controls all phases of production process

26 Impact of Outsourcing

27 Mexico & NAFTA Manufacturing has increased in Mexico NAFTA signed in 1994 eliminated most barriers to moving gods among Mexico, US & Canada Mexico attracts labor-intensive industries that need proximity to the US markets Plants near the US border in Mexico are known as maquiladoras Term applied to a tax when Mexico was a Spanish colony Companies receive tax breaks if they ship materials from US companies to be assembled in the maquiladoras & export the finished product back to the US There are over 3 million Mexicans employed at over 3,000 facilities

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29 Concerns with Maquiladoras
Labor leaders fear more manufacturers will relocate to Mexico to take advantage of lower wage rates Food processing Textile manufacturing Environmentalists fear NAFTA encourages firms to move production to Mexico because laws governing air and water-quality standards are less stringent

30 Mexico’s Challenges It lost a quarter-million maquiladora jobs during the first decade of the 21st century Electronic firms pulled out: Mexican wages are $6/hour are $1 higher than wages in China and India Despite higher site costs, Mexico is still competitive because of situation factors Proximity allows lower shipping costs to the US from Mexico than China

31 BRIC and BRICS Much of the future growth in manufacturing will take place outside principal industrial Goldman Sachs coined the term BRIC as the countries that will dominate global manufacturing in the 21st century Brazil, Russia, India and China They currently control ¼ of the world’s land area & contain 3 billion of the 7 billion people on the planet

32 China is expected to pass the US as world’s largest economy by 2020
India will be in 2nd place by 2035 In 2050, Brazil & Russia are expected to be 5th & 6th Indonesia & Nigeria are expected to be 4th & 5th The US will be the only developed country to rank in the top 7 South Africa was invited to a meeting in 2010 with the other emerging countries

33 Renewed Attraction of Traditional Industrial Regions
Proximity to skilled labor

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35 Just in Time Delivery Shipment of parts & materials to arrive at a factory moments before they are needed Parts & raw materials to manufactures of fabricated products such as cars & computers Reduces the amount of money manufacturers must tie up in wasteful inventory Reduces the size of factories Disruptions for just in time Labor unrest Traffic Natural hazards


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