Sustainability warm-up quiz 1.How many livable planets are there right now for humans to live on? 2.How much of the Earth is biologically productive? 3.With.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cities consume a lot – and can do a lot MEP Satu Hassi Greens/EFA Open Days 11 October 2011.
Advertisements

Definition: the study of the impact of humans on the environment The decisions and actions of all people in the world affect our environment.
Carbon footprints and Ecological footprints
Chapter 39 questions and answers
Aurel Vlaicu University of Arad, Romania
Ecological Footprinting has been defined as the method of measuring the 'load' imposed by a given population on nature. It represents the land area necessary.
Dr. Mathis Wackernagel Plattform Footprint – 10. Jänner 2008 Der ökologische Fussabdruck: Vom Labor der Wissenschaft zu weltweiten Anwendungen.
What is eco-footprinting? Read on to find out more…
Ecological Footprint.
Footprint Reducing Risks by Setting Measurable Targets Dr. Mathis Wackernagel
Ecological Footprint. Human Population Growth and Natural Resources Why does the human population keep growing? (Sanitation, Agriculture, Medicine) According.
IB SL. What Is It? An area of land (and water) that would be required to sustainably provide for a specific population’s resources and assimilate its.
Ecological Footprint & Environmental Sustainability
ICRAT, 2004, Zilina, Slovakia A FRAMEWORK FOR CALCULATING THE ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT OF AIR TRANSPORT Howard Cambridge, Stockholm Environment Institute,
Our Ecological Footprint
Ecological Footprint. Definition of Ecological Footprint “area of land in the same vicinity as the population that would be required to: –1) provide all.
Biosystems Engineering Class 14 August 2009
45:211: Environmental Geography Module 10 Ecological Footprint.
The Challenge of Sustainable Development H. Hamner Hill Political Science, Philosophy, and Religion Southeast Missouri State University.
Review: Why are many environments becoming increasingly fragile? Because of the human impact on these environments; population growth and resource consumption.
How Many People Can the Earth Support?
Fitting into Place (or not): The Ecological Footprint Martha Rosemeyer Eco Ag/Eco Design January 8, 2004.
By Ellen Murray Rosedale Heights School of the Arts, TDSB For OSEE 2010
Evaluate our ecological footprint as a measure of the relationship between population size and resource consumption.
Sustainability & Ecological Footprints. Ecological Footprint The land and water area that is needed to support the material standard of living of a given.
By Ellen Murray Rosedale Heights School of the Arts, TDSB For STAO 2010
APES INTRODUCTION TO AP ENVIRONMENTAL. INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Environment External conditions that affect living organisms Ecology Study.
Humans and The Environment
Ecological Footprint. Natural Capital resource production (such as fish, timber or cereals), waste assimilation (such as CO2 absorption or sewage decomposition)
It is evident from the graph that :- 1. the human population is increasing rapidly and shows a geometric (J-shaped) growth form 2. the population is doubling.
Geography of Canada Environment & Sustainability.
1.4 Sustainability Kristin Page IB ESS
Ecological footprint: the impact of a person, city, or country on the ecology of a local area or the whole planet. It is a measure of how much land and.
What is an Ecological Footprint (EF)? How do we measure our EF? Why strive for a smaller EF?
World Environmental Issues
Sustainability Definition: approach to development that meets the needs of the present without negatively affecting the ability of future generations to.
Flowers of the Field by Phil Porter. Ecological Footprint: The area of land and water ecosystems required to produce resources that the population consumes,
The World in an Apple... §We live in a world which is described as getting smaller and smaller…not literally, but in the perspective of the Global Village.
RESOURCE USE AND SUSTAINABILITY POPULATION, RESOURCES AND OUR SURVIVAL.
Danny O’CallaghanKingdown School Warminster Ecological Footprints.
Ecological Footprint What’s your impact?. Ecological Footprint (EF) Definition: how much of the Earth we use for our food, clothing, play, energy, shelter,
Ecological Footprints. ts=
Chapter 16, sections 1, 2, 3, 5 Biology Unit 2: Human Impact on Ecosystems 1.
Ecological Footprint Accounting Tool for Sustainability
Objectives Explain how the rate of human population growth is determined and compare the rates of growth over the last 100 years Distinguish between people.
Population Storyboard Human impact can be modeled as resulting from 3 factors Production and consumption are variables Expanding variables affecting the.
Reading Assignment #4 1 Also prepare to present your works for about 5 minutes (3-5 slides)
Bell Work Define what you think an indicator is.
Ecological Footprint IB SL.
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT.
Human Impacts on Ecosystems and Environmental Impacts
Introduction to Resources and Ecological Footprint
The Global Environment Picture
SUSTAINABILITY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
The sustainability challenge is to find ways we can all live rewarding lives, within the limits of one planet. How well are we doing? The Ecological Footprint.
The sustainability challenge is to find ways we can all live rewarding lives, within the limits of one planet. How well are we doing? The Ecological Footprint.
Ecological Footprint.
the Impact our Natural Resource Use?
UPCOMING DATES.
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT.
Carbon/ Ecological Footprints
ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT.
Calculating Ecological Footprint
Resource consumption.
                                .
Ecological Footprints
Sustainability The degree to which Earth is able to provide the resources necessary to meet people’s needs. Ecological Footprint Dividing the bio productive.
Use this to create a definition for the ecological footprint
                                .
Presentation transcript:

Sustainability warm-up quiz 1.How many livable planets are there right now for humans to live on? 2.How much of the Earth is biologically productive? 3.With how many species does our species share this planet with? 4.How big is the human population today? 1.In 1900? 2.In 2100? 5.How much bio-capacity is there per person on this planet? 6.How big are our Footprints (per person)? The Ecological Footprint represents the biologically productive space necessary to produce what people consume. (acres /person for people) 7.What happens if there is only one cake and one of four party guests takes three times more than average?

Footprint Ecological Footprint Accounting Robert Steele, Associate & Senior Trainer The AtKisson Group

The Apple Analogy

1.First, slice the apple into quarters (4 equal pieces) 2.Set aside 3 pieces. They represent the oceans of the world. 3.Slice the remaining quarter in half and set aside one of the pieces 4.The 1/8 remaining represents the land area where people live, but do not necessarily grow the food they need for life. 5.Next, slice the 1/8 into four equal segments. Set aside three of the segments as they represent the areas that are too rocky, too wet, too cold, too steep or with very poor soil that can’t grow food. It also represents the urban and suburban sprawl, roads, shopping centers, schools, parks, factories, car parks, etc. 6.Finally, carefully peel the remaining slice. The skin represents al of the earth that remains to produce food.

Bioproductive segments 18% Biologically Productive Land 11% Deserts, Ice Caps and Barren Land 67% Low- Productivity Ocean 4% Biologically Productive Ocean Bioproductive Segments 22%

Constant growth Current world population: 6.2 billion people Annual growth rate: 1.4 % (or 1.7 % in the 1980s) Annual growth ratePopulation in 2100 in billion 1.0% % % % %32.4 Population Dynamics: how we do grow!

House on planet

People vs. nature ?

Earth Shares An Earthshare is the amount of land each person on the planet would get if all the ecologically productive land (and some sea) on Earth were divided evenly among the present world population.

Earthshares There are approximately 12.5 billion hectares of ecologically productive land (and some sea) in the world and over 6.2 billion people. Divided equally among everyone, this means each person is entitled to approximately 1.8 hectares of land. Land + Sea = 1.8 hectares/person

One hectare

Calculate your own Footprint at:

1.Record your Ecological Footprint on the flip chart table and number of planets needed to sustain your lifestyle 2.Now go back and play around with the calculator and try to see about how you can reduce your footprint. 3.Go to the Population link Footprint Instructions……

Sitting on footprint What is the Eco Footprint?

What is Ecological Footprint? IN SIMPLE TERMS: Ecological Footprint calculates how much land (and some sea) is necessary to sustain our life style. It translates everything you consume, produce and throw out into a land area measurement called hectares (ha). 1 ha = 10,000 m2 Ecological Footprint is an “ecological camera” that takes a snapshot of our current demands on nature. Ecological footprint is a tool for measuring and analyzing human natural resource consumption and waste output within the context of nature’s renewable and regenerative capacity (or biocapacity).

What does Ecological Footprint calculate? Categories for consumption Food (energy inputs) Housing (energy inputs and resources) Transportation Other goods and services (clothing recreation, appliances, government services, etc.) Categories for Waste Sewage Carbon Dioxide

Island - equitable

Remember Earth Shares? Clearly, as the population increases, our Earthshares shrink. How much will each of us have when we hit 8 or even 10 billion people? Currently, are Earthshares equally distributed around the globe? What happens when some people have larger shares? US Ecological Footprint 9.57 ha/person The largest per capita on the planet!!!

Island - inequitable

Growth in the Ecological Footprint

Ecological Demand (Ecological Footprint)Ecological Supply (Biocapacity) Footprint Areas for:Biocapacity Areas: Growing Crops0.49Crop land0.53 Grazing Animals0.14Grazing land0.27 Settlements & infrastructure0.07Built-up area0.07 Producing timber & fuelwood0.24Forest0.81 Absorbing excess CO Harvesting Fish0.13Fishing Grounds0.14 Total Global Demand2.2Total Global Supply1.8 Global Footprint Accounts (in global hectares/person, 2001 data) Demand Exceeds Supply By 20% > Global Footprint

Moving to cities... Three billion people already live in cities. Cities, directly and indirectly, are responsible for the bulk of the planet’s consumption. They account for 80 % of the world’s use of fossil fuels. By 2030, over 60% of the world’s population will live in cities.

Living Large... How big would the glass hemisphere need to be so that the city under it could sustain itself exclusively on the ecosystem contained? From Wackernagel and Rees, 1996, Ecological Footprint Analysis

Are we the Boiled Frog? From Wackernagel and Rees, 1996, Our Ecological Footprint.

We have Overshot the Earths’ Carrying Capacity Humanity’s Ecological Footprint has overshot the limits of environmental sustainability. Humanity’s total Ecological Footprint increased to 13.2 billion global hectares, growing by 147 global hectares between 1999 and Living Planet Report 2002, WWF International and Redefining Progress Earth’s Sustainability We are here now!

Overshoot is growth beyond carrying capacity Carrying capacity limits can be overshot without a “big bang” because of the availability of large capital stocks. Harvests can still increase and money incomes rise, and where there may be indications of ecological stress, all else may seem normal. Ultimately, however, the consequences of eroded natural capital may be felt as eco-catastrophe and population crash. From Wackernagel and Rees, 1996, Our Ecological Footprint.

Living planet report cover Download at

Sustainability warm-up quiz 1.How many livable planets are there right now for humans to live on? 2.How much of the Earth is biologically productive? 3.With how many species does our species share this planet with? 4.How big is the human population today? 1.In 1900? 2.In 2100? 5.How much bio-capacity is there per person on this planet? 6.How big are our Footprints (per person)? The Ecological Footprint represents the biologically productive space necessary to produce what people consume. (acres /person for people) 7.What happens if there is only one cake and one of four party guests takes three times more than average?