SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 1 www.ihtpk.com SCI-Pak Sustainable.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Environmental Science
Advertisements

Jeopardy Changing Landscape Using Resources Biodiver- sity Challenges Miscellan- eous Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q.
Human Impact on Ecosytems
Environmental Science A Global Perspective Understanding our Environment Section 1.1.
Trade and Environmentally Sustainable Economic Growth By Rae Kwon Chung Director, Environment and Sustainable Development Division, UNESCAP Regional Workshop.
Problems due to overuse of energy Resources Unit III Part V
Ecological Footprint.
Monroe L. Weber-Shirk S chool of Civil and Environmental Engineering Global Resources 
Global Issues Unit Lesson 3. Objectives Consider the impact of people on physical systems and vice versa. Examine causes and effects of major environmental.
Introductions BIOL1040 Environmental Science.
HUMAN CAUSES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE Biology EOCT Review.
Mrs. Stewart Honors Biology. Human Footprint  the effects humans have on our planet.
EEA core set of indicators 37 indicators Of known quality: Geographical and temporal coverage Comparable data Nationally representative data Methodological.
Humans in the Biosphere
AP Environmental Science
HUMANS IN THE BIOSPHERE. A Changing Landscape  Growing populations depend on the limited natural resources of earth for survival.  Humans rely on ecological.
Human Impacts on the Environment
APES INTRODUCTION TO AP ENVIRONMENTAL. INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Environment External conditions that affect living organisms Ecology Study.
Ecological Footprint If current material and population growth trends continue and population stabilizes at 10 billion people in 2040, we will need between.
DO NOW Journal Entry – answer the following: Journal Entry – answer the following: What is environmental science?
Chapter 6.2 – Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
Human Impact on Ecosystems
Ecology Part 3. Earth’s human population continues to grow. Earth’s human carrying capacity is unknown.
environmentally sustainable society A Society that satisfies the basic needs of its people without depleting or degrading its natural resources and thereby.
SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 1 SCI-Pak Sustainable.
Chapter 1: Environmental Problems, Causes and Sustainability.
The Environment & Human Impact. Humans and the Environment 10,000 years ago, there were only about 5 million people on Earth. The development of dependable.
Human Population 8 CHAPTER
Earth’s human population continues to grow.
Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability.
Understanding Our Environment. Why is Earth so marvellous? Compared to other planets in our solar system, temperatures on earth are mild and relatively.
1 Understanding Our Environment. 2 Environmental Science.
Chapter 16 Human Impact on Ecosystems
How nature works. How the environment effects us. How we effect the environment. How we can live more sustainably without degrading our life-support.
Humans in the Biosphere Chapter 6 Mrs. Yanac. Limited Resources All organisms on Earth must share the planet’s resources and they are LIMITED. Humans.
HUMAN ENVIRONMENT Chapter 13.
HUMAN IMPACT ON ECOSYSTEMS Chapter 6 Day 1 Human Ecological Footprint Map Humans have influenced 83% of Earth’s surface based on population, travel.
1. Overusing Resources: -Two Main Types: * Renewable: sunlight, forests, air, soil * Nonrenewable: minerals, gems, & fossil fuels * Right now, we over.
Click to edit Master subtitle style MDG 7 : Ensuring Environmental Sustainability Presentation to Portfolio Committee 29 June 2011.
HUMAN-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTION: PATTERNS & PROCESSES of CHANGE.
Human Population Growth and Natural Resources Air Quality Water Quality Threats to Biodiversity Conservation
Environment is defined as the total planetary inheritance and the totality of all resources. It Involves:- (1) Biotic Factors (2) Abiotic Factors.
Unit 6 Human Environment Interaction Stress on the Earth’s Landscape.
Resources Renewable and Nonrenewable. DO NOW 1.What processes add carbon dioxide to the atmosphere? 2.What processes remove it from the atmosphere? 3.How.
Sustainability Chapter 6 Sustainability: using natural resources at a rate that does not deplete them.
Human Impacts on the Environment Environmental Science.
Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability
Chapter 6 Humans in the Biosphere. Chapter 6 Section 1 A Changing Landscape.
Bell Work Define what you think an indicator is.
Technology And The Environment
Investing in Natural Capital
Ecology Part 3. Ecology Part 3 Earth’s human population continues to grow. Earth’s human carrying capacity is unknown.
The Global Environment Picture
Environmental Problems, Their Causes and Sustainability
How Are Our Ecological Footprints Affecting Earth?
LECTURE 3: UNDERSTANDING THE ENVIRONMENT THROUGH ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
How Are Our Ecological Footprints Affecting Earth?
Chapter 6 Humans in the Biosphere
Human Impacts on the Environment
GB ecology part 2, day 3.
Biological Diversity & Conservation
Impact of Human Activities on the Natural Environment
Biology Chapter Sixteen: Human Impact on Ecosystems
Human Impact on Climate
Resource consumption.
Human Impact on the Biosphere
What does the Population & Economics have to do with it?
Human Impact on Ecosystems
What is happening here? Deforestation in Borneo.
Human Impact on The Environment and Ecosystems
Presentation transcript:

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 1 SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION The State of our Environment Dr Mehreen Faruqi

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 2 BIOSPHERE 2

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 3 Problems in Paradise “If the levels of consumption that...the most affluent people enjoy today were replicated across even half of the roughly 9 billion people projected to be on the planet in 2050, the impact on our water supply, air quality, forests, climate, biological diversity, and human health would be severe.”

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 4 THE BIG PROBLEMS u Poverty u Human Population u Inequity & exploitation u Resource use depletion u Environmental pollution

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 5 The Ecological Footprint measures the corresponding area of productive land and aquatic ecosystems required to produce the resources used, and to assimilate the wastes produced, by a defined population at a specified material standard of living, wherever on Earth that land may be located. The correct order from the largest to the smallest footprint (Hectares per person) is: USA 9.7UAE 10.3Qatar 9.7 Japan 4.2 Malaysia 3.2 South Africa 3.0 Thailand 1.9India 0.8Pakistan 0.7 True or False? Size of Footprints

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 6 Source: State of the World Report, 2006.

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 7

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 8 Specific Environmental Problems Global warming/Climate change Loss of biodiversity Pollution – Water, atmosphere, soil Water scarcity Waste generation Land Degradation/Desertification Consumption and resource depletion

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 9 SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION Global temperatures – difference from 1961 – 1990 average

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 10 Of the world’s 9600 bird species, 300 are stable or increasing, 6600 are in decline, vulnerable or threatened. Extinction rates have increases by 100 to 1000 times the average rate over a half billion year sweep of the fossil record (birds and mammals) 80% of world forest are now cleared, fragmented or degraded Biodiversity

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 11 Water Global freshwater consumption rose by a factor of 6 from 1990 – 1995, or 2x the population increase About 1/3 people live in countries with moderately high water stress – i.e. consumption is > 10% of renewable freshwater supply On present trends 2 out of 3 people will live in water stressed conditions by 2025 Declining state of freshwater resources (quantity and quality) may prove to be the dominant issue on environment and development agenda in 21 st century ~ 20% of world’s population lack access to safe drinking water ~ 50% of world’s population lack adequate sanitation Asian rivers have a faecal coliform count 50 x above WHO guidelines Asian rivers have a suspended solids levels increased 4x since the late 70s: typically 20x OECD levels

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 12 Energy from fossil fuels key source of pollution Parts of Asia – air pollution critical concern (acid rain): increasing SO 2 particulates CO 2 and other greenhouse gases and the enhanced greenhouse effect Water pollution – industrial, stormwater, sewage Soil contamination Pollution

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 13 Land Degradation About 2/3 of agricultural land have been degraded to some extent during the last 50 years. The main causes of land degradation are inappropriate land use, mainly unsustainable agricultural practices; overgrazing; and deforestation. The best estimate of tropical deforestation rate during the 1980s is 1,540,000 km 2 / decade, or 8% of the current tropical forest inventory per decade

SCI-Pak Sustainable and Cleaner production in the manufacturing industries of Pakistan FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION 14 Waste Consumer and commercial behaviour is resulting in increases in the generation of municipal waste including packaging waste More than half of the world's municipal waste is generated in developed countries. Industrialized countries generate more than 90 per cent of the world's annual total of some million tons of toxic and hazardous waste, mostly from the chemical and petrochemical industries. Electronic waste (e-waste) – from computers, televisions, telephones, cell phones, electronic toys, and other sources – is posing a new management challenge to Asia and the Pacific. E-waste is currently one of the fastest growing segments of solid waste.