AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 35 Unsustainable Agriculture in the Philippines.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
8th ANNUAL ELISABETH MANN BORGESE OCEAN LECTURE Blue Planet Under Threat: Challenges and Opportunities at Rio+20 Friday 8th June World Oceans Day.
Advertisements

Where is the Wealth of Nations? Measuring capital for the 21 st century The World Bank October 2005.
Monitoring the Transition Towards a Green Economy
Glenn-Marie Lange Environment Department, The World Bank
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 The Environment and Development.
Accounting for the Environment: Experiences from Southern Africa R M HASSAN Centre for Environmental Economics and Policy Analysis in Africa (CEEPA), University.
Derek Eaton Division of Technology, Industry & Economics Economics & Trade Branch Geneva, Switzerland “Designing the Green Economy” Centre for International.
Beyond GDP: New Measures of Wellbeing and Progress Jānis Brizga Pasaules dabas fonds.
SEJARAH PEMIKIRAN EKONOMI Prof. Jamal Pemikiran Ekonomi Sustainomics.
Lecture 22: The Environment and Development
Chapter 4 Resources and Environment Learning Objectives: World resources: nature, distribution & limits Global food problems: their nature & extent, difficulties.
Choices, Capabilities and Sustainability Second Conference on Measuring Human Development March 4 th -5 th 2012 Jean-Paul Fitoussi and Khalid Malik.
Sustainable Development & Sustainability References: Unit textbook – DesJardins, Chapter 1 UNCED (1992) ‘Agenda 21’ Worldwatch Institute ‘State of the.
Introductions BIOL1040 Environmental Science.
Where is the Wealth of Nations? Measuring capital for the 21 st century The World Bank March 2006.
C ENTER FOR A IR Q UALITY S TUDIES Georgia Tech Seminar – October 29, 2007 Implementing Sustainable Transportation at State DOT’s By Joe Zietsman, Ph.D.,
Story Earth Introduction.  Despite advances in technology and science;  There are in poverty, illiterate and unemployed  1/5 live in poverty, most.
Development Ruth S.. Guzman
1 Wageningen University “Consultation on THE WORLD BANK GROUP ENVIRONMENT STRATEGY” Ekko C. van Ierland January 2010 Environmental Economics and Natural.
i nitiatives The Summit was convened for addressing urgent problems environmental protection and socio-economic development at the global level.
Green Economy Initiative Derek Eaton UNEP UNCEEA, June 2010.
Chapter 4 Resources and Environment Learning Objectives: World resources: nature, distribution & limits Global food problems: their nature & extent, difficulties.
Economic Institutions for Sustainable, Just and Efficient Food System Joshua Farley Community Development and Applied Economics Gund Institute for Ecological.
History of Evolution of Sustainable Development
Tracking Progress— Tools, Indicators and Initiatives to Measure Country Performance towards Green Growth SIDA Development Talks: Next Steps toward Inclusive.
Prof. R. Shanthini 12 Nov SD is the environmental, economic and social well-being for today and tomorrow. CP551 Sustainable Development (SD) Source:
AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 36 Crop Improvement in Theory and Practice.
Copyright © 2009 Benjamin Cummings is an imprint of Pearson Environment: the total of our surroundings All the things around us with which we interact:
Biophysical Limits to Economic Growth Neo-Classical Perspective.
Life Impact | The University of Adelaide University of Papua New Guinea Economic Development Lecture 12: Environment.
Additional Measures of Progress for Scotland? Dr Karen Turner Senior Lecturer, Department of Economics and Fraser of Allander Institute University of Strathclyde.
Sustainable Development Santo Dodaro Econ 305 Stfx University
What is a “sustainable city”? Fred Lee Department of Geography The University of Hong Kong March 15, 2012.
European environment policy update
Chapter 11 Slide 1 Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc.
Accounting for Sustainability Kirk Hamilton Environment Department The World Bank.
Investment in Sustainable Natural Resource Management (focus: Agriculture) increases in agricultural productivity have come in part at the expense of deterioration.
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT FOR EUROPE AND THE WORLD HISTORY.
Ecological Economics Lecture 07 6th May 2010 Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical Engineering Collaboration:
1.4 Sustainability Kristin Page IB ESS
Measuring Progress towards Green Growth through indicators OECD work UNCEEA Sixth meeting New York, June 2011.
How nature works. How the environment effects us. How we effect the environment. How we can live more sustainably without degrading our life-support.
Planning and Sustainability Paul Farmer American Planning Association M6: Protecting the Urban Environment and Historical and Cultural Heritage.
The Environment in Introductory Economics Three Global Development and Environment Institute textbooks: Microeconomics in Context Macroeconomics in Context.
1 Measuring Sustainable Development: Wealth and Adjusted Net Savings Glenn-Marie Lange Environment Department The World Bank.
The Environmental Impact of Population Growth.  A larger population makes more demands on the Earth’s resources and leads to environmental problems including:
A Framework for Constructing Indicators for Policies to enhance Sustainable Development Keynote speech at The Conference of European Statisticians, June.
Valuation of ecosystem services for sustainability planning Valuation course October 2011 Gunilla A. Olsson.
Unit H Being Green Chapter 23: Ecological Economics.
Web site demo. Sustainability: a range of perspectives CENV 110.
Introduction to Natural Capital Accounting and the WAVES Global Partnership.
CEU/UNDP Summer school on Stainable Human Development Human development and sustainability Dr. Andrey Ivanov Human Development Advisor United Nations Development.
SUSTAINING THE EARTH MILLER/SPOOLMAN 10 TH Resources – natural capital.
WAVES Partnership in LAC1 WAVES © 2014 Wealth Accounting and the Valuation of Ecosystem Services Where has been (is) NCA useful?
Environmental Science 101 Chapter 1 Environmental Science and Sustainability
youtube. com/watch
Investing in Natural Capital
SOCI 220 DEVELOPMENT AND THE ENVIRONMENT
The Environment and Development
Development and Growth in Mineral-Rich Countries
The Environmental issues
Building a Sustainable Future
Multidisciplinary nature of environmental studies Lecture #1
Environmental and Natural Resource Economics
Environmental Science 101
International Relations and the Global Environment
1.4 Sustainability Mr. Zito.
The Environment and Development
SUSTAINABLE TOURISM HANDBOOK FOR EASTERN AFRICA: Aims and objectives
SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SUPPLY
Presentation transcript:

AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 35 Unsustainable Agriculture in the Philippines

Sustainable Development Definition: A pattern of economic development characterized by a condition in which some arbitrary indicator indicator of HUMAN well being does not decline over time. The definition is anthropocentric. attempts to combine efficiency + equity

Sustainability Starts with a notion of a “capital base” from which current and future well-being are derived. Contains both economic and ecological components key issue: relative tradeoffs between natural and other forms of capital

Important Points 1. Informed by ecology, but human-focused. 2. Emphasizes ecological limits and discontinuity 3. Emphasizes conservation of critical components of natural capital stock (e.g. critical set-asides) 4. Focuses on limits to deterioration of ecological assets at all levels: local-national-global 5. Asks “what is the carrying capacity of a system?” 6. Asks “what are appropriate measures of resilience?” 7. Questions traditional measures of wealth.

Indicators of Sustainability Most approaches are consistent with benefit-cost analysis. 1. Green “Net” National Product (gNNP) 2. Measures of “genuine savings” 1997 World Bank report: Expanding the Measure of Wealth Key set of indicators for tracking over time…

Natural capital Pastureland Cropland Timber Nontimber forest products Protected areas Subsoil assets (minerals) Fishing stocks Human capital (education) Social capital (institutions) Key Indicators of Sustainability

Ecological Economics Branch of environmental economics that takes as its foundations a strong interpretation of ecological sustainability. environmental assets are special. rejection of “marginalist” perspective concern about energy and materials use discounting future costs is unacceptable 1.Irreversibility (can’t restore natural capital) 2.Uncertainty (systems poorly understood 3.Scale (threshold effects, large-scale damages)

Key Points 1. Alternative views of what sustainability means 2. Views differ according to options for substituting natural and manufactured capital 3. Global measures are likely to be imprecise 4. Resilience is a useful indicator, but difficult to measure 5. "Green" national income measurements would be a first step: they make SD measurable.

Some approaches to SD 1. Control pop growth, especially in environmentally critical areas 4. Reduce pollution emissions and waste 3. Eliminate reliance on fossil fuels 2. Ensure prices reflect both private and social costs 7. Develop new, appropriate "green" technologies 6. Slow rates of deforestation, soil erosion, and fishery depletion 5. Eliminate poverty, especially in LDCs

UN Agenda 21 Plan of action regarding human-environment impacts Adopted by 178 governments at the UN Conference on Environment & Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in June 1992 Focus: local participation, nine major groups representing various “special” interests. Follow-up World Summit on Sustainable Development held in Johannesburg in 2002.