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ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

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Presentation on theme: "ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE"— Presentation transcript:

1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
14th Edition A Study of Interrelationships

2 Outline 2.1 The Call for a New Ethic 2.2 Environmental Ethics
2.3 Environmental Attitudes 2.4 Environmental Justice 2.5 Societal Environmental Ethics

3 Outline (Continued) 2.6 Corporate Environmental Ethics
2.7 Individual Environmental Ethics 2.8 The Ethics of Consumption 2.9 Personal Choices 2.10 Global Environmental Ethics

4 Of Sea Lions and Salmon: An Environmental and Ethical Dilemma

5 2.1 The Call for a New Ethic A lot of what we do on our home planet connects us to something or somebody else. Managing the interactions between people and their environment has been transformed by unprecedented increases in the rate, scale, and complexity of the interactions. Across the world, thousands of people believe that today’s environmental challenges must be met with a new and more robust environmental ethic.

6 2.2 Environmental Ethics Ethics is one branch of philosophy; it seeks to define what is right and what is wrong. Ethics can help us understand what actions are wrong and why they are wrong. Environmental ethics apply ethical thinking to the natural world and the relationship between humans and the earth. Despite the presence of some differences, there are many cases in which ethical commitments can and should be globally agreed upon.

7 2.2 Environmental Ethics Environmental ethics invites us to generally consider three key propositions: The Earth and its creatures have moral status, in other words, are worthy of our ethical concern. The Earth and its creatures have intrinsic value, meaning that they have moral value merely because they exist, not only because they meet human needs. Based on the concept of an ecosystem, human beings should consider wholes that include other forms of life and the environment.

8 Conflicting Ethical Positions
Sometimes an individual’s ethical commitments can conflict with each other. A mayor might have an ethical commitment to preserving land in a city but also have an ethical commitment to bringing in jobs associated with construction of a new factory. In many cases, what is good for the environment is also good for people. While forest protection may reduce logging jobs, a healthier forest might lead to new jobs in recreation, fisheries, and tourism.

9 The Role of Theology and Religion
Environmental issues were considered to be the concern of scientists, lawyers, and policy makers. What is our moral responsibility toward future generations? The natural world figures prominently in the world’s major religions. Religious leaders recognize that religions, as shapers of culture and values, can make major contributions to the rethinking of our current environmental impasse. The National Religious Partnership for the Environment (NRPE) was founded in 1993 to “weave the mission of care for God’s creation across all areas of organized religion.”

10 Three Philosophical Approaches to Environmental Ethics
Anthropocentrism Biocentrism Ecocentrism

11 Three Philosophical Approaches to Environmental Ethics
“A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise….We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect.” —Aldo Leopold A Sand County Almanac, 1949

12 Other Philosophical Approaches
Other areas of philosophical thought address environmental issues: Ecofeminism Social ecology Deep ecology Environmental pragmatism Environmental aesthetics Animal rights/welfare

13 2.3 Environmental Attitudes
Because ethical commitments pull in different directions at different times, it is often easier to talk in terms of environmental attitudes or approaches. The three most common attitudes/approaches are: Development approach Preservation approach Conservation approach

14 2.3 Environmental Attitudes
Development, preservation, and conservation are different attitudes toward nature. These attitudes reflect a person’s ethical commitments.

15 Development This approach is the most anthropocentric.
It assumes the human race is, and should be, master of nature. It assumes that the Earth and its resources exist solely for our benefit and pleasure. This approach is reinforced by the capitalist work ethic. This approach thinks highly of human creativity and holds that continual economic growth is a moral ideal for society.

16 Preservation This approach is the most ecocentric.
It holds that nature has intrinsic value apart from human uses. Preservationists such as John Muir, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman all viewed nature as a refuge from economic activity, not as a resource for it. Some preservationists wish to keep large parts of nature intact for aesthetic or recreational reasons (anthropocentric principles).

17 Conservation This approach finds a balance between unrestrained development and preservationism. Conservationism promotes human well-being but considers a wider range of long-term human goods in its decisions about environmental management. Many of the ideas in conservationism have been incorporated into an approach known as sustainable development.

18 Sustainable Development
Sustainable Development is a middle ground that seeks to promote development while still preserving the ecological health of the landscape.

19 2.4 Environmental Justice
In 1998, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) defined environmental justice as fair treatment, meaning: “No group of people, including racial, ethnic, or socioeconomic groups, should bear a disproportionate share of the negative environmental consequences resulting from industrial, municipal, and commercial operations or the execution of federal, state, local, and tribal programs and policies.” Environmental justice is closely related to civil rights.

20 2.4 Environmental Justice
Studies show that the affluent members of society generate most of the waste, while the impoverished members tend to bear most of the burden of this waste.

21 2.4 Environmental Justice
Environmental justice encompasses a wide range of issues, including: Where to place hazardous and polluting facilities Transportation Safe housing, lead poisoning, and water quality Access to recreation Exposure to noise pollution Access to environmental information Hazardous waste cleanup Exposure to natural disasters (e.g., Hurricane Katrina)

22 2.5 Societal Environmental Ethics
Western societies have long acted as if the earth has: Unlimited reserves of natural resources. An unlimited ability to assimilate wastes. A limitless ability to accommodate unchecked growth. Until the last quarter of the 20th century, economic growth and resource exploitation were the dominant orientations toward the natural environment in industrialized societies. Things have now started to change.

23 2. 6 Corporate Environmental Ethics
Corporations are legal entities designed to operate at a profit. Although a corporation’s primary purpose is to generate a financial return for its shareholders, this does not mean that a corporation has no ethical obligations to the public or to the environment. Shareholders can demand that their directors run the corporation ethically.

24 Waste and Pollution The cost of controlling waste can be very important in determining a company’s profit margin. Ethics are involved when a corporation cuts corners in production quality or waste disposal to maximize profit without regard for public or environmental well-being.

25 2.6 Corporate Environmental Ethics
Because stockholders expect a return on an investment, corporations can be drawn toward making decisions based on short-term profitability rather than long-term benefit to the environment or society.

26 Is There a Corporate Environmental Ethic?
Actions such as dumping waste in a river rather than installing a wastewater treatment facility or using expensive filters externalize the costs of doing business so that the public, rather than the corporation, pays those costs. Greenwashing is a form of corporate misinformation where a company will present a green public image and publicize green initiatives that are false and misleading.

27 Is There a Corporate Environmental Ethic?
Corporations face real choices between using environmentally friendly or harmful production processes, and are facing more pressure to adopt more environmentally and socially responsible practices. ISO 14000 CERES Principles - quarter of a century ago, a small group of investors founded Ceres largely in response to the Exxon Valdez oil spill that occurred on March 24, 1989. GRI’s Sustainability Reporting Guidelines shttps://

28 Green Business Concepts
It makes little sense to preserve the environment if preservation causes economic collapse. Natural capitalism is the idea that businesses can both expand their profits and take good care of the environment. The 3M Company is estimated to have saved up to $500 million over the last 20 years through its Pollution Prevention Pays (3P) program.

29 Green Business Concepts
Industrial ecology links industrial production and environmental quality. It models industrial production and biological production, forcing industry to account for where waste is going. In nature, nothing is wasted or discarded; all materials ultimately get reused. A pollutant is a resource out of place. Good environmental practices are good economics.

30 Green Business Concepts
The triple bottom line has been referred to as the ethical criteria for business success. Social Environmental Economic Profit Planet People

31 2.7 Individual Environmental Ethics
Ethical changes in society and business must start with individuals. We must recognize that our individual actions have a bearing on environmental quality and that each of us bears some responsibility for the quality of the environment in which we live. Many individuals want the environment cleaned up, but do not want to make the necessary lifestyle changes to make that happen.

32 2.8 The Ethics of Consumption
North Americans represent 5% of the world’s population. North Americans consume one-fourth of the world’s oil. They use more water and own more cars than anybody else. They waste more food than most people in sub-Saharan Africa eat.

33 2.8 The Ethics of Consumption
Food Fertilizers, pesticides, and high-yield crops have more than doubled world food production in the past 40 years. Food distribution, not food production, is the cause of hunger. Energy At current rates of consumption, known oil reserves will not last through the current century. Foresighted energy companies are looking ahead by investing in the technologies that will replace fossil fuels. Nuclear power, solar, wind, wave, and biomass technologies are meeting increasing proportions of national energy needs in other countries.

34 2.8 The Ethics of Consumption
Water Currently humans use about half the planet’s accessible supply of renewable, fresh water. More than any other resource, water may limit consumerism in the next century. Wild Nature Every day in the U.S., between 1000 and 2000 hectares of farmland and natural areas are permanently lost to development.

35 2.9 Personal Choices Individuals can make many lifestyle changes that significantly reduce their personal impact on the planet. Eating food produced locally, that is low on the food chain, and is grown with a minimum of chemical fertilizers and pesticides reduces the environmental impact of food production. Buying durable consumer products and reusing or repairing products with usable life reduces the raw materials that must be extracted from the ground.

36 2.9 Personal Choices Conserving energy at home and on the road can lessen the amount of fossil fuels used to support your lifestyle. Living close to your work, school, can reduce your impact on the environment. Lobbying for protection of wild areas and voting for officials who take environmental issues seriously are other ways you can contribute to a reduced environmental impact.

37 2.10 Global Environmental Ethics
Ecological degradation in any nation inevitably impinges on the quality of life in others. Much of the current environmental crisis is rooted in the widening gap between rich and poor nations. Environmental ethics suggests that we have an obligation beyond minimizing the harm we cause to our fellow human citizens. It suggests we may also have an obligation to minimize the harm we cause to the ecological systems and the biodiversity of the Earth itself.

38 Summary Different cultures put different values on the natural world and the individual organisms that compose it. Environmental ethics investigates the justifications for these different positions. Three common attitudes toward nature are the development approach, the preservationist approach, and the conservationist approach. Ethical obligations toward the environment are usually closely connected to ethical obligations toward people, particularly poor people and minority groups.

39 Summary Recognition that there is an ethical obligation to protect the environment can be made by corporations, individuals, nations, and international bodies. Natural capitalism and industrial ecology are ideas that promote ways of doing profitable business while also protecting the environment. Global commitments to the protection of the environment are enormously important.


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