ENEP 250 Test 1
sustainability is a _____ and not an _____
path, end point
planned obsolescence
the practice of modifying products so those that have already been sold become obsolete before they actually need replacement
reliable sources
trustworthy materials that come from experts in the field of study
Delaney Clause
- 1960: US Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act - 1996: Food Quality and Protection Act repeals Delaney Clause and directs agencies to seek expert assessment of "acceptable levels" of carcinogens
Risk analysis
- A scientific and political process - there is always uncertainty - there is likely to be disagreement within and between scientific communities - a focus on defining acceptable levels of risk that may divert attention from finding less-risky alternatives
Which of the following is one of the central assumptions of free-market economics?
- All participants have perfect information about costs and benefits. - Markets maximize benefits for all participants. - Market prices reflect the cost of production.
Which of the following is true regarding the devastation experienced in New Orleans and surrounding areas after Hurricane Katrina?
- Widespread channelization of the Mississippi River's watershed increased the vulnerability of the community to major flood events. - There was a continued lack of investment in flood protection infrastructure for poor and minority communities. - There was a delayed initial disaster response by the federal government.
our dominant social paradigm
- acceptance of free market/laissez-faire capitalism - growth and progress - faith in science and technology - humans are separate from, and hold primacy over nature
The Necessary and Proper Clause
- constitutional authorization for Congress to make any law required to carry out its powers - often paired with the Interstate Commerce Clause to provide a constitutional basis for a wide variety of federal laws
free-market economics
- decisions should be guided by markets and the forces of supply and demand - consumers want to maximize their benefit/utility - when all consumers individually pursue their own individual interests, society as a whole benefits
social science principles of sustainability
- economics-> full-cost pricing of externalities - politics -> zero-sum to win-win solutions - ethics -> responsibility to different communities, generations
3 components of laws
- establish policies and directives (Congress) - prescribed methods of policy implementation - prescribed methods of dispute resolution
Gibbons v Odgen (1824)
- federal law regulating interstate commerce takes precedent over state law - Congress can regulate a variety of activities under Commerce Clause
central assumptions of free-market economics
- market prices reflect the cost of production - market participants have perfect information regarding costs and benefits - markets maximize benefits for all participants involved - national success can be best-measured in GNP/GDP
Regulatory strategies for environmental policy
- none - standards and enforcement (federal regulation and implementation, federal regulation and state/local regulation, state/local regulation and implementation) - market tools and incentives - establish common property rights - privatize resource
causes of environmental problems
- population growth - unsustainable resource use - poverty - excluding environmental costs from market costs - increasing isolation from nature
causes of environmental problems and sustainability
- population growth - unsustainable resource use - poverty - excluding environmental costs from market prices - increasing isolation from nature
goal of environmental law in the United States
- prevent pollution from dispersing into the environment - ensure that natural resources are not abused or overexploited -
The Earth itself is a closed ecosystem with a few exceptions:
- solar energy - minerals from meteorites
restraints of environmental law in the US
- state jurisdiction over many environmental concerns - private property is paramount in the US legal system (environmental law often seeks to limit property rights) - adversarial legal/judicial process (everything is subject to appeal, and there are some fundamental debates we have never resolved, like the extent of property rights)
primary strategies to discredit science
- suppress analysis and data - keep results private - pack science advisory committees - magnification/manufacturing uncertainty and doubt - punish/shame whistleblowers - equate fringe/ unaccepted views with mainstream scientific opinion
Thomas Malthus - An Essay on the Principle of Population
- the power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to provide subsistence for man - the best means for addressing poverty among the lower classes is moral restraint
Elinor Ostrom - Governing the Commons
- we must use (and pay for) resources every day for survival (ecology) - we should be responsive to a diverse public (justice/democracy)
McCullogh v. Maryland (1819)
-Expanded implied powers through Necessary and Proper Clause -Enforced Supremacy Clause over states prohibiting states to tax the federal government -Bank of the United States ruled constitutional
what are the laws of ecology?
1) everything is connected to everything else 2) everything must go somewhere 3) nature knows best 4) there is no free lunch
key components of sustainability
1) natural capital 2) human activities often degrade natural capital 3) solutions to degradation: social/political and scientific
Judicial review
1) scope of review (guide by Constitution, Administrative Procedures Act and legal precedent) 2) legal standing 3) "ripeness" (which cases are ripe for review)
the ecological basis of sustainability
1) solar energy 2) biodiversity 3) chemical/nutrient cycling
Our Dominant Social Paradigm
1. acceptance of free market/laissez-faire capitalism 2. growth and progress 3. faith in science and technology 4. humans are separate from, and hold primacy over, nature
ecological economics
1. recognize that the economy is a subset of the environment and is dependent on its ecological systems 2. perpetual growth in a system with limited capacity is likely not possible 3. replace economic growth as the primary goal-> economic development 4. people have only bounded rationality 5. there are too many externalities to rely on market corrections 6. markets are unreliable indicators of resource limits 7. future interests should be considered, and ecology and the economy should be considered as co-evolving systems that impact each other over time
Which of the following are components of the Dominant Social Paradigm in the United States?
Acceptance of free-market capitalism and a belief that humans are separate from nature
Economic growth is different from economic development because:
Economic development incorporates measures of human well-being.
How are common pool resources defined?
Everyone can access the resource (non-excludable), but consumption reduces resource availability (rival)
What was significant about the perspective offered by Barry Commoner, author of The Closing Circle?
His was among the earliest appeals made by a Euro-American for the economy to be restructured according to nature, rather than expecting it to bend to our will and desires.
policy problems
Issues that are elevated in the public eye enough to necessitate governmental action - what any group agrees is a problem
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
Management of non-hazardous and hazardous solid waste including landfills and storage tanks. Set minimal standards for all waste disposal facilities and for hazardous wastes.
policy conflict
Occurs when two policy objectives cannot both be achieved at the same time
Elinor Ostrom won the 2009 Nobel Prize in Economics for challenging the accepted wisdom of which concept?
The Tragedy of the Commons
the Interstate Commerce Clause
The US Congress shall have the power "to regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes" (Article 1, Section 8, Clause 3)
economic growth
a central theme in all industrial societies, regardless of their political or economic systems
social paradigm
a cluster of beliefs, values, and ideals that influences our collective thinking about society, government, and our roles/responsibilities as individuals
steady states
an equilibrium state to which a system will return following minor disturbances
Basel Convention
an international treaty on the control of transboundary hazardous wastes and their disposal
regulatory context
any efforts to create policy solutions occurs within a broader social environment
politics
balancing interests, short-term solutions, bargaining, compromise
ecosystems
communities of plants, animals, and other organisms interacting with each other and their physical environment (open, nested systems)
normative
describes beliefs or values about how things should be or what people ought to do rather than what actually is
international law for the environment
does it exist
Greenpeace
dramatic encounters protecting whales, seals, etc, putting themselves in danger
how does the suns energy reach us?
electromagnetic waves
solar energy
energy helps plants produce nutrients (photosynthesis) for all life on earth
kinetic energy
energy in motion, including heat and EM radiation
stored energy
energy potential including water behind a dam or chemical energy in your food
no free lunch
everything has a cost
GNP
gross national product - goods/services bought/sold by citizens
politics
groups competing to get their policy measures
how much of the energy from the sun reaches the earths surface
half
Earth from space
illustrated fragility and interdependence
economic development
includes economic growth; measurement of quality of life
economic growth
increase in total financial value of economic transactions of a country
In the US, our electronic waste:
makes up 70% of our total toxic waste.
Law of Conservation of matter
matter can be changed into different forms, but it cannot be created or destroyed
As a result of our global reliance on coal, there are health warnings about consuming many fish species (especially for large fish that are higher on the food chain) because they are contaminated with:
methyl mercury
chemical/nutrient cycling
moves critical nutrients through ecosystems, continually recycling them
what is the environmentally friendly option of lead?
mtbe
natural capital
natural resources and ecosystem services
religious influences on human and nature
our early national/colonial history was dominated by Judeo-Christian perspectives regarding the relationship between humans and the environment, that humans are separate from, and superior to, the rest of nature
direct solar input
photosynthesis, warmth, daylight
federalism
power given to the states where the states have lots of control over environmental issues on the local level
overall goal for sustainability
protect your capital and live within your income (regenerative capacity of earth's resources)
biodiversity
provides the raw materials for adaptation and resiliency
science
requires constant revision, long-term process, seeking truth, and reducing uncertainty
no free lunch example
river channelization and wetland conversion in the Mississippi river basin, barricades of the wetlands caused area around to dry out and the speed of water increases making more problems downstream, resulting in many problems in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina on minority populations
What is the legal basis for environmental policy?
the Constitution lays out explicit limitations on what the federal government can and cannot do, and reserves significant power to the states - no Constitutional basis for environmental policy
Barry Commoner - The Closing Circle (1971) and the Laws of Ecology
the US economy should be restructured to conform to the unbending laws of ecology - pinned capitalist technology as the primary cause of environmental degradation - one of the first appeals to the broader public to embrace the idea of sustainability
ecological footprint
the amount of productive land and water (natural capital) needed to provide an indefinite supply of resources and to absorb and recycle wastes and pollution produced through the use of resources
ecological footprint
the amount of productive land and water needed to provide an indefinite supply of resources and to absorb recycled wastes and pollution produced through the use of resources
energy
the capacity to do work or transfer energy
public policy
the course of action the government takes in response to an issue or problem
wastes and pollution
the presence of material/agent at a level that is harmful to human and other organisms health, survival, or activities - including those that are natural
Which of the following is commonly accepted as the root cause of our environmental crisis?
there is no one root cause
environmental paradox
we must protect our resources, and also protect the interests of those who exploit them
perceived obsolescence
when a customer is convinced, that he / she needs an updated product, even though his /her existing product is working well
externalities
when prices do not reflect all costs, particularly those with social and environmental impacts
1st law of thermodynamics
whenever energy is converted from one form to another in a chemical or physical change, no energy is created or destroyed
2nd law of thermodynamics (law of entropy)
whenever energy is converted from one form to another, we end up with lower-quality or less usable energy than we started as heat is lost to the system
indirect solar input
wind and waves, hydropower, biomass
Australian Cane Toad
• In the 1930s, Australian sugarcane farmers imported hundreds of cane toads as a way to control cane beetles, a native insect pest • The poisonous toads multiplied rapidly, and migrated throughout much of the country, advancing at a pace of 25 miles/year • Major impacts on local wildlife (poisonings, diseases, predation), pets, and humans with no effective local predator • Most efforts to control the invasion have been unsuccessful • And they don't eat the cane beetles
Which of the following are a central idea associated with ecological economics?
- Economic growth is a faulty indicator of social well-being - Our environmental challenges cannot be overcome just by paying the full cost of externalities. - We should account for the interests of those who are not direct participants in market transactions.
global cultural shifts
1) agricultural revolution (10,000ya) 2) industrial revolution (275ya) 3) Information-Globalization Revolution (50ya)
Factors in setting regulation
- science and risk analysis - economic and cost-benefit analysis
Tragedy of the Commons - Garrett Hardin (1968)
- use of the commons is below the carrying capacity of the land (all users benefit) - if one or more users increase the use of the commons beyond its carrying capacity, the commons becomes degraded - unless environmental costs are accounted for and addressed in land use practices, eventually the land will be unable to support the activity
GDP
Gross domestic product - total goods/ services within a country
Which of the following make up the ecological basis of sustainability?
Solar Energy, Biodiversity, and Chemical/Nutrient Cycling
an environmentally sustainable society
a society that meets the current and basic needs of people without compromising the ability of future generations to do the same