Environmental Management :Session - 1 Environmental Management
Objective of this course... :Objective of this course... To understand the effects of the impacts of the modern human society upon the environment we live in
Issues that effect the managers involving
Networking or Politics
Business itself, the projects, or the programs
Resources like natural resources, facilities, money etc
To explore ways to reduce our environmental footprint in day to day activities
What is Environmental Management :What is Environmental Management It is the management of
All the components of biological, physical and chemical in both biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living)
The interaction of social, cultural, and economic environment with the bio-physical environment.
Why do we need to study this course? :Why do we need to study this course? We have just one planet which can sustain life and not 9
The resources are limited
Space on earth
Non-renewable energy
Natural resources
The environment is depreciating in life sustaining capabilities at an ever increasing pace.
At this rate, the day is not far when we reach a point of no return and face the wrath of global climatic change
We need to understand our responsibility towards the environment and adopt an environment friendly system of working
Hot, Flat and Crowded :Hot, Flat and Crowded
Crowded :Crowded World population in
Year 1800 – 1 billion
Year 1922 – 2 billion
Year 2000 – 6 billion
Year 2050 – 9 billion (estimated)
The population has & will increase due to
Health care
Disease Eradication
Economic development
World population today is around 6.7 billion and will increase by 2.5 billion in 43 years – UN Population report dated 13 May 2007
Crowded :Crowded The maximum growth will happen in the lesser developed countries as their economies grow from 5.4 billion in 2007 to 7.9 billion in 2050
Developed countries population will remain more or less stable and shall hover around 1.2 billion
Some facts
Year 1800 – London was the largest city with pop. 1 million
Year 1900 – 111 cities with pop. 1 million
Year 1995 – 300 cities with pop. 1 million
5 cities with pop. over 10 million in 1975
14 cities with pop. over 10 million in 1995
26 cities with pop. over 10 million in 2015 (estimated) – UN pop. Fund statistics
Mumbai has a pop. of over 19 million
What are the effects of Crowding :What are the effects of Crowding Loss of arable land
Over fishing
Water shortage
Air & water pollution
Stress on cities infrastructure
Per capita decrease in facilities like health care
By 2030 number of cities dwellers expected to rise to 5 billion – Associated Press 27/06/2007
These increases will happen more in smaller cities than in the larger ones around 45% growth in pop.
Terrorism will no longer be a problem, demographics will
Population Growth :Population Growth
A Beach in China :A Beach in China
Aamchi Mumbai... :Aamchi Mumbai...
Flat :Flat Personal computer invented in around 1975.
By 1977 PC were being mass produced
PC enabled users to become authors of their own content
Then came the Internet, WWW & Web browser
Software and transmission protocols started flattening the world by enabling outsourcing
Geopolitical flatteners are the fall of Berlin Wall on Oct 03, 1990 & collapse of communist Soviet Union
These factors made the world seamless making the world entirely flat.
Flat :Flat 200 million people improved their economic conditions in 1980’s and 1990’s in China and India, raising them from poverty
10 of millions added to the middle class
This created more demand for products like cell phones, computers, gas stoves, refrigerators etc
These products created demand for raw materials and led to increase of green houses gases (GHG) either during production, usage or upon discarding
Light Bulb Example :Light Bulb Example In the next 12 years we shall have another 1 billion people
Now, if we give each of these people a 60 W incandescent light bulb
The weight of individual light bulb is negligible, but 1 billion light bulbs will weigh around 20000 metric tonnes
If we were to turn these light bulbs ON, all at one time for 4 hours a day, we would need 10000 MW of electricity which would need 20, 500 MW power plants. If these power plants are coal fired, imagine the amount of GHG emitted
Hot :Hot The global average temperatures have increased by 0.8C vis-à-vis 1750s
It all started with the industrial revolution in late 1700s when we went from manual or horse power to machine power, from agricultural to manufacturing societies
Industrial revolution was the revolution of energy
Steam engine –converted the chemical energy of coal/wood to mechanical energy of industrial machinery
Eventually coal was started being preferred for wood as it generated twice as much energy as the same weight of food.
This slowed down deforestation
Earth has a fever and needs help! :Earth has a fever and needs help!
Hot :Hot Coal was used for
Industrial process
Metallurgy
Heating building
Power steam engines
Crude oil was commercially exploited in 1800s where is first replaced whale oil used for lighting lamps and then for heating, manufacturing and fuel for engines.
In short, man needed these sources of energy for
Light
Heat
Motive power, or
Electricity
The Industrial Revolution :The Industrial Revolution
Transportation Revolution :Transportation Revolution Early 20th century saw a “Transportation Revolution” - from the internal combustion engine
The first gasoline powered automobile was made in 1885
First mass produced automobile was the Old’s Mobile in 1902 by Ransom E. Olds.
It was Henry Ford in 1896 who started working on an assembly line.
The Ford’s T-Mobile which first rolled out in 1908 and by 1927 when it stopped production 18 millions cars had rolled out of the assembly line
Hot :Hot These cars, produced a lot of CO2 and required a lot of crude, iron steel & rubber which further emitted more GHG during their production.
This triggered industrialisation and which resulted in urbanisation and suburbanisation
We had now been sucked into a vicious cycle of energy dependency which produced lot of emissions and caused a lot of harm to the environment
“We build an inefficient system with great efficiency”
Soon the entire world copied America and Europe and followed the path of self destruction
Fuels :Fuels Fuels from Hell
Coal
Oil
Natural gas
Fuels from Heaven
Wind
Hydro
Solar
Tidal
Biomass
The Green House Effect :The Green House Effect
The Green House Effect :The Green House Effect Without GHG the earth’s average temperature is estimated to be 15C cooler. A 5-6 C drop in temperature brings in an Ice-age
Composition of Earth’s atmosphere has remained more or less constant for over 20 million years
But in the last 100-200 years, things have changed
Concentration of CO2 for 10000 years have been 280 ppm as evident from polar ice core samples
Since, 1950’s this has increased
2007 CO2 concentration was 384ppm and climbing 2 ppm per year
Average global temperatures have increased 0.8 C
Concentration of GHGs :Concentration of GHGs
Green House Gases :Green House Gases
Green House Gases :Green House Gases Global green house gases emissions due to human activities have grown since pre-industrial time, with an increase of 70% between 1970 & 2004
CO2 & CH4 :CO2 sources
Fossil fuels, deforestation, forest fires, agriculture, large scale cattle grazing
CH4 sources
Solid waste land fills, animal defecation, coal minng, rice farming, cattle belching
CH4 is 21 times more potent in trapping heat than CO2 CO2 & CH4
When Hot meets Flat and Crowded :When Hot meets Flat and Crowded Convergence of Global Warming, Over population and Global Flattening
s :s
Convergence of Hot, Flat and Crowded :Convergence of Hot, Flat and Crowded Energy demand and supply
Petro-dictatorship
Climate change
Energy poverty
Biodiversity loss
Energy Demand and Supply :Energy Demand and Supply Fuels from Hell are expensive, dirty, and not really abundant
The demand for fossil fuels grew by 5% per year between 1951-1970 in the developed nations
Developing nations, the demand is growing almost close to their rate of economic growth
Global consumption of energy will double between now and 2050
In 2004 – the first demand let energy shortage occurred, causing price hikes
Price increase in 1973, 1980 & 1990 were mainly due to the wars and revolution in the east
But by 2004, with countries like China & India creating surplus demands for oil, ahead of supply, pushed demand to 3 million barrels per day from the estimated 1.5 million barrels per day
Petro-Dictatorship :Petro-Dictatorship
Petro-dictatorship :Petro-dictatorship “As price of oil goes up, pace of freedom goes down”
Hence, you will observe cash rich/oil rich countries mostly have dictators ruling
In 2006, Russian President (now Prime Minister) Vladimir Putin, turned off gas supply to Ukraine, because the newly elected Ukrainian President was pro-western
Petro-dictatorship is best seen in the Middle-East, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela
Climate Change :Climate Change Anthropogenic GHG like CO2 are long lived and stay in the atmosphere for over 1000 years
Average global temperatures have risen by 0.8C than in 1750s
11 of the last 12 warmest years (1995-2006) since 1850s
A 2C rise in temperature may kill 10 million people
5C rise in temperature may kill 100 million people
Frequent hurricanes in the US like Katrina, floods in Bihar, droughts in sub-Saharan Africa are few examples
Energy Poverty :Energy Poverty The lack of the access to the basic energy, like electricity, requirements in certain parts of the world especially in the less developed nations
Between 2003 and 2007 South Africa’s grid started to deteriorate and the early 2007 saw frequent blackouts
SA imported 44590 generators in 2007 vis-`a-vis 790 in 2003
Businesses suffered
Energy poverty is one of the main factors of over-crowding of urban areas in LDCs
Global Energy Poverty :Global Energy Poverty
Global Energy Poverty :Global Energy Poverty
Biodiversity Loss :Biodiversity Loss Disrupting ecosystems
Half of the world’s tropical & temperate forests are gone
Rate of deforestation is about an acre/second in tropics
Half of wetlands are gone
1/3rd of Mangroves are gone
90% of predator fish are gone
20% of coral are gone & 20% are threatened
Species are disappearing 1000 times faster than before
In 2006, we lost a close relative, the Yangtze River freshwater dolphin
It is not the loss of a species but the loss of a genus
“We are running an uncontrolled experiment on the only home we have” :“We are running an uncontrolled experiment on the only home we have” All these problems were increasing till we reached a tipping point after the year 2000
Thank You :Thank You
The Kyoto Protocol :The Kyoto Protocol International agreement linked to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
Binding targets for 37 industrialised nations and EU for reducing GHGs
Protocol has 3 mechanisms
Emissions trading
Clean development mechanism
Joint Implementation