NSTP Common Module 4: Environment Protection: Environmental Protection and Management Introduction
NSTP Common Module 4: Environment Protection: Environmental Protection and Management Introduction
ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION
Objectives:
1. Know the importance of conserving our natural resources and the existing natural
environment;
2. Acquire knowledge of pollution and environmental degradation;
3. Enumerate values for environmental protection;
4. Be actively involved in environmental decision-making;
5. Explain the 7 principles of environment; and
6. Discuss your role in environmental protection and management.
Man’s environment consists of natural resources like air, land, water, plants, and animals. With
the progress of industrialization and civilization, man has interacted with his surroundings and
disturbed the nature. It leads to environmental pollution, which cannot be eradicated by nature’s
self-acting process, i.e., various biogeochemical cycles. Environmental problems stem from two
main categories of human activities:
(a) Resources utilization at unsustainable levels and contamination of the environment through
pollution and
(b) Discharge of wastes at levels beyond the earth’s and environment’s capacity to absorb them
or render them harmless which results in ecological damage and degradation of the
environment. Environmental damage around includes pollution of water and air and
consequent health problems, biodiversity loss, deterioration of buildings and monuments,
soil fertility loss, desertification, ozone depletion, and many more. Environmental protection
and management has become one of the foremost concerns of the world community.
International concern for environmental protection and management has gained momentum
with Stockholm Declaration in 1972. It is considered as Magna Carta of environmental
protection and sustainable development. Then a series of global efforts have been
undertaken internationally for protection of the environment. Hence, environmental
protection has become not only local, regional, or national importance but also a global
concern. Over the past several decades, growing public awareness regarding threats to the
environment, informed by warnings from scientists, has led to demands that law protects
the natural surroundings on which human well-being depends. Under growing pressure
from national and international public opinion, governments began to demonstrate concern
over the general state of the environment introduced legislation to combat pollution of
inland waters, ocean, and air.
6. Nature is beautiful and we are stewards of God’s creation. (Ang kalikasan ay maganda
at tayo ang tagapangasiwa ng lahat na nilikha ng Diyos.)
Among all creatures, humans are the only ones made in God’s image and have been
given the right to have dominion over all His creations. Being the most intelligent and
gifted with reason, humans are capable of manipulating creation to their own advantage.
Yet, creation exists not to be ravaged or abused but to be taken care of. Humans cannot
exist without nature. They are co-natural with the environment they live in. If the
environment they live in is destroyed, with it will go Homo Sapiens.
7. Everything changes. (Ang lahat ay nagbabago.)
The environment is constantly changing. Organisms also develop through time.
However, with our current technology, we have affected these natural changes that
these changes now cause problematic events to us. Humans should rethink their
relationship with the environment. Because what we believe that is beneficial to the
environment often turn out to be catastrophic.
ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS
While it is tempting to call all threats to the world’s forests ‘illegal,’ it would be an unhelpful
oversimplification to assert that violations of forest resource protection are the only, or even the
most important hazards. Even where regulations are violated in the course of forest destruction
or degradation, more intricate and elaborate chains of causation, involving poverty,
environmental change, competing demands and other forces are also at work. Nonetheless, a
law enforcement perspective does have a great deal to offer in understanding forest loss and in
offering specific recommendations and interventions. Indeed, there is an enormous and
increasing body of evidence that suggests that activities carried out in violation of forest
resource protection regulations are important contributors to the global decline of forest
resources.
Most activities that can be perceived as violations of forest resource protection are not
inherently wrong or bad. Unauthorized logging, land clearance, setting fires, hunting and other
potentially unwanted activities may, at some time and in some places, be legal, desirable and
even promoted. Where they are unwanted, they acquire their illegality only in reference to
violations of specific prohibitions and, in some legal frameworks, after specific judicial
determination that they contravene those prohibitions. From a practical point of view, however,
the importance of forest resource protection violations can be classified in a number of ways.
At the heart of forest resource protection are such questions as, how does society intend natural
resources to be used? Who will they benefit? How is management to be carried out? Before
expecting resource managers to enforce resource infractions or violations as a narrow technical
function, it is essential that policy-makers consider the whole social, economic and physical
setting for resource policy. In particular, sensible resource policy anticipates the incentives
facing resource users and the resources available to managers and seeks to optimize the
structure of the resource management framework.
Many governments contribute to forest resource protection problems by adopting policies and
legislation that are in serious conflict with the fundamental social and physical setting. Resource
users act as they do - they log, they set fires, they clear land, they hunt - largely, if not entirely,
because it is in their economic interest. The mere imposition of formal legislation, however well
intentioned, does not change the basic underlying incentives faced by resource users. Rather, it
may simply criminalize people and activities artificially with little lasting consequence on the
resource base.
Taken together, all of these considerations yield one of the key lessons to emerge from
experience with forest resource violations: use resource policy to avoid, as much as possible,
the need for enforcement and especially for public sector assistance. This general principle also
leads to a number of subsidiary and related recommendations.
Strategies - Prevention, Detection and Monitoring
Prevention: A sound policy framework is a major contributor to the prevention of forest resource
protection violations. But going beyond general policy considerations, forest resource protection
and violation prevention can be addressed specifically in resource management operations,
programs and projects. Particularly critical is prevention at the level of the forest management
unit (FMU) and through public education.
Public education and awareness is another aspect of prevention in which government can also
cooperate with the private sector and civil society groups such as NGOs. Information campaigns
can address the provisions of forest law (ensuring that users are at least informed of restrictions
and prohibitions); the justification for restrictions (informing the public, for example, of the
damages that restrictions are intended to prevent); and actions, which the public can take to
support forest resource protection.
The primary purpose of prevention management is to ensure compliance with laws and
regulations designed to promote sustainable forest management and use. Commercial timber
and non-commercial forest product management involve ensuring
that exploitation occurs only in forests authorized for such use and
that within these forests the level, nature, geographic distribution
and frequency of exploitation are consistent with the principles of
sustainable development.
A second purpose of timber and forest product management is to ensure that the government
receives its fair share of revenue generated through exploitation of public resources.
Strategies
1. Maintain order in forests and protected areas.
2. Increase revenue returns from authorized activities.
3. Prevent damage to forest resources resulting from unwanted resource violations.
4. Meet sustainable yield targets.
5. Involve the public through information and education programs to prevent violations and
damage to forests and protected areas.
6. Increase skill levels of forest technicians and forest managers in prevention, detection
and monitoring programs.
7. Reduce susceptibility or vulnerabilities that can create opportunities for unwanted
activities to occur.
Forest policy and planning should recognize timber and other management measures for forest
product protection as a major development goal.
Prevention is everybody’s business and must become a fully integral activity toward
achieving excellence in protecting valuable resources. A preventable unwanted activity
involving timber and other forest products adversely affects and reflects the
government’s image and its effectiveness in caring for the land.
Due to the complexities associated with managing government land, it is critical that
efforts be made to reduce situations that generate unwanted activities. Contract
requirements, stipulating that the contractor is required to prepare plans to prevent
violations in the contract area before any harvesting, are essential. The government
should also prepare similar plans for timber sale and all other forest areas where
products are exploited.
A forest resource protection plan prepared by the contractor will provide a government
with assurances that the contractor is going to take necessary steps to prevent
unwanted logging from occurring on the contract area.
It is clear that there are no easy solutions for forest resource protection problems that an FMU
may be encountering. Experiences in numerous countries however, point to a number of
technologies, in the sense of institutions as well as equipment and hardware that can be
employed to facilitate specific forest resource protection functions.
Community involvement: In many ways much of what has been developed as social or
community forestry over the last 20 years has been a response to what were at one time
perceived as law enforcement problems. Efforts to develop agroforestry, farmer production of
fuelwood and other domestic wood needs, and joint forest management in many places have
their origins in efforts to develop socially sound ways of achieving forest management objectives
that could not be reached through traditional police-style forestry regulation enforcement.
Legal and judicial reform: Laws and regulations sometimes need to be adjusted and revised to
make forest resource protection more supportive of desired forest management objectives.
Tree and log marking and tracking: A technology that has attracted considerable attention for
log monitoring and tracking is the use of optical bar coding to identify and track logs. These high
technology systems are recent refinements to widely known and used log and tree marking and
labeling systems. While the new technology offers greater protection against contract violations
and can, at some significant costs, provide real-time monitoring of log movements, the basic
intent remains the same. Prior to felling, trees to be felled are marked or tagged.
Remote sensing and global positioning systems (GPS): The rapid development and ease of
access to high-quality satellite imagery and to inexpensive and accurate GPS navigation
devices greatly increases the possibilities for detecting and monitoring forest landscapes over
broad and remote areas. Recent applications in the Amazon and Southeast Asia illustrate the
potentials and limitations.
A serious monitoring program for forest resource protection can be established at minimal cost
to enable the routine synthesis of data on unwanted activity by nature of the infraction or
violation, geographic concentration, volume or value of the incidents and by other
classifications. A standard approach is the development of a computerized tracking system. In
such a tracking system all reported incidents are entered routinely into a database following a
standard procedure and protocol and all subsequent information and action, including further
action needed, recoveries, and fines are recorded and available for recall. This permits analysis
of patterns of unwanted activity, the effectiveness and consistency of follow-up and provides an
indication of the rigor with which appropriate action is being pursued.
Clearly, a computerized tracking system can only reflect the data provided by the monitoring
effort. This also allows a check of the rigor of the forest resource protection system. It is
important to note that incomplete reporting can result from several sources, e.g. capacity, skills
and commitment. In addition to a willful failure to implement, inadequate training,
communications and systems failure are among the possible sources of inconsistency. While
understandable, these should decrease as experience with implementation builds. A program of
independent monitoring in association with a new computerized tracking system is now in its
early stages of implementation in Cambodia using Global Witness as an official independent
monitor.
While substantial progress has been made in increasing access to clean drinking water and
sanitation, billions of people – mostly in rural areas – still lack these basic services.
Worldwide, one in three people do not have access to safe drinking water, two out of five people
do not have a basic hand-washing facility with soap and water, and more than 673 million
people still practice open defecation.
The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the critical importance of sanitation, hygiene and
adequate access to clean water for preventing and containing diseases. Hand hygiene saves
lives. According to the World Health Organization, handwashing is one of the most effective
actions you can take to reduce the spread of pathogens and prevent infections, including the
COVID-19 virus. Yet billions of people still lack safe water sanitation, and funding is inadequate.
Availability and access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services is fundamental to
fighting the virus and preserving the health and well-being of millions. COVID-19 will not be
stopped without access to safe water for people living in vulnerability, UN experts said.
The impacts of COVID-19 could be considerably higher on the urban poor living in slums,
without access to clean water. UN-Habitat is working with partners to facilitate access to running
water and handwashing in informal settlements.
UNICEF is urgently appealing for funding and support to reach more girls and boys with basic
water, sanitation and hygiene facilities, especially those children who are cut off from safe water
because they live in remote areas, or in places where water is untreated or polluted, or because
they are without a home, living in a slum or on the street.
In response to the COVID-19 outbreak, the International Organization for Migration (IOM)
is adjusting its WASH services to prevent the spread of the disease. This includes continued
support to affected, at-risk, low-capacity and fragile countries to secure WASH services and
infection prevention control in health facilities.
Strategies
Social Solutions
Water conservation programs involved in social solutions are typically initiated at the local level,
by either municipal water utilities or regional governments. Common strategies include
public outreach campaigns, tiered water rates (charging progressively higher prices as water
use increases), or restrictions on outdoor water use such as lawn watering and car
washing. Cities in dry climates often require or encourage the installation
of xeriscaping or natural landscaping in new homes to reduce outdoor water usage. Most urban
outdoor water use in California is residential, illustrating a reason for outreach to households as
well as businesses.
New technology poses a few new options for consumers; features such as full flush and half
flush when using a toilet are trying to make a difference in water consumption and waste. It is
also possible to use/"pollute" the water in stages (keeping use in flush toilets for last), hereby
allowing more use of the water for various tasks within a same cycle (before it needs to be
purified again, which can also be done in-situ).
Also available are modern shower heads that help reduce wasting water: Old shower heads are
said to use 5-10 gallons per minute, while new fixtures available use 2.5 gallons per minute and
offer equal water coverage. Another method is to recycle the water of the shower directly, by
means a semi-closed system which features a pump and filter. Besides recycling water, it also
reuses the heat of the water (which would otherwise be lost).
Household Applications
Contrary to the popular view that the most effective way to save water is to curtail water-using
behavior (e.g., by taking shorter showers), experts suggest the most efficient way is replacing
toilets and retrofitting washers.
Many water-saving devices (such as low-flush toilets) that are useful in homes can also be
useful for business water saving. Other water-saving technology for businesses includes:
Waterless urinals (also can be installed in schools)
Waterless car washes
Infrared or foot-operated taps, which can save water by using short bursts of water for
rinsing in a kitchen or bathroom
Pressurized waterbrooms, which can be used instead of a hose to clean sidewalks
X-ray film processor re-circulation systems
Cooling tower conductivity controllers
Water-saving steam sterilizers, for use in hospitals and health care facilities
Rain water harvesting
Water to Water heat exchangers.
Young people constitute a large part of the world’s population and young people will have to live
longer with the consequences of current environmental decisions than will their elders. Future
generations will also be affected by these decisions and the extent to which they have
addressed concerns such as the depletion of resources, biodiversity loss, and long-lived
radioactive wastes.
Young people can play an active role in protecting and improving the environment. They can
change their lifestyle and how it affects the environment. They can make their homes, schools
and youth organizations more environmentally friendly by adopting environmentally friendly
practices, recycling of different materials as well as preserving resources such as water and
electricity. Engaging youth in environmental protection not only creates direct impact on
changing youth behaviors and attitudes, but possibly influence their parents, relatives and
families.
Youth are the back bone of the nation. They can change the future of the society with their well
being and courageous behavior. Unfortunately today we find the youth those who are more
interested in other places which are not useful to them as well as nationally. They choose to
spend their days doing drugs and playing video games. They spend their nights partying and
living it up, so to speak. More and more young men of this age group are sitting at home in front
of their televisions playing games all day instead of bettering themselves or going to work. They
have no vision and if they do have dreams they do not have the drive to make any attempt at
achieving them.
The environment is simply defined as our surrounding, including both living and non-living things
and youth are the young people. Environmental protection is a broad subject Environmental
problems are rising day by day and everyone is concerned about global warming and climate
change as globally but local and national environmental problems are less concerned.
Protecting the environment starts with pollution control therefore, youth can help reduce waste
by paying attention to minor details in their daily lives, for example, not to take extra plastic bags
when we go shopping. Actually there are many other tips for greener environment.
By applying the greening knowledge at home and schools, we can help to market city, a greener
city. Discarding computers, electrical appliances and rechargeable batteries can seriously harm
the environment. Youth role is to implement recycling programs for used computers and
electrical appliances. You can arrange for collection services with them. There are also many
collection points for recycling of rechargeable batteries, so do not simply throw them away.
Youth have a role to play in environmental and conservation efforts that will improve livelihoods.
Tips:
In House
Close the running tap water, when not needed.
Use the dishwasher, when the dishes are full. Try to avoid using it more often i.e. for each
single plate.
Try to be cautious in using water. Turn off taps when not used. By this way, it is estimated
every home can save more than a gallon of water, which is very high when combined in a
local.
Turning off Lights and saving electricity as much as possible is also a way to go green.
During the daytime, it is good to open windows and screens to let sunlight in and fill house
with warmth. After all, sunlight is essential for body in the form of vitamin A.
The local power company would be able to provide a free presentation on how to make the
home a better energy efficient home.
With Transport
Carpooling or vehicle pooling is the best way to save environment from three or four times
the pollution. Carpooling can be done with friends, neighbors, or relatives working in the
same direction as yours, not necessarily the same company.
Maintaining the vehicle regularly and providing it for service near a service station would help
minimize its pollution output.
Many companies have started offering the plan 'Work while you are at home'. Enjoying this
benefit not only saves green, but also enables one to spend quality time together in a family
and allowing to save costs of travelling and fuel.