Topic 1 Notes
Topic 1 Notes
Topic 1 Notes
• ECOCENTRISM
o An ecocentric viewpoint integrates social, spiritual, and environmental dimensions
into a holistic ideal.
o It puts ecology and nature as central to humanity and emphasizes a less materialistic
approach to life with greater self-sufficiency of societies.
o Beliefs:
§ Environmental conservation is central to decision-making.
§ Humans are part of nature.
§ Individual responsibility and accountability
§ All life has inherent value
§ Against causing extinction of other species
§ Protection of habitats and ecosystems
IB Environmental Systems and Societies SL
Topic 1: Foundations of environmental systems and societies
Shreya Mozumdar
o Mercury is a heavy metal and is poisonous to animals. It affects the nervous system
causing loss of vision, hearing and speech and lack of coordination in arms and
legs. Severe poisoning causes insanity or death.
o The Chisso Corporation built a chemicals factory in Minamata, Japan and was very
successful for years. But a by-product was methylmercury which bioaccumulated
in the bodies of humans, causing mercury poisoning.
o The villagers sued Chisso many times and asked for compensation, until the
government finally had Chisso pay them compensation and treat their illnesses.
IB Environmental Systems and Societies SL
Topic 1: Foundations of environmental systems and societies
Shreya Mozumdar
o In the early hours of the morning of 3 December 1984, in the centre of the city of
Bhopal, India, in the state of Madhya Pradesh, a Union Carbide pesticide plant
released 40 tonnes of methyl isocyanate (MIC) gas, immediately killing nearly
3,000 people and ultimately causing at least 15,000-22,000 total deaths. This has
been called the Bhopal Disaster and is considered to be the world’s worst industrial
disaster. The world was in shock.
o The people are still suffering till today.
o In 1986, at Chernobyl, the worst nuclear disaster ever occurred. This was a few
miles north of Kiev, the capital of Ukraine (then part of the USSR) where an
explosion and then fire resulted in a level 7 event (the highest).
o The reactor vessel containing the uranium radioactive material split so exposing the
graphite moderator to air which caused it to catch fire. The reactor went into
uncontrollable meltdown and a cloud of highly radioactive material from this
drifted over much of Russia and Europe as far west as Wales and Scotland.
o Fission products from the radioactive cloud, e.g. isotopes of caesium, strontium and
iodine, have a long half-life and were accumulated in food chains.
o There is much debate about how many people have been affected by the radiation
as long-term effects, such as cancers and deformities at birth, are difficult to link to
one event.
o 31 workers died of radiation sickness as they were exposed to high levels in trying
to shut down the reactor and some had a lethal dose of radiation within one minute
of exposure.
o Estimates of later deaths vary but some state about 1,000 extra cases of thyroid
cancer and 4,000 other cancers caused by the fallout cloud. Other estimates state
that 1 million people will have died as a result of the disaster.
o Even today, the reactor is still dangerous. It was encased in a concrete shell but the
other reactors continued to run until 2000. Now, a metal arch is being built as the
concrete shell only has a lifetime of 30 years but estimates of the date of completion
have been put back to 2016.
o In 2011, there was another nuclear accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant
in Japan. An earthquake set off a tsunami which caused damage resulting in
meltdown of 3 reactors in the plant. The water flooding these became radioactive
and will take many years to remove.
o Although the radiation leak was only about 30% that of Chernobyl and radiation
levels in the air low, one third of a million people were evacuated as the plant was
sited in a densely populated area.
o Later reports showed the accident was caused by human error – it was not built to
withstand a tsunami even though it was close to the sea in an earthquake zone. The
plant is still not secured.
IB Environmental Systems and Societies SL
Topic 1: Foundations of environmental systems and societies
Shreya Mozumdar
o After the disaster, there were anti-nuclear demonstrations in other countries and
Germany announced it was closing older reactors and phasing out nuclear power
generation. France, Belgium, Switzerland all had public votes to reduce or stop
nuclear power plants. In other countries, plans for nuclear plants were abandoned
or reduced.
Inputs can be changed to see the effects and Models rely on the level of expertise of the
outputs, without having to wait for real people making them.
events to occur.
Model results can be shown to other Different people can interpret the
scientists and the public. They are easier to information in models in different ways.
understand than detailed information about
the whole system.
Models depend on the quality of the data that
go into the inputs.
Models can be manipulated for political or
financial gain.
Different models can show different results
even when given the same inputs.
• Resilience is the ability of a system to return to its initial state after a disturbance. The
more resilient a system is, the more disturbance it can deal with.
• FACTORS AFFECTING ECOSYSTEM RESILIENCE
o The more diverse and complex a system is, the more resilient it is because there
are more interactions between different species.
o The greater the biodiversity of an ecosystem, the more resilient it is because it
is likely that a species that dies out can be replaced by another one with a similar
role in the ecosystem, maintaining the equilibrium.
o The more genetic diversity there is within species, the more resilient it is
because it is more difficult to wipe out a species.
o The larger the ecosystem, the more resilient it is because there are more animals
and species and it is more difficult for them to be wiped out by a disturbance.
o The faster the rate of reproduction of the species, the more resilient the
ecosystem because species can recover form disturbances faster and recolonise,
preventing them from dying out.
• A tipping point is a threshold that is reached when an ecosystem experiences a shift to
a new state, driving it into a new state. Its characteristics are:
o Involve positive feedback, which makes the change self-perpetuating and drives
the system further from equilibrium.
o Beyond the tipping point, a fast change of state occurs.
o The tipping point cannot be precisely predicted.
o The changes are long-lasting and difficult to reverse.
o There is a large time lag between the pressures driving the change and the
evidence of the impacts, making management of the change difficult.
1.4. Sustainability
• Sustainability is the use and management of resources that allows full natural
replacement of the resources exploited and full recovery of the ecosystems affected by
their extraction and use.
• Natural capital is a term that refers to natural resources that can produce a sustainable
natural income of goods and/or services.
• TYPES OF NATURAL CAPITAL
o Renewable – living things that can be generated and/or replaced as fast as they
are used by natural productivity. (e.g. food crops)
o Replenishable – non-living resources which are continuously replaced by
natural processes. Depend on abiotic processes for replenishment. (e.g. water)
o Non-renewable – resources that are irreplaceable or only replaced over a long
time scale, slower than the rate at which they are being used. (e.g. fossil fuels)
• Natural income is the yield obtained from natural resources.
• VALUE OF NATURAL CAPITAL
o Intrinsic value – values that are not determined by their use to humans, value
is given and can vary by culture, religion, etc.
o Economic value – value determined from the market price of the goods and
services produced by a resource.
o Ecological value – value that has no market price, but is essential to life
nonetheless.
IB Environmental Systems and Societies SL
Topic 1: Foundations of environmental systems and societies
Shreya Mozumdar
o Aesthetic value – value of anything that looks good or is pleasing to the eye.
Has no market price.
• Organisms or ecosystems that have aesthetic or intrinsic value may not provide
commodities in the form of goods or services, and may remain undervalued
economically.
• Organisms or ecosystems that have intrinsic value are valued regardless of their
potential use to humans.
• The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA/MEA) gave a scientific appraisal of
the condition and trends of the world’s ecosystems and the services they provide using
environmental indicators and scientific basis for action to conserve and use them
sustainably.
• A synergy is a non-linear relationship between two or more elements whereby they
generate a combined outcome that is more or less than the sum of their parts taken
separately, due to their capacity to work together or against each other.
• CRITICISMS OF EIAs:
o No standard practice or training for EIA practitioners
o No clear definition of system boundaries – till where the impacts should be
measured
o Indirect impacts may not be considered
o Public consultation practices are poorly implemented
o Reports not well-written or explained
o EIA practices can be expensive, inefficient or time-consuming
o Reports are manipulated where some information is understated or omitted.
o No monitoring or review to ensure the implementation of the EIS properly.
• An ecological footprint (EF) is the area of land and water required to sustainably
provide all resources at the rate at which they are being consumed by a given
population.
• If EF is greater than the area available to the population, it indicates unsustainability.
• ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT VS. CARRYING CAPACITY
o Carrying capacity: the POPULATION that can be sustainably supported by a
GIVEN AREA
o Ecological footprint: the AREA that can be sustainably supported by a GIVEN
POPULATION
• EF is increased by:
o Reliance on fossil fuels
o Increased use of technology and energy
o High amounts of imported resources
o High per capita production of carbon waste/emissions
o High per capita consumption of food
o Meat-rich diets
• EF is reduced by:
o Reducing use of resource
o Recycling resources
o Using renewable energy sources
o Reducing reliance on fossil fuels
o Increasing efficiency of resource use
o Investing in new and efficient technologies
o Using biological controls for weeds and pests instead of synthetic pesticide
o Using high-yielding varieties of seeds
o Less dependence on meat in diet
o Less dependence on chemical fertiliser
o Matter – organic (contains carbon atoms) or inorganic (does not contain carbon
atoms)
o Energy – sound, light, heat
o Living organisms – invasive species, biological agents
• TYPES OF POLLUTANTS
o Primary pollutants – active on emission (e.g. carbon monoxide)
o Secondary pollutants – formed when primary pollutants undergo physical or
chemical changes (e.g. sulphur trioxide + water à sulphuric acid)
• TYPES OF POLLUTION
o Point-source pollution – release of a pollutant from a single, clearly
identifiable source.
§ Easy to determine exactly who or what is causing the pollution
§ Easier to manage as the source is easily identified
§ E.g. waste disposal pipe of a sewage works into a river
o Non-point source pollution – release of pollutants from various widely
dispersed sources.
§ May have many different sources and may be impossible to detect where
exactly it is coming from.
§ E.g. air pollution blown many kilometres away by wind cannot be traced
back to its original source.
• Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) are resistant to breaking down and remain active
in the environment for a long time.
o They can bioaccumulate in animal and human tissues and biomagnify in food
chains.
o Properties:
§ High molecular weight
§ Not soluble in water
§ Highly soluble in lipids – can pass through cell membranes
o They cause cancers and disrupt hormone functions
• Biodegradable pollutants do not persist in the environment and break down quickly.
o They are broken down by decomposers or physical processes like light and heat.
o E.g. degradable plastic bags made of starch
• TYPES OF POLLUTION
o Acute pollution – large amounts of a pollutant are released at once, causing
significant harm. (e.g. Bhopal Disaster in India, see 1.1.)
o Chronic pollution – long-term release of a pollutant in small amounts. (e.g.
Beijing air pollution)
§ May go undetected for a long time
§ Difficult to manage
§ Spreads widely.
• DETECTION AND MONITORING OF POLLUTION
o Direct measurements record the amount of a pollutant in water, air or soil. (e.g.
acidity of rainwater, amount of a gas in the atmosphere)
o Indirect measurements record changes in abiotic or biotic factors that are
affected by the pollutants. (e.g. oxygen content of water, present of species that
indicate pollution or cleanliness known as indicator species)
• POLLUTION MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES
IB Environmental Systems and Societies SL
Topic 1: Foundations of environmental systems and societies
Shreya Mozumdar