Zusammenfassung der Ressource
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
- Development
and Definition
- Concept evolving for over 40
years since the 1972 UN
Conference on the Human
Environment (Stockholm)
- Since it gained
prominence, its
definition and
description has varied
- Gained recognition alongside other related
issues e.g. conservation, ecosystem
services and social concerns
- Has to evolve and be
adapted to the real world:
for all sectors including
finance, investors,
economists and traders
- SD Projects need to be:
- 1) Economically and Financially Viable
- 2) Environmentally Sound
- 3) Take into account Social Issues
- 4) Governed & Supported Appropriately
- National Income redefined as: "sustainable social net product" (Sir John Hicks)
- Savings, as a % of GDP, should be greater to or equal to the sum of
the depreciation of human knowledge plus the depreciation of
human-made capital plus the depreciation of natural capital
- Strong sustinability requires EACH to increase or remain constant over time,
Weak just requires SUM to increase or remain constant
- Originated with quantities such as
MSY - working at the maximums -
but this is not necessarily
sustainable in the long term
- 1987: World Commission on Environment and
Development, chaired by the Prime Minister of Norway:
Gro Harlem Brundtland, report: "Our Common Future"
or the Brundtland Report
- landmark document
- creating separately existing
environmental institutions is not enough
because env issues are an integral part
of all development policies
- Env issues are crucial to economic
consideration as part of energy decisions,
social issues and development work
- "Sustained human progress not just in a few
places for a few years, but for the entire
planet into the distant future"
- 1992 UN Conference of Environment and
Development, Rio de Janeiro - The Earth Summit:
- Endorsed "Agenda 21" a "Think piece"
and program of action governing human
activities with impact on the
environment
- 2002 Wold Summit on
Sustainable
Development, heads of
state and world
leaders committed to
implement Agenda 21
- Finalised the UN Climate Change Convention and Biodiversity
Convention, signed my many heads of states
- responsible for the ratification of the Kyoto Protocol
- It's Clean Development Mechanism: designed
in part to assist participating developing
countries in achieving sustainable
development
- Brundtland Report 1987: development that meets the needs of
the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs
- Reppetto, R. 1986 "the core idea of sustainability is that current
decisions should not impair the prospects for maintaining or
improving future living standards. This implies that our economic
systems should be managed so that we can live off the dividends of
our reourses"
- Daly, H.E. 1987 "increase in moral
knowledge or ethical capital for mankind"
- Munasinghe, M. 1993: 3 approaches to SD - the triple bottom line
- 1) economic - maximising income while maintaining a constant or increasing stock of capital
- 2) ecological - maintaining resilience and robustness of biological and physical systems
- 3) social-cultural - maintaining stability of social and cultural systems
- used to gauge success of projects
- Key References: Rogers, Jalal and Boyd 2008 "An Introduction
to Sustainable Development"
- Achievability
- Measuring Environmental
Quality (Rogers and Jalal et al.
1997): "9 ways to achieve
sustainability"
- 1) Leave/Return everything
in a pristine state
- 2) Develop without overwhelming the
carrying capacity of the system
- what is the globes carrying capacity?
- If it is exceeded - what next?
- 3) Sustainability will take care of itself as
economic growth proceeds: Kuznets Curve
- continuously degrading system
with development of populations
- 4) Polluter and victim can arrive
at an efficient solution
themselves (Coase)
- Can work well on a small
scale - national or global?
- Transaction costs high
- 5) Let the markets take care of
it - the invisible hand
- Prices on pollution and permits on pollution trading
- 6) Internalise the Externalities
- How to value and quantify
externalities for economic analysis?
- 7) National economic accounting systems
should reflect defensive expenditures -
accounting should consider resources
- GDP is benefited by pollution
and resource use: indicates
expenditures
- 8) Reinvest rents for non renewable
resources - strong and weak
sustainability
- large oil companies are
investing profits into
renewable technologies
- 9) Leave future generations the options or
the capacity to be as well off as we are
- Can we continue to
progress and improve?
How do we ensure it?
- Life - Cycle Analysis
- can prove the sustainability of small lifestyle choices
- look at raw materials, production and disposal (potential heat recovery) / reusability
- Environmental impacts: pollution, emissions, raw materials, utilities e.g. electricity
- imperative to achieve SD to consider environmental
concerns, new legal requirement, economic and social costs
- Considerations
- population growth, consumption, production, pollution, effects of legal
requirements, poverty, international law and environmental agreements
- poverty, population, inequality, pollution, policy and market failures,
prevention and management of natural disasters
- Environmental Degradation and Poverty
- The two cycles need to be broken if development
is to be sustainable
- Good Governance
- Accountability - answerable for their actions and behaviour
- Participation & Decentralisation -
involvement of stakeholders and
redistribution away from a central
organisation - to local governance
- Predictability - laws, regulations and policies must be fair and
consistently applied so that people can predict the
consequences and outcomes of violating them
- Transparency - info on government
actions and policies before and after
action, must be available to the
general public