Sustainable development is development
that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs
"Living for today with tomorrow in mind"
Large organisations
ASDA/Wal-mart
Many products are wrapped
in polythene or shrink wrap
A distribution centre in Oxfordshire used to fill four skips a week
A company called Mil-tek installed a plastic bailing machine
The bails are collected once a week by a recycling company
ASDA now gets money for this and no plastic goes to landfill
Nokia
Over 50% of people get a
new phone every year
44% of the old phones are kept
in a draw and never used again
100% of phones
can be recycled
They can be made into
trumpet, park benches etc.
General Electric
Operates in many
different countries
By 2012 they will reduce
fresh water usage by 20%
This will save 7.4 million
cubic meters of water
Rainforest extraction
Deforestation - to set up
operations, companies have to
build roads through the forests
Local conflicts - the locals often
gain the least from projects and
stand to loose the most
Biodiversity loss - fragmentation
of natural habitats caused by
pipelines can deplete species
populations and sometimes
companies working near protected
areas don't always follow the rules
Soil and aquatic pollution - lots
of things can go wrong when oil
is mined, spills and toxic
by-products are are sometimes
dumped near the site, polluting
the surroundings
Air pollution - by products or
natural gas are sometimes burnt,
these can cause air pollution, and
can sometimes cause fires
Costa Rica
They are trying to develop
through ecotourism
They have cleared
trais through the woods
They are also
developing through
plant life, they
have made a deal
with an american
company called
merck, that they
look for plants that
can be used in
medicine etc. and
the Costa Ricans
get a share of the
money
Tectonic Activity
Scales
Mercalli scale
The mercalli scale measures how much
damage is done by an earthquake
It is measured in a
scale between 1 and 12
Richter scale
It measures the magnitude of an
earthquake using a seismometer
It has no upper limit
It is a longarithimic scale, this means
that a magnitude of 6 on the richter
scale is 10 times bigger than 5 which
is 100 times bigger than four
Volcanoes
Can be popular tourist attractions
(e.g. Mount Etna in Sicily)
People can't afford to move sometimes
People may not want to
leave family and friends
People near Mount Merapi in
Indonesia believe that the
spirits protect them
May not erupt for hundreds of years
Volcanic soils can be especially fertile
(e.g. the lower slopes of Mount Mayon,
Philippines is covered in plantations
In Iceland the volcanoes provide
cheap geothermal energy
Earthquakes
People feel safer as
buildings can be
earthquake proof
Some places
can be really
beautiful (e.g.
Malibu,
California)
People believe the chance of
an earthquake is very low
Can be popular tourist attractions
People may consider the risk acceptable
because they get money from their job
Some people have disaster plans that
tell them what to do in an emergancy
Plate boundaries
Constructive/Divergent
New land is created
Two plates move apart
Magma rises to fill the gap
Since magma can
escape easily, it
doesn't erupt with
much force
As the two plates move
apart, the magma comes out
and new land is created
Distructive/Convergent
Land is destroyed
Subduction zone - when an
oceanic plate meets a
continental plate, the oceanic
plate goes under as it is heavier
and denser, as it drops down, it
becomes magma, the magma
then rises through the gaps
causing severe folding
Very explosive
The friction
can cause
earthquakes
Conservative/Transform
Land moves past each other
No volcanoes occur
Plates moving in the
same direction tend to
stick and then jerk
forwards sending
shock waves and so
causing earthquakes
No land is created or destroyed
Focus, Seismic
waves, Epicentre
Focus - the
point at
which the
rock moves
Seismic waves - they start
at the focus and spread
out like ripples on a lake
Epicentre - directly
above the focus on
the Earth's surface