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Environmental Sustainability: Challenges, Consequences, and Solutions

December 5, 2023 963 0

Exploring Biotic and Abiotic Interactions in Environmental Sustainability:

The environment is defined as the entire planetary inheritance and the totality of all available resources.

It comprises both biotic (living) and abiotic (non-living) factors that interact with one another. Biotic elements include animals, plants, forests, and fisheries, while abiotic elements encompass air, water, land, rocks, and sunlight.

  • Understanding the ecosystem, which is crucial for Environmental Sustainability, involves examining the interplay between these biotic and abiotic components.

Water bodies

 Water bodies: small, snow-fed Himalayan streams are the few fresh-water sources that remain unpolluted.

What are the Key Functions of our Environment?

The environment serves four crucial functions, highlighting the importance of Environmental Sustainability:

  • Resource Supply for Human Needs: It provides both renewable (e.g., forests, ocean fisheries) and non-renewable (e.g., fossil fuels) resources for human use.
  • Efficient Waste Assimilation Mechanisms: The ecosystem absorbs and processes waste generated by human activities.
  • Life Support Systems: Genetic Diversity and Biodiversity: It supports life by offering genetic and biodiversity.
  • Aesthetic Contributions: Enhancing Scenic Beauty: The ecosystem contributes to aesthetic qualities such as scenic beauty.

Impact of Global Warming on Environmental Sustainability: Causes, Consequences, and International Efforts

  • Global warming is the gradual rise in Earth’s lower atmospheric temperature due to increased greenhouse gasses, primarily caused by human activities like burning fossil fuels and deforestation since the Industrial Revolution
    • This rise in temperature is attributed to elevated levels of carbon dioxide, methane, and other heat-absorbing gasses in the atmosphere, which have surged by 31% and 149% respectively since 1750. 
    • Over the past century, global temperatures have increased by 1.1°F (0.6°C), sea levels have risen, and there are long-term consequences such as polar ice melting, coastal flooding, disrupted water supplies, species extinction, more frequent tropical storms, and increased tropical diseases.
  • Contributors to global warming include the combustion of coal and petroleum products, deforestation, methane release from animal waste, and expanded cattle production, which leads to deforestation, methane emissions, and increased fossil fuel use. 
  • In 1997, the UN Conference on Climate Change in Kyoto, Japan, produced an international agreement that called for greenhouse gas emission reductions by industrialized nations to combat global warming.
  • Environmental sustainability is crucial in addressing these challenges and fostering a healthier, balanced planet for future generations.

Environmental Sustainability in Balancing Supply and Demand Dynamics

  • Pre-Industrial Balance: Resources and Demand
    • In the early stages of civilization, and before the substantial population growth and industrialization, the demand for ecological resources and services was much lower than their natural supply.
  • Environmental balance in Resource Use:
    • Pollution levels were within the environment’s capacity to absorb.
    • The rate of resource extraction did not exceed the rate of resource regeneration.
    • Consequently, ecological issues were not a significant concern during those times.

Damodar Valley is one of India’s most industrialised regions. Pollutants from the heavy industries along the banks of the Damodar river are converting it into an ecological disaster

Damodar Valley is one of India’s most industrialised regions. Pollutants from the heavy industries along the banks of the Damodar river are converting it into an ecological disaster

  • Global Shift: Population Growth and the Industrial Revolution
    • However, with the explosive growth of the global population and the onset of the Industrial Revolution, the situation changed dramatically.
  • Environmental Crisis: Change in Demand and Supply
    • The increasing population required more resources for both production and consumption, surpassing the rate at which these resources could regenerate.
    • This led to immense pressure on the environment’s capacity to absorb pollutants and waste.
    • Essentially, there has been a shift in the supply-demand relationship for ecological quality.
    • A situation now involves escalating the demand for ecological resources and services, but their supply is limited due to overuse and misuse.
    • This has resulted in critical ecological problems related to waste generation and pollution that are prominent in the current era.

Balancing Supply and Demand Dynamics for Environmental Sustainability

  • Concept of Environmental Carrying Capacity: Environmental functions continue smoothly as long as they stay within the environment’s carrying capacity
    • This means resources should be used at a rate sustainable for their regeneration.
    • And waste generation should not exceed the ecosystem’s ability to absorb it.
  • Crisis Point: Global Challenges in Environmental Sustainability: However, the world is facing an environmental crisis due to factors like increasing population, resource depletion, and excessive pollution. 
  • Consequences for Health and Cost: Many resources are disappearing, and pollution is widespread, impacting health and requiring higher healthcare spending.
  • Global Challenges: Need for Sustainable Practices
    • Global issues like climate change and ozone depletion demand significant government investments.
    • Hence, the costs of negative environmental impacts are substantial, making sustainable practices critical.

Ozone Depletion and the Montreal Protocol in Environmental Sustainability

  • Ozone depletion refers to the reduction of ozone in the stratosphere, primarily caused by chlorine and bromine compounds, such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and halons
  • These compounds are used in air conditioners, refrigerators, aerosol propellants, and fire extinguishers. 
  • Ozone depletion leads to increased ultraviolet (UV) radiation reaching Earth, causing harm to living organisms, including human skin cancer, reduced phytoplankton production, and effects on aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems.
  • From 1979 to 1990, approximately 5% of the ozone layer was lost, sparking global concern.
  • In response, the Montreal Protocol was adopted, banning the use of ozone-depleting substances like CFCs and halons.

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UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
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Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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