1 Introduction
1 Introduction
OBJECTIVES:
i. understand the global environment system
ii. understand the issues & challenges of pollution management
iii. Awareness of current environmental problems
iv. Sustainability in process industries
CONTENTS:
1.1 Interactive Global Environment Systems
1.2 Historical Perspective of Environmental Pollution
1.3 Global Environmental Issues
1.4 Engineering & the Environment
1.5 Sustainable Industrial Production
Reference: http://www.anthropocene.info 3
Some Relevant Definitions
Environment
Surroundings in which an organisation operates, including air, water, land, natural
resources, flora, fauna, communities and their interrelation.
Pollution
Can be defined as an undesirable change in the physical, chemical or biological
characteristics of the air, water and land that can harmfully affect the health,
survival or activities of humans or other living organisms
Slide No. 3
Water-Air-Land Interactions
Slide No. 5
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
General:
Living conditions in urban areas horrify reform minded commissions in
London in the 1840s and America in the 1850s and 60s. Progress is slow
but the common interest in pure drinking water and sanitation is spurred by
epidemics of typhoid and cholera.
Water pollution carried disease, but no one knew exactly why until the
1880s. Some concerned reformers didn't wait for exact knowledge: John
Snow, a London physician, traced a part of the cholera epidemic to a
contaminated water pump in 1855.
Smog episodes begin killing residents of large cities like London.
Demands for conservation of wilderness areas accelerate with the felling of
an enormous redwood, called the "Mother of the Forest" in 1851. The
outrage over the act leads to calls for a national park system.
Contributing factors:
Urbanisation
Population growth
Industrialisation
Transport systems
Slide No. 9
Example - Environmental Impacts of Urbanisation
Urban component
Slide No. 10
Example : Environmental side effects of urban sprawl
Increasing run-off:
flooding
stream bank erosion
degrading water quality
Decreased infiltration:
depletion of water resources
land subsistence
saltwater intrusion
An area of inner-city
Baltimore
An area of suburbia
Baltimore
Slide No. 12
Population growth map
Original data comes from the United Nations Population Division Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision.
Slide No. 13
Waste Cycle Industrialized Society
Slide No. 14
Map of World
The denial phase occurred at the end of the last century where the responsibility of
waste disposal has with the local authorities who either did the work themselves or
contract it out to the private sector.
The second phase is also commonly termed the 'end of pipe' (EOP) treatment.
Environmental awareness was little heard of until the 1960s when Rachel Censons
'The Silent Spring' sort of set off the green history of the world. By the middle of the
1970s guidelines for waste management were included in the UN's environmental
policy. The approval taken towards environmental protection is to treat the wastes
after it has been produced. Such an approach frequently do not actually eliminate the
wastes but simply transfer it form one medium to another often in highly diluted form
and frequently results in secondary environmental impacts
Slide No. 20
Phases of management of environmental crises
The third phase involving waste recycling and resource recovery system
from the realisation that regulation and control could not cope with the ever
increasing amounts of wastes. The energy also made the world woke up to
the fact that some resources are not unlimited. However recycling and
recovery of wastes is not always economical and practical.
Slide No. 21
GLOBAL
ENVIRONMENTAL
ISSUES
Slide No. 22
Environmental Problems of the 21st Century
The most important environmental problems of the next 100 years as seen by 200
experts and scientists of the UN Environmental Programme (UNEP)
Climate change 51
Water scarcity 29
Deforestation/desertification 28
Water pollution 28
Loss of biodiversity 23
Waste dumps 20
Air pollution 20
Soil erosion 18
Disruption of ecosystems 17
Chemical pollution 16
Urbanisation 16
Hole in ozone layer 15
Energy consumption 15
Exhaustion of natural resources 11
Collapse of biochemical cycle 11
Industrial emissions 10
Natural disasters 7
Introduction of exotic species 6
Gene technology 6
Marine pollution 6
Over-fishing 5
Change of sea currents 5
Persistant organic polluters 4
El Nino 3
Rise of sea level 3
0 20 40 60 80 100
Percentage
Slide No. 23
Major Problems Highlighted in Global
Environment Outlook, Geo-4
This problem is a global Priority, Water will become scarcer. Water quality is declining too,
but the report finds a remarkable Irrigation already takes 70% of polluted by microbial pathogens
lack of urgency, and a woefully available water, yet meeting and excessive nutrients. Globally,
inadequate global response. Several reducing global goals on hunger will contaminated water remains the
highly polluting countries have mean doubling food production by greatest single cause of human
refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol. 2050. Fresh water is declining by disease and death.
Some industrial sectors that were 2050 water use will rise by 50% in
unfavourable to the Protocol developing countries and 18% in the
managed successfully to undermine developed world. The escalating Fish
the political will to ratify it, says burden of water demand will Consumption more than tripled
Geo-4 become intolerable in water-scarce since 1961 to 2001. Catches have
countries stagnated or slowly declined
since the 1980s. There is excess
fishing capacity, 250% more than
Biodiversity is needed to catch the oceans
sustainable production.
Current biodiversity changes are the fastest in human history. Species are
becoming extinct 100 times faster than the rate shown in the fossil record.
Over 30% of amphibians, 23% of mammals and 12% of birds are threatened. Source: The Star, 12th Nov 2007
Slide No. 28
Engineering
and the
Environment
Slide No. 31
Social Sciences Engineering Science Humanities and Social Sciences
pollutant Physical
Human Land used, Transport ,chemical Valuation Economic,
pollutant resource & & biological Of Culture,
& economic consumption transformation changes environment value, etc
activity & emissions In air, water in the changes
& soil environment
Technology
development
Political
process
Slide No. 34
Some examples of environmental changes from human activities
Slide No. 33
Sources of Environment Impacts
1. Materials Selection
Choices of the materials will directly affect the environment
2. Manufacturing Processes
Method that turn raw into finished material and product
3. Energy Use
Most important ( quantities & type of energy uses directly affect
environment quality)
Slide No. 35
Source: Rubin 5.6 Introduction to engineering & environment
Basic Engineering Principles
Slide No. 31
Paradigm shifts: From MDGs to SDGs
Gap with MDGs
MDGs specify an outcome
but do not set out the process
which would make it
possible to realize the
objectives.
MDGs are stipulated without
any reference to initial
conditions, but where a
country gets to in any given
time horizon depends at
least, in part, on where it
starts out from.
Goals, targets and indicators
were not consistent with each
other, causing problem in the
issue of measurement and
ownership.
Ownership conflict due to
contradiction between global
goals and national priorities.
Technological and methodological development in the field of product, process, service and
management which meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs for its future orientation of the economical, ecological and
social improvement
Possible Strategies
Slide No. 41
So what is
Environmental
Management?
Slide No. 3
Some Definitions of Environmental Management (EM)
1. Ad hoc approach
2. Problem-solving approach
3. Systems approach
4. Regional approach
5. Specialist discipline approach
6. Strategic environmental approach
7. Voluntary sector approach
8. Commercial approach
9. Political economy or political ecology approach
10. Human ecology approach