1 / 34

SUSTAINABILITY

SUSTAINABILITY. & Higher Education. Sustainability Principles. In the sustainable society, nature is not subject to systematically increasing…. Increasing concentrations of substances extracted from the earth’s crust.

etoile
Download Presentation

SUSTAINABILITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SUSTAINABILITY & Higher Education

  2. Sustainability Principles In the sustainable society, nature is not subject to systematically increasing… Increasing concentrations of substances extracted from the earth’s crust Increasing concentrations of substances produced by society Degradation by physical means and… human needs are met worldwide.

  3. Sustainability requires that we focus simultaneously on systemic changes that improve health for current and future humans, build strong, secure and thriving communities, provide economic opportunity for all by restoring and preserving the integrity of the life support system.

  4. Why Sustainability Now? We are the first generation capable of determining the habitability of the planet for humans and other species.  

  5. life supporting resources declining consumption of life supporting resources rising Global Perspective

  6. Social Well-being Flourishing Environment Strong Economy Sustainable Society

  7. Ice Cores Preserve the History of Atmospheric CO2 The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has never been above 300 ppm for at least the last 430,000 years (and probably not for the last 30 million years!)

  8. Computer models of climate match the observations only when natural and human “forcings” are included in the models. The human forcings are responsible for most of the rapid warming 1970-2000.

  9. Coastal glaciers are retreating Muir Glacier, Alaska, 1941-2004 August 1941 August 2004 NSIDC/WDC for Glaciology, Boulder, compiler. 2002, updated 2006. Online glacier photograph database. Boulder, CO: National Snow and Ice Data Center.

  10. Soon Americans will have to settle for a Non-Glacier National Park.

  11. Greenland ice Melting 1992, 2002, and 2005 Greenland summer surface melting, 1992-2005 1992 2002 2005 In 1992 scientists measured this amount of melting in Greenland as indicated by red areas on the map Ten years later, in 2002, the melting was much worse And in 2005, it accelerated dramatically yet again Source: ACIA, 2004 and CIRES, 2005

  12. Shrinking mountain glaciers The famous snows of Kilimanjaro have been shrinking rapidly in recent decades and are nearly gone. This is particularly significant because high-elevation ice and snow near the equator does not vary much except when climate is changing globally. The decline between 1912 and 2000 was 81%

  13. 2011 Mississippi Floods

  14. Combining the ice-core data and the direct measurements from Mauna Loa yields a curve strikingly similar to the curve that describes…

  15. From Fossil powered Take, make, waste Living off nature’s capital Market as master Loss of cultural & biological diversity Individual centered To Solar powered Cyclical production Living off nature’s income Market as servant Increased cultural & biological diversity Community centered Global Transition

  16. Reversing Climate Disruption Energy Efficiency Renewable Energy wind, solar, geothermal, hydro Land use & transportation higher density, less auto dependence alternative fuels for vehicles “Circular” economy Sustainable/local agriculture Carbon sequestration

  17. Higher Education’s Importance to Sustainability • Influences current & future leaders & professionals • Deeply influences K-12 education • Dedicated to new ideas, exploration and experimentation • Has critical mass & diversity of skills necessary • Crucial but overlooked leverage point in transition to sustainability

  18. Opportunity in Higher Education • 4,096 U.S. Colleges and Universities1 • 14.8 million students1 • $277 billion annual expenditures; 2.8% of the GDP1 • Higher education expenditures greater than the GDP of all but 25 countries in the world2 • 1 From: 2001 Digest of Education Statistics, US Dept. of Education. • 2 From: 2001 CIA World Factbook and Dowling, Mike., "Interactive Table of World Nations," available from http://www.mrdowling.com/800nations.html; Internet; updated Friday, June 29, 2001

  19. Higher Education Modeling Sustainabilityas a Fully Integrated Community

  20. Administrators Faculty Operations & facilities managers Students Trustees Staff Higher Ed Associations Alumni Parents of students Communities Accreditation orgs. Future Employers Funders Professionals Future Generations World cultures Biosphere & all its species Higher Education Stakeholders

  21. American College & University Presidents Climate Commitment • Voluntary effort ~ to Mayor’s Climate Agreement • Organized by AASHE, Second Nature & ecoAmerica • Commit to 3 actions • Plan within 2 years to achieve climate neutrality • GHG Inventory • Operations, Education & Research • Adoption of select emission reduction measures • Public reporting on plans and progress thru AASHE www.presidentsclimatecommitment.org

  22. End of Part I

  23. Sustainability Principles In the sustainable society, nature is not subject to systematically increasing… Increasing concentrations of substances extracted from the earth’s crust Increasing concentrations of substances produced by society Degradation by physical means and… human needs are met worldwide. The Natural Step guiding principles

  24. What is Biomimicry? • A science that studies nature's best ideas and then imitates these designs and processes to solve human problems. • The core idea is that nature, imaginative by necessity, has already solved many of the problems we are grappling with. • Animals, plants, and microbes are the consummate engineers. They have found what works, what is appropriate, and most important, what lasts here on Earth. 1 • 1 From: An Interview with Janine Benyus, 2003 • .

  25. Material Inspirations Abalone mussel nacre (mother of pearl coating) Hard coatings-for windshields and bodies of solar cars, airplanes, anything that needs to be lightweight but fracture-resistant. A crystalline coating self-assembles in perfect precision atop protein templates. In the abalone, it's a 3-D masterpiece, tougher than anything we can manufacture! 1 1 From: www.biomimicry.net

  26. Natural Capitalism • Dramatically increase productivity of natural resources • Shift to biologically inspired production models • Move to solutions-based business model • Value as flow of services, e.g., illumination not lightbulbs • Reinvest in natural capital

  27. End of Part II

More Related