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Environmental Issues. By Jayne Forbes. Climate change. Biodiversity - Deforestation. Animals. Air-miles - Roses from Kenya. Flying and Tourism. Waste of resources . Sustainable Organisational Behaviour. Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Policy
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Environmental Issues By Jayne Forbes
Sustainable Organisational Behaviour • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Policy • Green Audit • Green Policy • Objectives to include human rights and environmental criteria. • Issue ethical shares. • Source locally • Pay decent wages and provide good working conditions. • High levels of health and safety • Carbon offset?
Precautionary Principle • Action must be taken to avoid harm, or the threat of harm before it occurs, even when firm evidence of cause and effect relationships is unavailable. • Since all processes, materials and systems have environmental impacts, they must be regulated accordingly until sufficient evidence becomes available that there is no risk to the ecosystem. • High quality scientific information should form a central component for early detection of environmental threats. • A progressive, ever improving approach , which reduces environmental impacts should be adopted by all mega events (Olympics)
Sustainable Development Brundtland Commission (1983): • Development that "meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”. • “We do not inherit the world from our parents, but borrow it from our children” IUCN (2006)
Sustainable Buildings and Construction: • Issues to be addressed: • Design, aesthetics • Sustainable architecture • Eco friendly checklist • Vegetation • Light • Energy conservation • Energy source • Water • Waste
Aesthetics: Roger Stephens’ Graduate Centre, Leeds Univ.London MetropolitanGraduate centre.Libeskind
Design: Le Corbusier Modernist architect, 1923, Perceived as the architectural pioneer of the twentieth century whose genius lay in his ideals
Sustainable architecture The building of shelter consumes one-sixth of the world's fresh water supply, one quarter of its wood harvest, and two-fifths of its fossil fuels and manufactured materials
Quality of Environmental Space Is it • Subjective • Personal, • Cultural, • Universal? Eg Colour Favourite colour but: • red speeds the metabolism • blue slows it down Different colours stimulate different glands yellow – thyroid. Green – the colour of balance.
Buildings – Design Biodegradable Buildings Earth Stone Straw Wood
Eco-friendly checklist • Recycled and renewable materials • Low-embodied energy materials • Harvested timber • Water catchment systems • Low maintenance • Recycling of buildings • Reduction of ozone depleting and other chemicals • Preservation of natural environment • Energy efficiency • Solar orientation • Access to public transport • Bed-zed
Vegetation • Improves air quality • Humidity regulation • Ion breeding • Dust absorption • Smell masking • Softens harsh shapes • Aesthetic qualities
Roofsand walls • To protect • But Green Rooves can: • Absorb airborne toxins • Redress oxygen, ion and humidity imbalances • Reduce rainwater overload of drains • Look good.
Light Abundant, natural light A vertical farm Interior lighting, in a club
Energy Conservation • Insulation and draft proofing • Size of building • Orientation to the sun • Windows on South side
Energy Conservation cont’d • Reduce temperature by one degree (or more) • Only heat/cool rooms in use, switch off after use. • Switch off the technology if not needed.
Energy source Renewable: Collective • HEP • Wind • Tide • Solar • CHP Individual • Solar panels: PV or solar water heating. • Water • Ground source • Wood chip burner
Water A valuable, scarce resource. • Clean water • Sustainable water: • Recycle, reuse • Reduce use • Collect • Don't waste
Water • Showers, not baths • Reuse – eg bath/shower, kitchen water in the garden • Reduce use signs • Water collectors • Water meter • Aerators on taps • Water saving head on shower • Low flush/dual flush toilet • Don’t use bottled water
Waste cont’d • Food - compost • Glass bottles and jars • Plates, glasses, cutlery – reusable, not disposable. • Aluminium and steel cans • Plastic containers, newspapers • Office paper • other
Paperless events • Every 1000 forms printed is equal to a 17 kg carbon dioxide footprint in our atmosphere • The world average paper consumption per person is an estimated 56 kgs of paper each year. Approximately 28% of this is used in printing documents. • Every year, more than 1.1 billion trees are cut down in order to satisfy office printing needs around the world. • Reducing worldwide paper usage by 10% would save over 100 million trees, 100 million metric tons of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and £2.5 billion in paper costs. http://www.greenpdf.com
Food The thirty times increase in food production in last 100 years is due to massive increases in inputs of energy. Peasant farming input energy to output energy 40:1. Now mechanised 1.3:1. It takes 3 units of fossil fuel energy to produce 1 unit of grain protein. For beef or lamb protein it takes 50 units of energy.
Reducing Food waste • Portion control • Procurement policy: • local food, • fair trade • sustainable sources of meat and fish • Packaging • Planning of menus to reduce waste • Reuse • Waste
Transport Consider: • Cars, parking • Public transport: rail, tube, buses, coaches • Cycling, walking
The Office • Computers, screens, printers – switch off • Printer cartridges (40 million sold in Europe, 75% go to landfill, takes 1 litre of oil, aluminium and steel to produce), are usually refillable. Or recycle. • Paper – reduce, recycle, reuse. Don’t print unless necessary. • Travel – use virtual technology. Sustainable travel plans.
Further reading • http://www.globalurban.org/GUDMag06Vol2Iss1/Roper.htm • Agreenerfestival.com • The Green Meetings Industry Council • Bowden,C, Allen,J et al Events Management • Getz,D Events Studies:Theory, Research and Policy for Planned Events