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The Driving Forces of Environmental Change. 11. STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES. After reading this chapter, students will be able to. Explain the terms that comprise the IPAT equation.
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The Driving Forces of Environmental Change 11
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES After reading this chapter, students will be able to • Explain the terms that comprise the IPAT equation. • Identify examples that illustrate how technology can reduce or increase environmental impact. • Describe the net effect that population growth, affluence, and technological change has had on gasoline use in the United States. • Cite the reasons why firms prefer market-based incentives in environmental policy to command-and-control approaches. • Explain how personal and cultural beliefs affect environmental change. Figure CO11
The Smiths New Year’s Resolution • Inventoried all the energy and materials they used and waste they produced • More income = more consumerism • Technology also has impact • Growing income, family size, and technology choices determine consumerism • So do attitudes, values, and beliefs
I = People x Economic Activity x Environmental Impact People Economic Activity The Root Causes of Environmental Impact Impact (I) = Population (P) x Affluence (A) x Technology (T)
Solid Waste Generation • Population size • Population density • NYC fills 6,000 garbage trucks/day • 67% exported to other states!
Technology • Determines the types and quantities of resources extracted • Determines nature of waste generated • A double-edged sword. Why? Technology Recipe Capital Labor Energy Materials Information
Technology and Fuel Economy • Rising gasoline prices in 1970s and Japanese competition decreased engine size • But in the 1980s the rise of light trucks, minivans, and SUVs increased engine size!
Impact = Population x Affluence x Technology Gallons consumed = # vehicles x miles driven x gallons consumed vehicle miles driven The IPAT for Gasoline Use
How Societies Choose Technologies Figure 11.17 • Most nations use the market • Firms maximize profits by minimizing cost of production • But what about “wrong prices” and what causes them? • externalities • subsidies
Market Failures and the Environment • In 2005, gas was $2-4 • Included price to pump oil, refine it to gasoline, ship it to filling stations, and pay attendants • Also taxes paid to government • Cost did not include environmental impact • Loss of barrier islands • Pipeline leaks • Air pollution • Global climate change
Cultural Beliefs • Judeo-Christian tradition has led to Anthropocentric perspectiveof the environment. • Seeks to control nature for the purpose of satisfying human needs. • Has shaped technology for the past 200 years. • No limit to levels of human population and affluence. • Biocentric perspective holds that all living things have the right to exist. • Ecocentric view holds that entire ecosystems have a right to exist.
Market-Based Incentives?An alternative to command and control Figure 11.20 • Pollution Taxes • Tradable Permits • Cap and Trade System