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13-1 What Are the Major Population Trends and Problems in Urban Areas? . Concept 13-1 Urbanization continues to increase steadily, and most cities are unsustainable because of high levels of resource use, waste, as well as pollution and poverty.. Half of the World's People Live in Urban Areas (1).
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1. Chapter 13Urbanization and Solid and Hazardous Waste
2. 13-1 What Are the Major Population Trends and Problems in Urban Areas? Concept 13-1 Urbanization continues to increase steadily, and most cities are unsustainable because of high levels of resource use, waste, as well as pollution and poverty.
3. Half of the World’s People Live in Urban Areas (1) Urbanization
Creation and growth of urban and suburban areas
Percentage of people who live in such areas
Urban growth
Rate of increase of urban populations
Immigration from rural areas
Pushed from rural areas to urban areas
Pulled to urban areas from rural areas
4. Half of the World’s People Live in Urban Areas (2) Push factors
Poverty
Lack of land to grow food
Declining labor market in agriculture
War, famine, conflicts
Pull factors
Jobs, food, housing
Education
Health care
5. Half of the World’s People Live in Urban Areas (3) Four major trends
Proportion of global population living in urban areas is increasing
Number and size of urban areas is mushrooming
Megacities, hypercities
Urban growth slower in developed countries
Poverty is becoming increasingly urbanized; mostly in less-developed countries
6. Global Outlook: Satellite Image of Major Urban Areas Throughout the World
7. Case Study: Urbanization in the United States (1) Four phases between 1800 and 2008
Migration from rural areas to large central cities
Migration from large central cities to suburbs and smaller cities
Migration from North and East to South and West
Migration from cities and suburbs to developed areas outside the suburbs = exurbs
Urbanization went from 5% to 79%
8. Case Study: Urbanization in the United States (2) Environmental problems decreasing
Better working and housing
Better water and sanitation
Better health care
Older cities
Deteriorating services
Aging infrastructures
U.S. $2.2 trillion behind in infrastructure maintenance
9. Urban Sprawl Gobbles Up the Countryside Urban sprawl
Low-density development at edges of cities/towns
Contributing factors to urban sprawl in the U.S.
Ample land
Low-cost gasoline; highways
Tax laws encouraged home ownership
State and local zoning laws
Multiple political jurisdictions
10. Urban Areas in North America
11. Natural Capital Degradation: Urban Sprawl
12. U.S. Megalopolis of Bowash
13. Urbanization Has Advantages (1) Centers of:
Economic development
Innovation
Education
Technological advances
Jobs
Industry, commerce, transportation
14. Urbanization Has Advantages (2) Urban residents tend to have
Longer lives
Lower infant mortality
Better medical care
Better social services
More recycling programs
Concentrating people in cities can help preserve biodiversity in rural areas
15. Urbanization Has Disadvantages (1) Huge ecological footprints
Lack vegetation
Water problems
16. Urbanization Has Disadvantages (2) Concentrate pollution and health problems
Excessive noise
Different climate and experience light pollution
17. Natural Capital Degradation: Urban Areas Rarely Are Sustainable Systems
19. Life Is a Desperate Struggle for the Urban Poor in Developing Countries Slums
Squatter settlements/shantytowns
Terrible living conditions
Lack basic water and sanitation
High levels of pollution
What can governments do to help?
20. Case Study: Mexico City Urban area in crisis
Severe air pollution
Water pollution
50% Unemployment
Deafening noise
Overcrowding
Traffic congestion
Inadequate public transportation
1/3 live in slums (barrios) or squatter settlements
What progress is being made?
21. 13-2 How Does Transportation Affect Urban Environmental Impacts? Concept 13-2 In some countries, many people live in widely dispersed urban areas and depend mostly on motor vehicles for their transportation, which greatly expands their ecological footprints.
22. Cities Can Grow Outward or Upward Compact cities
Hong Kong, China
Tokyo, Japan
Mass transit
Dispersed cities
U.S. and Canada
Car-centered cities
23. Motor Vehicles Have Advantages and Disadvantages (1) Advantages
Mobility and convenience
Jobs in
Production and repair of vehicles
Supplying fuel
Building roads
Status symbol
24. Motor Vehicles Have Advantages and Disadvantages (2) Disadvantages
Accidents: 1.2 million per year, 15 million injured
Kill 50 million animals per year
Largest source of outdoor air pollution
Helped create urban sprawl
Traffic congestion
25. Reducing Automobile Use Is Not Easy, but It Can Be Done (1) Full-cost pricing: high gasoline taxes
Educate consumers first
Use funds for mass transit
Opposition from car owners and industry
Lack of good public transit is a problem
Rapid mass transit
Difficult to pass in the United States
Strong public opposition
Dispersed nature of the U.S.
26. Reducing Automobile Use Is Not Easy, but It Can Be Done (2) Raise parking fees
Tolls on roads, tunnels, and bridges into major cities
Charge a fee to drive into a major city
Car-sharing
27. It is Difficult to Reduce Automobile Use (3) Bicycles
Heavy-rail systems
Light-rail systems
Buses
Rapid-rail system between urban areas
28. Trade-Offs: Bicycles
29. Trade-Offs: Mass Transit Rail
30. Trade-Offs: Buses
31. Trade-Offs: Rapid Rail
32. 13-3 How Can Cities Become More Sustainable and Livable? Concept 13-3A Urban land-use planning can reduce uncontrolled sprawl and slow the resulting degradation of air, water, land, biodiversity, and other natural resources.
Concept 13-3B An ecocity allows people to choose walking, biking, or mass transit for most transportation needs; to recycle or reuse most of their wastes; to grow much of their food; and protect biodiversity by preserving surrounding land.
33. Smart Growth Works (1) Smart growth
Reduces dependence on cars
Controls and directs sprawl
Cuts wasteful resource
Uses zoning laws to channel growth
34. Smart Growth Works (2) Curitiba, Brazil
China: stand on urban sprawl
Europe: compact cities
35. Solutions: Smart Growth Tools
36. The Ecocity Concept: Cities for People Not Cars Ecocities or green cities
Build and redesign for people
Use renewable energy resources
Recycle and purify water
Use energy and matter resources efficiently
Prevent pollution and reduce waste
Recycle, reuse and compost municipal waste
Protect and support biodiversity
Urban gardens; farmers markets
Zoning and other tools for sustainability
37. Case Study: The Ecocity Concept in Curitiba, Brazil Ecocity, green city: Curitiba, Brazil
Bus system: cars banned in certain areas
Housing and industrial parks
Recycling of materials
Helping the poor
New challenges
38. 13-4 What Are Solid Waste and Hazardous Waste, and Why Are They Problems? Concept 13-4 Solid waste contributes to pollution and represents the unnecessary consumption of resources; hazardous waste contributes to pollution, natural capital degradation, and human health problems.
39. We Throw Away Huge Amounts of Useful Things and Hazardous Materials (1) Solid waste
Industrial solid waste
Mines, farms, industries
Municipal solid waste (MSW)
Trash
Hazardous waste (toxic waste)
Threatens human health of the environment
Organic compounds
Toxic heavy metals
Radioactive waste
40. We Throw Away Huge Amounts of Useful Things and Hazardous Materials (2) 80–90% of hazardous wastes produced by developed countries
Why reduce solid wastes?
ľ of the materials are an unnecessary waste of the earth's resources
Huge amounts of air pollution, greenhouse gases, and water pollution
41. Case Study: Solid Waste in the United States Leader in solid waste problem
What is thrown away?
Leader in trash production, by weight, per person
Recycling is helping
42. What Harmful Chemicals Are in Your Home?
43. Electronic Waste is a Growing Problem (1) Electronic waste, e-waste: fastest growing solid waste problem
Composition includes
High-quality plastics
Valuable metals
Toxic and hazardous pollutants
44. Electronic Waste is a Growing Problem (2) Shipped to other countries
What happens in China?
International Basel Convention
Bans transferring hazardous wastes from developed countries to developing countries
Not signed by the United States
European Union
Cradle-to-grave approach
45. Electronic Waste is a Growing Problem (3) What should be done?
Recycle
E-cycle
Reuse
Prevention approach: remove the toxic materials
46. 13-5 What Should We Do With Solid Waste? Concept 13-5A A sustainable approach to solid waste is first to reduce it, then to reuse or recycle it, and finally to safely dispose of what is left.
Concept 13-5B Technologies for burning and burying solid wastes are well developed, but burning contributes to pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, and buried wastes eventually contribute to the pollution and degradation of land and water resources.
47. We Can Burn or Bury Solid Waste or Produce Less of It Waste Management
Reduce harm, but not amounts
Waste Reduction
Use less and focus on reuse, recycle, compost
Integrated waste management
Uses a variety of strategies
48. Integrated Waste Management: Priorities for Dealing with Solid Waste
49. We Can Cut Solid Wastes by Reducing, Reusing, and Recycling (1) Waste reduction is based on
Reduce
Reuse
Recycle
50. We Can Cut Solid Wastes by Reducing, Reusing, and Recycling (2) Six strategies:
Redesign manufacturing processes and products to use less material and energy
Develop products that are easy to repair, reuse, remanufacture, compost, or recycle
Eliminate or reduce unnecessary packaging
Use fee-per-bag waste collection systems
Establish cradle-to grave responsibility
Restructure urban transportation systems
51. What Can You Do? Solid Waste
52. Reuse: Important Way to Reduce Solid Waste, Pollution and to Save Money Reuse: clean and use materials over and over
Downside of reuse in developing countries
Salvaging poor exposed to toxins
Flea markets, yard sales, second-hand stores, eBay, Craigslist, freecycle.org
Rechargeable batteries
53. Case Study: Use of Refillable Containers Reuse and recycle
Refillable glass beverage bottles
Refillable soft drink bottles made of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic
Bottle deposits create jobs and reduce litter and landfill amounts
Paper, plastic, or reusable cloth bags
Pros
Cons
54. What Can You Do? Reuse
55. There Are Two Types of Recycling (1) Primary, closed-loop recycling
Materials recycled into same type: aluminum cans
Secondary recycling
Materials converted to other products: tires
Types of wastes that can be recycled
Preconsumer: internal waste
Postconsumer: external waste
56. There Are Two Types of Recycling (2) Do items actually get recycled?
What are the numbers?
57. We Can Mix or Separate Household Solid Wastes for Recycling Materials-recovery facilities (MRFs)
Can encourage increased trash production
Source separation
Pay-as-you-throw
Fee-per-bag
Which program is more cost effective?
Which is friendlier to the environment?
58. Science Focus: Bioplastics (1) Plastics from soybeans: not a new concept
Key to bioplastics: catalysts that speed reactions
Sources
Corn
Soy
Sugarcane
59. Science Focus: Bioplastics (2) Sources cont…
Switchgrass
Chicken feathers
Some garbage
CO2 from coal-burning plant emissions
Benefits: lighter, stronger, cheaper, and biodegradable
60. Case Study: Recycling Plastics (1) Plastics: composed of resins created from oil and natural gas
Most containers discarded: 4% recycled
Litter: beaches, oceans
Kills wildlife
Gets into food chain and seafood
61. Case Study: Recycling Plastics (2) Low plastic recycling rate
Hard to isolate one type of plastic
Low yields of plastic
Cheaper to make it new
62. We Can Copy Nature and Recycle Biodegradable Solid Wastes Composting
Individual
Municipal
Benefits
63. Recycling Has Advantages and Disadvantages Advantages
Disadvantages
64. Trade-Offs: Recycling
65. We Can Encourage Reuse and Recycling (1) What hinders reuse and recycling?
Market prices don’t include harmful costs associated with production, use, discarding
Recycling industries get less favorable government treatment than large industries do
Prices for recycled materials fluctuate
66. We Can Encourage Reuse and Recycling (2) Encourage reuse and recycling
Government
Increase subsidies and tax breaks for using such products
Decrease subsidies and tax breaks for making items from virgin resources
Fee-per-bag collection
New laws
Citizen pressure
67. Burning Solid Waste Has Advantages and Disadvantages Waste-to-energy incinerators
600 Globally
Most in Great Britain
Advantages
Disadvantages
68. Solutions: A Waste-to-Energy Incinerator with Pollution Controls
71. Trade-Offs: Incineration
72. Burying Solid Waste Has Advantages and Disadvantages Open dumps
Widely used in less-developed countries
Rare in developed countries
Sanitary landfills
73. Solutions: State-of-the-Art Sanitary Landfill
76. Trade-Offs: Sanitary Landfills
77. 13-6 How Should We Deal with Hazardous Waste? Concept 13-6 A sustainable approach to hazardous waste is first to produce less of it, then to reuse or recycle it, then to convert it to less hazardous materials, and finally to safely store what is left.
78. We Can Use Integrated Management of Hazardous Waste Integrated management of hazardous wastes
Produce less
Convert to less hazardous substances
Rest in long-term safe storage
Increased use for postconsumer hazardous waste
79. Integrated Hazardous Waste Management 13-2013-20
80. We Can Detoxify Hazardous Wastes Collect and then detoxify
Physical methods
Chemical methods
Bioremediation
Phytoremediation
Incineration
81. We Can Store Some Forms of Hazardous Waste (1) Burial on land or long-term storage
Last resort only
Deep-well disposal
64% of hazardous liquid wastes in the U.S.
82. Trade-Offs: Deep-Well Disposal
83. We Can Store Some Forms of Hazardous Waste (2) Surface impoundments
Lined ponds or pits
Secure hazardous landfills
84. Trade-Offs Surface Impoundments
85. Solutions: Secure Hazardous Waste Landfill
87. What Can You Do? Hazardous Waste
88. Case Study: Hazardous Waste Regulation in the United States (1) 1976: Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
EPA sets standards and gives permits
Cradle to grave
Covers only 5% of hazardous wastes
89. Case Study: Hazardous Waste Regulation in the United States (2) 1980: Comprehensive Environmental, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA)
National Priorities List
2010: 1300 sites, 340 sites cleaned so far
Pace of cleanup has slowed
Superfund is broke
Laws encouraging the cleanup of brownfields
90. 13-7 How Can We Make the Transition to a More Sustainable Low-Waste Society? Concept 13-7 Shifting to a low-waste society will require individuals and businesses to reduce resource use and to reuse and recycle more of their wastes at local, national, and global levels.
91. Grassroots Action Has Led to Better Solid and Hazardous Waste Management “Not in my backyard”
Produce less waste
“Not in anyone’s backyard”
“Not on planet Earth”
Environmental Justice
Everyone is entitled to protection from environmental hazards
Discrimination
92. International Treaties Have Reduced Hazardous Waste (1) Basel Convention
1992: in effect
1995 amendment: bans all transfers of hazardous wastes from industrialized countries to less-developed countries
2009: Ratified by 195 countries, but not the United States
93. International Treaties Have Reduced Hazardous Waste (2) 2000: Delegates from 122 countries completed a global treaty
Control 12 persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
“Dirty dozen”
DDT, PCBs, dioxins
Everyone on earth has POPs in blood
2000: Swedish Parliament law
By 2020 ban all chemicals that are persistent and can accumulate in living tissue
94. We Can Make the Transition to Low-Waste Societies Norway, Austria, and the Netherlands
Committed to reduce resource waste by 75%
East Hampton, NY, U.S.
Reduced solid waste by 85%
Follow guidelines to prevent pollution and reduce waste
95. Case Study: Industrial Ecosystems: Copying Nature Biomimicry: using natural principles to solve human problems
Nature: wastes of one organism are nutrients for another; apply to industry
Ecoindustrial parks
Two major steps of biomimicry
Observe how natural systems respond
Apply to human industrial systems
96. Industrial Ecosystem in Denmark
98. Three Big Ideas Most expanding urban areas are unsustainable with their large and growing ecological footprints and high levels of poverty, but most urban areas can be made more sustainable and livable.
99. Three Big Ideas The order of priorities for dealing with solid and hazardous wastes should be to produces less of them, reuse and recycle as much waste as possible, convert hazardous material to less hazardous material, and safely store or dispose of what is left.
We need to view solid wastes as wasted resources and hazardous wastes as materials that we should not be producing in the first place.