Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 13

GE ES – ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

Module 1 – Introduction to Environmental Science

Prepared by:
ENGR. KARLA ANN D. PICOY
Faculty, Department of Civil Engineering

Module 1 - Introduction 1
This module has the following sections and corresponding icons:

It shows the specific topic of the


Title
module.

The topics in this module are


Overview
included in this section.

A brief debate on the lectures is


given in this section. It helps you
Lecture Proper
explore new ideas and capabilities.

It involves questions or an
Practice Problems expression that sets out the
concepts and wordings that you
learned from real-life
circumstances.
Assessment It is a job aimed at evaluating your
mastery in acquiring learning skills.

In this segment you will improve


( Supplementary your awareness or experience
Knowledge through the lectures as an
additional practice.

Answer Key This contains answers to all


activities in the module.

This is a list of all sources that this


References module uses for creation.

Module 1 - Introduction 2
Overview:

Environmental science is the study of the interaction of humans with the natural
environment. Environmental science and the issues that it studies are complex and
interdisciplinary. It includes concepts and ideas from multiple fields of study.
In this module, you will study about the importance of environmental science and
environment. You will also study the major environmental problems and its causes.

Course Description:
The course is about the environmental classification, laws issues and other factors that
affect the natural environment. It is also about issues on safety and safety precautions.

Course Outcomes:
After completing the module, you must be able to:
1. Have adequate information/knowledge of the impact/implications of the built environment
to the natural environment.

Intended Learning Outcomes:


At the end of this module, you are expected to:
1. Enumerate the three principles of sustainability
2. Know how our ecological footprints affects the Earth
3. Identify some environmental problems
4. Identify Environmentally Sustainable Society

Time Frame:
This module covers two weeks in the course syllabus.

Module 1 - Introduction 3
LESSON
1.1
What is Environmental Science

Environmental Science is the study of the interaction of humans with the natural environment.
It is an interdisciplinary study of how humans interact with the living and nonliving parts
of their environment.
It integrates information and ideas from the natural sciences such as biology, chemistry,
geology; the social sciences such as geography, economics and political science; and the
humanities such as philosophy and ethics.
Environmental science and the issues that it studies are complex and interdisciplinary. It
includes concepts and ideas from multiple fields of study. Decisions have impacts in all these
fields of study.

Source: Principles of Environmental Science, Cunningham, 2005.


Example:
A community decides to use coal for electricity, as it is the cheapest source available.
(Economics)
The coal must be mined from under the soil. (Geology)
The coal must be transported to the population center by road or rail. (Engineering)
When it is burned at a power plant, air pollution is released. Some of that pollution is converted
to acid in the atmosphere. (Chemistry)
This falls as acid rain somewhere downwind. (Meteorology)
The acid stresses plants by affecting their nutrient absorption. (Ecology)
Laws are passed requiring the plant to install pollution scrubbers. (Politics)

Module 1 - Introduction 4
The environment includes all conditions that surround living organisms:
1. Climate
2. Air and water quality
3. Soil and landforms
4. Presence of other living organisms
5. Energy

Goals of Environmental Science:


1. To learn how life on Earth has survived and thrived;
2. To understand how we interact with the environment; and
3. To find ways to deal with environmental problems and live more sustainably.

Ecology – the biological science that studies how organisms, or living things, interact with one
another and with their environment.
Every organism is a member of a certain species, a group of organisms that have a unique set
of characteristics that distinguish them from other organisms.
An Ecosystem is a set of organisms within a defined area or volume that interact with one
another and with their environment of nonliving matter and energy.
Example: a forest ecosystem consists of plants, animals, and tiny micro-organisms that
decompose organic materials and recycle their chemicals, all interacting with one another with
one another and with solar energy and the chemicals in the forest’s air, water, and soil

Three Principles of Sustainability:


1. Reliance on solar energy: The sun warms the planet and provides energy that plants
use to produce nutrients, the chemicals necessary for life. The energy contained in the
sun’s radiation is called solar energy. Without the sun, life would not exist. It also powers
indirect forms of solar energy such as wind and flowing water.

2. Biodiversity: Biodiversity (biological diversity) is the astounding variety of different


organisms, the natural systems in which they exist and interact (such as deserts,
grasslands, forests and oceans), the natural services that these organisms and living
systems provide free of charge (such as renewal of the topsoil that makes up the top layer
of the earth’s crust, pest control, and air and water purification).

Biodiversity also provides countless ways for life to adapt to changing environmental
conditions. With-out it, most life forms would have been wiped out long ago.

3. Chemical cycling: Nutrient or chemical cycling is the circulation of chemicals from the
environment (mostly from soil and water) through organisms and back to the environment
is necessary for life. Natural processes keep the cycle going, and the earth receives no
new supplies of chemicals. Thus, for life to sustain itself, these chemicals must cycle in
this way indefinitely. Without chemical cycling, there would be no air, no water, no soil,
no food, and no life.

Module 1 - Introduction 5
Major Environmental Problems:
1. Resource Depletion

Natural capital – the natural resources and natural services that keep us and other forms
of life alive and support human economies.
A great deal of natural resources are needed to support the human population (~7
billion).
Renewable resources can be replenished within a human lifetime.
Ex. Timber, water, air, soil, plants and wind.
The supply of nonrenewable resources is replenished extremely slowly, if at all. These
can be used up.
Ex. Coal, oil, minerals.
Natural services are processes in nature such as purification of air and water and
renewal of topsoil, which support life and human economies.
Nutrient cycling an important natural service recycles chemicals needed by organisms
from the environment (mostly from soil and water) through those organisms and back to
the environment.
Ex.

Organic matter Dead organic


in animals matter

Organic matter
Decomposition
in plants

Inorganic matter
in the soil

2. Pollution

Pollution is a degradation or an undesired change in air, water, or soil that affects the
health of living things.
Biodegradable pollution will break down naturally over time.
Nondegradable pollution does not break down.

3. Loss of Biodiversity

The number of species on the Earth is unknown, but estimated to be in the tens of millions.
Biodiversity is the number of different species present in one specific ecosystem.
Extinction, or the complete loss of a species, is a natural event that can be accelerated by human
actions.

Module 1 - Introduction 6
LESSON
1.2
Environmental Ethics

Environmental ethics is the discipline that studies the moral relationship of human beings to
the environment.
What is the value of the environment?
What moral responsibility do we have in dealing with the major environmental problems that
result from our resource consumption?
Which needs should be given the highest priority in our decision making?

Two main categories of ethics have emerged in human culture in modern history.
1. Anthropocentrism literally means “human-centered”.

This set of ethics protects and promotes of human interests or well-being at the
expense of all other factors.
Often places an emphasis on short-term benefits while disregarding long-term
consequences.

Module 1 - Introduction 7
2. Ecocentrists believe that nature deserves to exist for its own sake regardless of degree
of usefulness to humans.

The preservation of ecosystems or other living things takes priority over human
needs.

Example: Hetch Hetchy Debate


The debate about whether to build a dam in the Hetch Hetchy valley was one of the first big
debates between these two philosophies.

 Anthropocentrists argued that San Francisco needed the water, and this was by far the
most viable option.
 Ecocentrists argued that this violated the very purpose of the Federal Parks were to be
preserved ecosystems – untouched by human hands.
 The dam was eventually constructed.

Module 1 - Introduction 8
 The justification for building it was best stated by Gifford Pinochet, the first man in charge
of the U.S. Forest Service.
"Where conflicting interests must be reconciled, the question shall always be
answered from the standpoint of the greatest good of the greatest number in
the long run.“
 This philosophy, called resource conservationism, was also advocated by Teddy
Roosevelt.

The Tragedy of the Commons


A great deal of progress has been made since the birth of modern environmentalism, but many
debates still rage on.
An ecologist named Garrett Hardin wrote an essay called “The Tragedy of the Commons”,
describing the source of environmental problems as a conflict:
Short-term interests of individuals versus…
Long-term interests of civilization and the Earth itself

Module 1 - Introduction 9
Example: A small village consists mostly of farmers that raise and sell sheep at a nearby city.
The only place for the sheep to graze is a commons in the center of the village.

A commons is an area that belongs to no individual; it is shared by the entire society.


Likely outcome: Villagers obtain as many sheep as possible, allow to graze in the commons.
Maximize short-term financial gain.
What if the commons was instead divided into sections that was owned by each villager?
Because the land is owned, individuals are much more likely to plan and use it for the long-term.

The Tragedy of the Commons describes the likeliness of a commons area being exploited for
short-term economic gain.
Modern examples include the atmosphere and oceans.

Module 1 - Introduction 10
How are our Ecological footprints affecting the Earth?
An ecological footprint is one measurement of a person’s resource use.
Includes the amount of space needed to support each person in a nation, including forests,
farms, and cities.
Ecological Footprint the amount of biologically productive land and water needed to supply a
person or a country with the renewable resources that they need and to absorb and recycle the
wastes and pollution produced by such resource use.
The per capita ecological footprint is the average ecological footprint of an individual in a
given country or area.
Developed countries have a much larger footprint, reflecting a much larger use of resources.
If a country’s TEF is larger than its current biological capacity to replenish its renewable
resources and absorb the resulting wastes and pollution, it is said to have ecological deficit.
Ecological Footprint Comparison

Sustainability is when human needs are met so that the population can survive indefinitely.
“Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to
meet their own needs.” Brundtland Commission, 1987
It is the ability to meet current human need for natural resources without compromising the needs
of future generations
The Earth is a closed system, meaning nothing enters or leaves the Earth in large quantities is
heat. Resources are limited, but the population continues to increase. Wastes do not go away.

Module 1 - Introduction 11
LESSON Major causes of the
1.3 environmental problems:
1. Population growth
- Exponential growth occurs when a quantity such as human population increases at a
fixed percentage per unit of time, such as 2% per year.
- Human population has been growing exponentially, the world’s people consume vast
amount of food, water, raw material and energy
- Humans also produced huge amounts of pollution and wastes in the process.

2. Wasteful and unsustainable resource use


- The lifestyles of many consumers in more-developed countries and in less-developed
countries are built upon growing affluence, or wealth, which results in high level
consumption and unnecessary waste of resources.
-
3. Poverty
- A condition in which people are unable to fulfill their basic needs for adequate food,
water shelter, healthcare, and education.
- The daily lives of the world’s poorest people are focused on getting enough food,
water, and cooking and heating fuel to survive.
- Desperate for short term survival, some of these individuals unintentionally degrade
forests, soils, grasslands, fisheries, and wildlife at an ever-increasing rate.
- Does not have the luxury of worrying about long term environmental quality and
sustainability.

4. Failure to include in their market prices the harmful environmental costs of goods and
services
- Ex. Fishing companies pay the costs of catching fish but do not pay for the depletion
of fish stocks
- Timber companies pay the cost of clear-cutting forests but do not pay for the resulting
environmental degradation and loss of wildlife habitat.
- The primary goal of company is to maximize profits for its owners or stockholders,
which is how capitalism works.
- Consumers have no effective way to evaluate the harmful effects, on their own health
and on the earth’s life-support systems, of producing and using these goods and
services.

Practice Problems
Essay Writing: Write an essay about the following.
1. In your own understanding, discuss the following: a.) Environmental Science
b.)Environment c.) Ecology d.) Ecosystem e.) Sustainability
2. What do you think are the effects of our actions on the earth? You may give
examples to justify your answer.
3. Do you agree or disagree to the following statements? Explain your answers.
a.) The earth’s resources are not infinite.
b.) The earth is a “closed system”.
c.) Developed countries consume resources at a greater rate.

Module 1 - Introduction 12
d.) The preservation of ecosystems or other living things takes priority over human
needs.
e.) Make a short-term solutions to benefits individuals today, rather wait for the
long-term interests of civilization.

Assessment

Essay Writing: Write an essay about the following.


1. Make a short review of the following: a.) “The Tragedy of the Commons” by Garrett
Hardin and b.) “Silent Spring” by Rachel Carson.
2. What do you think are the sources of environmental problems and conflict? Give
example to justify your answer.
3. As future architects, what moral responsibility do you think you have in dealing with
the major environmental problems that result from our resource consumption?

Supplementary Knowledge

Answer Key
Refer to rubrics for the essay.

References

1. G. Tyler Miller Jr. and Scott Spoolman, “Introduction to Environmental Science”, 14th
Edition, Cengage Learning,2013
2. Masters, G. M. , Introduction to Environmental Engineering and Science, Pearson New
International Edition

Module 1 - Introduction 13

You might also like