Sustainability
Definitions of sustainability, ecological principles, and sustainability initiatives drive the Center's work.
The Center incorporates the following principles into its work.
Definitions of Sustainability.
The goal of sustainability
recognizes that human impact on the natural world is excessive. It must
be reduced, and natural systems must be restored, or the rights and
opportunities of future generations will be greatly diminished. Two
definitions illustrate the temporal focus of sustainability.
Sustainable development is meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. [1]
Sustainability is equity over time. As a value, it refers to giving
equal weight in your decisions to the future as well as the present. You
might think of it as extending the Golden Rule through time, so that you do
unto future generations (as well as to your present fellow beings) as you would
have them do unto you. [2]
Ecological principles.
Principles have been developed
in an attempt to describe conditions that must be met to attain a sustainable
future. One of the best-known set of principles is the Natural Step
framework.
In the late 1980s Karl-Hènrik Robert, a Swedish doctor specializing in cellular biology, was inspired by young leukemia patients to look for root causes of the disease. That pursuit led him to look at the biosphere (the living part of the earth) itself and to develop the four conditions necessary to keep it healthy:
- Substances mined from the earth’s crust must not increase in nature. Scientists have found that an accumulation in the biosphere of heavy metals, minerals, and byproducts of burning fossil fuels is harming life. We must systematically decrease dependence on these non-renewable materials, replacing them with sustainable and renewable materials.
- Synthetic products must not increase in nature. We must phase-out persistent, toxic, substances, such as dioxin and organochlorines in pesticides and plastics, and use precaution in the use of and introduction of other man-made compounds.
- The physical basis for the productivity and diversity of nature must not continue to deteriorate. We must decrease our reliance on monocultures, practices that deplete topsoil or groundwater, and practices that threaten the viability of nonhuman species, such as over fishing and appropriating wildlife habitat.
- The use of resources must be efficient and just. Basic human needs
must be met with the most resource-efficient methods possible–with maximum
reuse, recycling, and water and energy conservation. Fair resource
distribution is necessary to ensure the social stability and cooperation
necessary to make changes in society over time. If we don’t meet this
condition, we won’t be able to meet the other three.
Sustainability initiatives.
Because ecological
principles have not been respected, sustainability initiatives are being
pursued on an international, national, regional, state, and local basis.
Examples include the Kyoto Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention
on Climate Change, the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Green
Building Rating System developed by the U. S. Green Building Council to
encourage sustainable construction practices, and the organic food movement.