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Ecological Footprint
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> Ecological Footprint
Ecological Footprint
Are
Your Choices Sustainable?
People
depend on nature for many things: food source, shelter, air, water,
diversion of waste products, energy, clothing, and other needs of
support our existance. If we are to continue to have quality living
conditions, we must ensure that nature's ability to produce for
our needs isn't used more quickly than the natural resource can
be renewed, and that waste isn't discarded more quickly than nature
can absorb it.
Ecological
Footprint
The
ecological footprint is an accounting tool for ecological resources.
Categories of human consumption are translated into areas of productive
land required to provide resources and assimilate waste products.
The ecological footprint is a measure of how sustainable our life-styles
are.
The ecological footprint of the average Canadian adds up to 4.8
hectares or 18 acres of land! This is the total amount of land required
for food, housing, transportation, consumer goods and services.
Energy is a large component of this footprint: approx. 2.9 hectares
are necessary to provide for long term biological substitute for
fossil fuels. Agriculture is the second largest component at 1.1
hectare for the supply of food and consumer goods. Forestry takes
up 0.6 hectare to supply the fibre for housing and consumer goods.
Finally, our living environment takes up 0.2 hectares for housing
and transportation.
Can the earth's population live like the average Canadian
today?
No.
In fact, if everyone on earth lived like the average Canadian, it
would require at least three to four earths to provide all the material
and energy she or he currently uses. Initial estimates show that
the ecological footprint of today's consumption in food, forestry
products and fossil fuels alone may already exceed the global carrying
capacity by approximately 30%. About 3/4 of the current consumption
goes to the 1.1 billion people who live in prosperity, while 1/4
of the consumption remains for the other 4.6 billion people. This
demonstrates the ethical implications of the sustainability problem
and questions economic expansionism as a remedy for poverty.
The
Answer is up to Us!
We
need to think seriously about how we can actually reduce the amount
of waste we produce. Individual life-style choices have a strong
influence on the ecological footprint. These choices include food,
energy, transportation, housing, and water consumption, and other
non-consumptive goods. For example: compare how much ecologically
productive land is needed to travel by bicycle, car or bus. Most
of the car's land is required to absorb CO2. Most the biker's land
is used to provide the extra food for quenching the biker's hunger.
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