quiz 3 lecture vocab Flashcards

1
Q

Pop Growth: Implications

A
  • inc. demand for: food, water, energy, other nat res.
  • host country demog changes:
    • migrants are younger & childless or w/ young children
    • voluntary migs are better educated, motivated than non immigrants
  • uneven distribution of impacts; cocentrated in urban areas
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2
Q

Pop Growth debate: neo-malthusians

A
  1. Neo-malthusians:
    • pop growth causes misery / env. degredation
    • limited carrying capacity
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3
Q

Pop growth debate: economists

A
  • pop growth is source of progress
  • stimulates:
    • inc. efficiency
    • resource substitution
    • conservation
    • innovation
    • ppl live longer and better now than when pop was smaller
  • policies & markets are the problem, not pop growth
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4
Q

Pop growth debate: Inequality Argument

A
  • pop growth, env. deg, misery all caused by unequal social structural arrangements
  • LDC econ stagnation caused by:
    • poverty, inequitable trade policies, ongoing dependencies / neo-colonialism
  • large multinational corps are destroying env, not indigenous pop
  • hunger caused by poverty & high food prices, not overpop
    • 22 most food-def African nations could meet needs w/ just 11% of surplus held by neighbors
    • Thailand: rice prod increased 30%, exports increased 9x faster -> per capita rice has dropped
    • China has 1/2 India’s cropland per person, but India has more widespread/severe malnutrition
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5
Q

there’s enough food for 2800/cal/day/person, but…

A
  • 30 million americans malnourished
  • 1/3rd world grain fed to animals
  • smaller % of world is hungry, but that’s of a much larger number, so more actual people are hungry
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6
Q

Benefits of biotechnology

A
  1. early maturing crops
  2. more efficient users of solar energy for prim. prod.
  3. more resistant to: droughts, pests, salinity, etc
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7
Q

Sustainable Agriculture examples

A
  • Agro-ecology / low-input farming
  • more labor-intensive traditional practicies
  • use ecological principles of diversity, interdependence, & synergy to improve productivity
  • multiple cropping, rotation, inter-cropping, mixed farming (plants + animals)
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8
Q

Population is Stabilizing (rate of growth falling) due to…

A
  1. socio-economic development -> falling birth rates
  2. family planning programs
  3. global diffusion of feminism & women’s rights
  4. increasing death rates due to misery, malnutrition, HIV/AIDS, other diseases, disasters, etc
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9
Q

Energy Dependence

A
  • energy mediates human-environment interactions & sustainability
    • we are always producing and consuming energy
  • inc. living standards = inc. consumption
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10
Q

OPEC

A
  • Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
  • created in 1960 at Baghdad Conference
  • Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, S. Arabia, Venezuela
  • 70s: took control of oil production: 63% of global supplies
    • 73: Arab-Israeli war -> Oil Embargo
    • World economic decline / human misery
    • triggered MDC changes:
      • IEA
      • conservation / efficiency / energy alts
      • such that Iran War (79) did not have same impact
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11
Q

IEA

A
  • International Energy Agency, Paris-based, autonomous, intergovernmental org.
  • created in 1974 in response to 1973 oil crisis
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12
Q

When energy prices spike (cyclical), political reaction will be to… (4)

A
  • boost production (Bush Sr & Jr), opposed by env’s
  • change behavior w/ BTU tax (Clinton), opposed by consumers
  • increase efficiency (Clinton, Obama)
  • fund alternatives (Obama)

… depending on their political stance

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13
Q

2 reasons US has military bases in foreign countries…

A
  1. protect economic interests
  2. protect geopolitical interests
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14
Q

Predicament

A

Chronic problem leading to a crisis, if left unattended

inter-crisis predicaments:

  • gas hogs still predominant
  • cheap gas
  • efficiency, conservation, & alternative efforts are less predom.
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15
Q

Crisis

A

rapidly deteriorating situation leading to disaster, if left unattended

  • ‘73, ‘79, mid 90s, 2000s, recently
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16
Q

energy problems: source

A
  1. source probs: oil supplies will run out… how soon depends on efficiency, conservation, alts; finding new sources; world economic growth
    • supply-side policies: subsidies, cheap gas
    • externalized cost / lack of demand-side policy
    • gas hogs still ~50% sales
    • ~30bill/yr military protection
    • env./social costs of energy prod/consumption
17
Q

energy problems: pop growth, econ dev., distribution probs

A
  • MDCs are 20% of global pop, use 75% world energy
  • 1 US = 3 in Japan = 6 in Mexico = 531 ethiopeans
18
Q

energy problems: policy & geopolitical

A
  • supply-side policies: subsidies, cheap gas
  • externalized cost / lack of demand-side policy
  • gas hogs still ~50% sales
  • ~30bill/yr military protection
  • env/social costs of energy prod/consumption
19
Q

energy problems: sink

A
  • might be more pressing than source probs
  • greenhouse gas emissions
  • oil spills, other pollutants
  • Coal Production:
    • 80% of NOx & SO2 gases
    • forest damage from acid rain
    • 65,000-200,000 die/yr
    • mercury, a carcinogen
    • more radioactive particles per unit energy than nuclear
  • If costs could be internalized it’d drive efficiency, conservation, alternatives
20
Q

present system: oil

A
  • relatively cheap
  • easy to transport
  • high yield of net useful energy
  • multiple uses / versatile
  • greenhouse & other gas emissions
21
Q

present system: coal

A
  • very abundant
  • high yield of net useful energy
  • cheapest source of inustrial heating/electricity
  • highly polluting
22
Q

present system: natural gas

A
  • more efficient than coal
  • versatile: industry / transportation / power
  • fewer pollutant than any other fossil fuel
  • highly concentrated in just a few areas
  • methane emission leakage & incomplete combustion has warming effect 25x > CO2
23
Q

present system: nuclear

A
  • zero CO2 or other greenhouse gasses
  • highly controversial: long-lived low-level radiation & storage concerns
  • risks of: exposure, meltdown, accidents,
    • Three Mile Island, PA (TMI)
      • radioactive gas escaped, lawsuits cost 2x cost of plant
    • chernobyl meltdown: more radiation than Hiroshima/Nagasaki combined -> fallout in much of Europe, some Alaska
  • planning, construction, regulation is unfavorable
  • slow growth… likely a failing techno-option
24
Q

controversy is…

A

a good thing, as it forces action, conversation, etc

25
Q

present system: renewables

A
  • really the oldest “tech”
  • could provide 50% of orld energy needs in next 50 yrs, or less than 50 yrs if we increase efficiency
  • science/principles well established, but large scale commercial availability is “impractical & unaffordable”
    • which is a CULTURAL argument not based in reality
26
Q

present system: biomass

A
  • traditional fuels: wood, charcoal, dung, plant residue
  • low net yield, dirty -> black carbon, CO2, CO
  • major cause of deforestation, erosion, desertification, degredation, biodiversity loss in LDCs
  • used to produce biofuels
    • biogas anaerobic digesters make methane from biomass
      • 6million in China, 750k in India
      • residue -> fertilizer
      • seasonal variability
    • ethanol from corn and others
27
Q

present system: hydropower

A
  • salmon / dam / climate change dilemma
  • 0 emissions, long lifespan
  • can be useful for irrigation
  • highly dependent on topography / seasonal hydrological variability
  • displaces ppl/wildlife, destroys habitat, descreases siltation
  • just 13% of world potential used, but most of the remainder in China, India, S. America
28
Q

present system: wind

A
  • N. Dakota is “saudi arabia of wind”, more power potential than local demand, 90% of US wind potential
  • “wind parks” on 10% of earth’s land could produce 2x projected 2020 demand
  • req’s no water for cooling, produce no CO2 or other air pollution
  • kills birds, but more die in alternative venues
  • land can be re-used for grazing, crops
  • 3x cheaper than nuclear
  • cheapest if subsidized at same rate as coal, oil, gas
  • UK, Denmark, Netherlands, Spain, produce 2x US amount
29
Q

present system: solar

A
  • could supply world needs fro Equatorial regions
  • variably available, needs storage / backup
  • US: active/passive solar investments lower than 70s
  • Jordan, Israel, Australia, new housing in Arizona/Florida: domestic hot water from solar
  • scale: portable up to megawatt plants
  • production/infrastructure is costly
  • land can’t be used for anything else
  • Growing rapidly because
    • cheapest way to supply 2 billion villages in LDCs
    • generator price keeps dropping
    • Fukushima -> domestic/industrial PVE subsidies
    • EU nations switching FF subsidies to wind/PVE
    • corporations: PR
30
Q

passive solar heating

A

captures sunlight directly via structures, stores & releases as low temp heat

31
Q

active solar heating

A

specially designed collectors, usually on roofs, concentrate solar energy, heating a medium, which is then distributed elsewhere (shower, floorboards, etc)

32
Q

PVE

A
  • photovoltaic energy
  • no pollution, no moving parts, no water
  • made of silicon, 2nd most abundant mineral
33
Q

present system: hydrogen fuel

A
  • energy from H2 gas via electrolysis
  • abundant, but takes more energy to make than you get out of it
  • 2.5x more energy by weight than gasoline
  • no greenhouse gasses, just water
  • stored in tanks, or safely as hydrides; transported by pipeline
  • versatile: industry / transportation / heating
34
Q

present system: efficiency

A
  • cheapest, easiest, fastest way to solve current energy predicament
  • ‘75-2000, US economy grew by 50% but energy intensity dropped by 40% via improved tech, policies, marketing
  • BUT: success bred complacency
    • oil prices fell, consumers saw less need for eff.
    • Reagan taunted it as 70s relic, froze CAFE standards
      • GM said could hit 33mpg by 85… rolled back to 26
    • Bush Jr. said “you don’t need to conserve; we’ll go get the oil for you”
    • energy plan of 2001 put off raising CAFE
    • McCain/Kerry amendment for 36mg did not pass
    • 2004 fleet avg was lowest since 1980
35
Q

CAFE

A

corporate average fuel economy

36
Q

efficiency 2

A
  • power sector could cut rates by 40% & CO2 emissions by 50% w/ upgrades
  • 2.7mpg gain would displace Persian Gulf imports
  • companies that pursued efficiency make more money
  • things to do:
    • efficient lighting: save 120 power plants
    • efficient electric motors: 150 power plants
    • eliminate waste (lighting empty places)
    • better architecture -> passive solar
    • efficient appliances
37
Q

barriers to energy efficiency

A
  • renewables get lower tax breaks / subsidies
  • issue-attention cycle
  • fragmented energy policies, split by fuel type; net effects: supply-side policies, less favor for alts
  • need for global articulation of energy policies