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Global Warming... Is it real?

Global Warming is an issue that gained popularity within years. There are several points of view regarding this problem which present different perspectives about this important problem, and that should be considered when having an opinion about the topic:


1) Global Warming is serious and is caused by humans: The millions of tons of gases such as carbon dioxide that humans pump into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels; trap heat, raise the average global temperature, and indirectly cause many negative effects, including floods, storms, and droughts.


2) Media Hysteria: The earth is warming naturally as it overcomes the effects of the Little Ice Age that had plagued the globe until the mid-nineteenth century. Instead, the hysteria over global warming has become a widespread belief, and it has been reinforced by the ignorant media that increases the people's fears.


3) Global Warming is happening but we're not the problem: Geothermal activity and Volcanoes are the cause of the increase in Greenhouse Gasses, which show that they are causing Global Warming.


4) Global Warming will be beneficial: A warmer earth will result in large forests, a decrease in climate-related disasters, increased food production, and a healthier human population.


What do I think?


After considering the different points of view and evaluating the perspectives presented by each of them, I think that global warming may be part of the natural development of earth, although human activities accelerate the process, not letting the earth recover and follow its natural cycle, which may result into a damaging result for the planet.







The three level model... Pollution Management :O

Three level model
·      Human activity producing pollutant
o   Altering human activity through education, incentives and penalties to promote
 Development of alterative tech
Adoption of alternative lifestyles
Reducing, reusing and recycling
·      Release of pollutants into environment
o   Regulating and reducing at points of emission
Standards
Measures to extract pollutants from emissions
·      Long-term impact of pollutants from emissions
o   Cleaning up pollutants and restoring ecosystems
 Extracting and removing pollutant from ecosystems
Replanting and restocking animal populations

Measuring Pollution :)

Detection and monitoring of pollution is a process that can be done directly or indirectly

Directly: Measuring the concentration of pollutants

  • Acidity of rain
  • Amount of gases in atmosphere or emissions
  • Soil pH
  • Concentration of nitrates, phosphates, sulfates in soil and water
  • Amount of organic matter in soil and water
  • Amount of bacteria
  • Concentration of (heavy) metals
  • BOD (biochemical oxygen demand: the amount of oxygen used by microorganisms to break down organic matter in water): used to determine the pollution of water. The greater the BOD, the more pollution.
Indirectly
  • Absence or presence of indicator species

Pollution...

What is it?
The presence of waste or agent which has increased and reached a point where it can't be managed and harms the environment


Types of pollution...
Point Source: the origin of the pollution can be tracked, they can be measured
Non-Point Source: Cause of pollution cannot be identified


What is pollution management?
Actions for managing pollution from human activity.


Sources of pollution:



Type
Point Source
Non-point Source
Water
Municipal Sewage Treatment Plant Discharges for chemical agents and organic matter
agricultural and urban runoff

Industrial Plant Discharges may include metals and chemicals which change water's pH
runoff from mining and construction site
Air
power plants, smelters, industrial and commercial boilers
On road mobile sources like cars and trucks

wood and pulp processors, paper mills, industrial surface coating facilities, refinery and chemical processing operations, and petroleum storage tanks
natural sources such as windstorms and fires
Soil
Agricultural Pesticides
Runoff

Major pollutants... :O

PollutantCausesEffects
Carbon monoxideForms during the incomplete combustion of   carbon-containing materials. Motor-vehicles, burning and forest and grasslands, inefficient stoves, open firesCO reacts with hemoglobin, reducing blood's ability to transport oxygen. Can cause headaches, nausea, drowsiness.
Carbon dioxideA result of the carbon cycle, the burning of fossil fuels, and industrial processesCan alter the pH of water bodies and because of excessive quantities, it is contributing to the greenhouse effect. In the human body, excessive CO2 can cause asphyxiation and kidney damage.
Nitrogen oxides and nitric acidCombustion of fossil fuels. Motor vehicles are a major contributor. Nitric acid can come from sewage and fertilizers.Nitrogen oxides harm airways and can lead to respiratory diseases. It also contributes to the formation of ozone. Nitric acid leads to acid rain.
Sulfur dioxide and sulfuric acidBurning of coal and oil, also a byproduct of metal and industrial processes.Both cause acid rain wich results in acidified soils and bodies of water. Health effects include respiratory and cardiovascular problems
Suspended Particulate MatterMotor vehicles, coal-burning, fireplaces, power plants.Causes asthma and decreased lung function. In the environment, it reduces visibility.
OzoneFormed by the reaction of VOCs and nitrogen oxides.Causes shortness of breath, wheezing and coughing, but can lead to severe lung problems such as reduced function and irritation.
RadonProduced by the decay of uranium in soil and water.Lung cancer.

A new beginning... Policies and Population :)

After Christmas vacations, a new semester of ES&S. After studying population and its effects, the first topic discussed in class was the different policies that countries may adopt in order to have a sustainable population, that is easily adapted to changes and population dynamics. Australia and China are two countries that have established policies regarding population, in order to control and shape its changes into a sustainable population.


Although both countries have the objective of having sustainable populations, the situation in each of them is different and therefore, Australia and China have different aims to be achieved. Australian population aims are to have economic stability, sustainable increase in food production, improve connections between regions, improve infrastructure and address labor shortages. In the other hand, China aims to control population growth, ensure food security and economic development for the country. Because of the different conditions and aims of each country, strategies in order to achieve them vary according to the conditions of the country. 


In the table bellow, a contrast between policies established by both countries is shown.



For more information regarding policies in China check out the following link:
http://www.fao.org/docrep/004/ab981e/ab981e0c.htm

Food Food Food :D

Food Security is the term that refers to the situation in which every person in a given area has daily access to enough nutritious food to have an active and healthy life. Developing countries do not produce enough food for feeding their people and are too poor to import enough food to provide national food security. Food security also depends on gently reducing the harmful environment effects of agriculture, not only at local, but also at national and global levels.
In order to maintain good health, the human body needs macronutrients, micronutrients and minerals. 

When people cannot grow or buy enough food to meet their basic needs, they suffer from chronic undernutrition or hunger. Children who suffer undernutrition often live in developing countries. The consequences of this are mental retardation, stunted growth and death caused by infectious diseases such as measles and diarrhea.

Malnutrition results from deficiencies of protein, calories and other key nutrients. This is because many of the world’s poor can afford only to live on a low-protein, high-carbohydrate, vegetarian diet. Overnutrition occurs when food energy intake exceeds energy use and causes excess body fat. Too many calories, too many exercise or both can cause overnutrition.

One of every three people has a deficiency of one or more vitamins and minerals, especially vitamin A, iron and iodine. Iron, is a component of the hemoglobin that transports oxygen in the blood. Too little iron, may cause fatigue, makes infection more likely and increases a woman’s chances of dying from hemorrhage in childbirth. It also causes anemia.
A famine occurs when there is a severe shortage of food in an area accompanied by mass starvation, many deaths, economic chaos, and social disruption. Famines often lead to mass migration of starving people to other areas or to refugee camps in a frantic search food, water and medical help. Famines are usually caused by crop failures from drought, flooding, war and other catastrophic events.

There are three main systems which provide most of the world’s food:
    • Croplands: Mostly produce grains, and provides 77% if the world’s food using 11% of the world’s land area.
    • Rangelands and pastures: produce meat, mostly from grazing livestock and supply about 16% of the world’s food using about 29% the world’s land area.
    • Oceanic fisheries: Supply about 7% of the world’s food.
Traditional agriculture consists of two main types which together are practiced by the 42% of the world’s people and provides one-fifth of the world’s food supply:
  • Traditional Subsistence Agriculture: Uses mostly human labor and draft animals to produce only enough crops or livestock for a farm’s family survival.
  • Traditional Intensive Agriculture: Farmers increase their inputs of human and draft-animal labor, fertilizer and water to obtain a higher yield per area of cultivated land. They produce enough food to feed their families and to sell.