From Local To Global Environmental Awareness
From Local To Global Environmental Awareness
From Local To Global Environmental Awareness
ENVIRONMENTAL
AWARENESS
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Excessive
Environment
Exploitation
2 nd to
6 th May, 2022
Romania
EXCESSIVE EXPLOITATION OF NATURAL
RESOURCES
What are natural resources?
Natural resources are those
that the planet offers without
the need for human
intervention. They are essential
for our survival, but if they are
consumed at a faster rate than
their natural regeneration, they
can be exhausted.
Today various types of natural resources are exploited, which
can be classified into three categories:
Sand is used to form beaches and places for recreation. It’s used to make
windowpanes, cell phone screens, and sunglasses. Concrete and asphalt
both come from sand. And the industrial uses of sand — to fill holes, make
molds, and create traction — are seemingly endless.
It’s the second-most exploited resource after water, and the world is running
out of it
3.Fossil Fuels
Fossil fuels supply the vast majority of the world’s energy demands and will
continue to do so for the foreseeable future.
But the problems associated with fossil fuels are many. Most immediately, burning
fossil fuels warms the planet and acidifies the oceans by releasing carbon and other
greenhouse gas emissions into the environment.
Burning fossil fuels also leads to air pollution, which kills an estimated 6.5 million
people each year.
Extracting oil can cause devastating spills in marine environments; extracting coal
can destroy forests and other landscapes; and extracting natural gas can pollute
waterways and cause earthquakes.
4.Trees
It can take more than a millennium to produce 1 centimeter of soil, yet humanity has
degraded roughly a third of all the world’s soil, according to the UN, and half of all
topsoil has been lost in the past 150 years.
The primary drivers of this loss include industrial pollution, erosion, bad agricultural
practices, real estate development, salt-water contamination, and others.
Since 95% of the food that humans eat comes from soil, the continued degradation of
soil poses an existential risk.
6. Palm Oil
Because it’s so cheap and versatile, palm oil is the most common vegetable oil
in the world, used in everyday products like bread, chocolate, soap, lipstick,
and margarine.
But it’s also causing enormous ecological harm in the countries where it’s
harvested.
In many countries palm oil cultivation is largely unregulated and is depleting
.
tropical forests, which are important carbon sinks and habitats for endangered
species.
CONSEQUENCES OF THE OVEREXPLOITATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES
For Health: If we do not take care of the forests there will be more air
pollution. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), nine out of ten people
worldwide breathe air with high levels of pollutants and seven million people die each
year of air pollution.
SOLUTIONS TO THE OVEREXPLOITATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES
The future, as stated in the United Nations Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development,
poses a double challenge to human beings: conserving the many forms and functions
of nature and creating an equitable home for people on a finite planet. If we want to
reverse this situation, we need, among other things, to:
Conserve Natural Capital
Restore degraded ecosystems and their services.
Halt the loss of priority habitats.
Significantly expand the global network of protected areas.
Laws and Policies
Develop legislation to regulate the exploitation of natural resources and establish
environmental impact assessment as an essential requirement for entire projects
Support sustainable development and environmental protection initiatives
Commit to renewable and non-polluting energies
Promote environmental care to maintain ecosystem health
Take responsibility for environmental and social costs.
Support and reward companies that promote conservation, sustainable resource
management and innovation in their activities.
Awareness-Raising
Encourage the use of public transport and bicycles
Foster a culture of recycling: reduce, reuse and recycle
Promote environmental education in schools
Promote agriculture and ecological tourism
Responsible Consumption
• Use water and electricity responsibly
• Buy fewer unnecessary products
• Avoid non-biodegradable products
• Choose to buy local or organic products
• Consume more responsibly
• Change current energy consumption patterns
• Promote healthy and sustainable consumption patterns
***** THANK YOU! *****