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Environmental problems…

Environmental problems…. Dispersion of Toxic Substances. Water Pollution & Water Resources. Ozone Layer Depletion. Waste . Air Pollution. Climate Change . Urban Environmental Problems. Loss of Biodiversity . Marine Environment & Coastal Zones. Resource Depletion .

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Environmental problems…

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  1. Environmental problems… DispersionofToxicSubstances Water Pollution & Water Resources OzoneLayerDepletion Waste Air Pollution Climate Change UrbanEnvironmentalProblems Loss of Biodiversity Marine Environment & CoastalZones Resource Depletion

  2. Emergence of environmental problems Maslow’s pyramid of needs N E E D S

  3. Environmental Policy Global conferences on the environment: • - Stockholm – 1972 • Rio – 1992 • kyoto – 1997 • Johannesburg – 2002 • Copenaghen -2012

  4. …’70 years Gradual internationalization of the debate around the issue of relations between environment and development. increase the perceptionofenvironmentalissues: focus on largepointsourcesofpollutionconcentrated (industrial plants, powerplants, pollution) increase scientific knowledge in environmental

  5. Report "The Limits to Growth" Published for the Club of Rome from MIT (Massachussets Institute of technology) ResourceDepletion Pollution Limits to Growth Management ofenvironmentalricks Management ofresources New technologies and energy efficiency Environmental costs

  6. Stockholm Conference (1972) First summit ONU on “HUMAN ENVIRONMENT” Pollution: Acid rain World Hunger Marine Environment & CoastalZones Third World devolepment Establishment UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme)

  7. Rio Conference (1992) Earth Summit, second summit ONU on “environment and development” 183 countries comparison among industrialized countries (which have reached the carrying capacity of its ecosystem) and the countries of the South, underdeveloped or developing (as opposed to assume responsibility for the environment, if not after compensatory measures, such as programs Economic Assistance

  8. Rio Conference (1992) • Results: • Climate convention: CO2 emission • Biodiversity convention: preservation of the genetic heritage of animals and plants • Statement of Forest: The Convention has been impeded by the holders of most countries of tropical forests • Statement of Rio: 27 integrating environment and development principles • Local Agenda 21: global action plan that identifies the characteristics of sustainable development and the means to achieve

  9. Local Agenda 21 Collection of intentions to initiate sustainable development policies through consensus of the entire civil society (population, institutions, businesses, etc..) At national, regional and sub-regional level. Local actors must become active partners in decision making concerning their own territory governance processes (voluntary choices shared "bottom-up) and partnerships (selected subsidiaries and implemented by all players on the territory). Multisectoral action program (4 sections - the socio-economic, conservation and management of resources for development, strengthening the role of social forces, implementation tools - and 40 chapters) is owned by the governments in the twenty-first century.

  10. Eco development “Term coined at the Stockholm Conference and logical antecedent of "sustainable development." Suffix "eco" stands for "ecological" and "economic": A weld between economy and ecology. The transition from "Ecosviluppo" to "sustainable development" has sanctioned the movement from local to global level environmental problems caused by development have an impact not only on the territory in question, but invest the whole planet, requiring a comprehensive approach to resolving them.

  11. JOHANNESBURG Conference (2002) RECOGNIZING THAT THE ERADICATION OF POVERTY, CHANGE OF STYLES OF PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION AND THE PROTECTION AND MANAGEMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES ARE THE OBJECTIVES AND BASIC CONDITIONS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

  12. SOCIAL EQUALITY OTHER IMPORTANT CONCEPTS for definitions of sustainable development are: Fairness 'SOCIAL within generations within a single community; GENERATIONS respect to future generations. UNCERTAINTY AND IRREVERSIBLE' OFTEN THE EVALUATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS It appears as extremely complex, giving rise POSITIONS TO MUCH difference between scientists or between countries

  13. SBD: sustainable business development STRATEGIC FRAMEWORK FOR INTEGRATING BUSINESS ENTERPRISES, CREATING INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS SBD Take a comprehensive perspective of the corporation and its business environment that includes direct relationship with suppliers, distributors, customers partners, employees and shareholders and indirect linkages with stakeholder, competitors relates industries and natural environment (eco-system)

  14. SBD: sustainable business development UN International community SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUSTAINABILITY UN conference an invironment and development (RIO EARTH SUMMIT) Involves articulating integrating achieving social, economic and environmental objectives and initiatives to protect humankind and natural world

  15. Sbd & Agenda 21 Is a holistic management construct that includes the entire value system from the origins of the raw materials to production processes and customer applications to end-of-life solutions (EoL). Corporate today face the daunting challenges of achieving superior performance ad well as meeting the expectations of the social economic and environmental dimensions articled in agenda 21.

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