Environmental Management Notes
Environmental Management Notes
Other strategies exist that rely on making simple distinctions rather than building
top-down management "systems" using performance audits and full cost accounting. For
instance, Ecological Intelligent Design divides products into consumables, service
products or durables and unsaleables - toxic products that no one should buy, or in many
cases, do not realize they are buying. By eliminating the unsaleables from the
comprehensive outcome of any purchase, better environmental management is achieved
without "systems".
Recent successful cases have put forward the notion of "Integrated Management".
It shares a wider approach and stresses out the importance of interdisciplinary
assessment. It is an interesting notion that might not be adaptable to all cases.
"Today's businesses must comply with many Federal, State and local
environmental laws, rules, and regulations. It's vital to safeguard your company against
compliance short-cuts. This approach leaves you vulnerable to violations of the law, in
addition to missing important environmental liabilities."
02 Why do managers need to study Environmental Management?
While the competencies acquired as a result of studying for an MBA degree in are
undoubtedly valuable, many employers seek recruits with specialised training. Employers
look for expertise and experience in subjects such as environmental law, economics and
policy formulation, environmental assessment techniques, environmental management
approaches and strategies (including, for example, coastal management, land restoration,
marine environment management, or forest management). The facility to use
geographical information systems (GIS), and to analyse data sets – perhaps acquired by
remote sensing - is also deemed essential.
The 2009 United Nations Climate Change Conference, commonly known as the
Copenhagen Summit, was held at the Bella Center in Copenhagen, Denmark, between 7
December and 18 December. The conference included the 15th Conference of the Parties
(COP 15) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the 5th
Meeting of the Parties (COP/MOP 5) to the Kyoto Protocol. According to the Bali Road
Map, a framework for climate change mitigation beyond 2012 was to be agreed there.
The conference was preceded by the Climate Change: Global Risks, Challenges
and Decisions scientific conference, which took place in March 2009 and was also held at
the Bella Center. The negotiations began to take a new format when in May 2009 UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon attended the World Business Summit on Climate
Change in Copenhagen, organised by the Copenhagen Climate Council (COC), where he
requested that COC councillors attend New York's Climate Week at the Summit on
Climate Change on 22 September and engage with heads of government on the topic of
the climate problem.
The Copenhagen Accord was drafted by the US, China, India, Brazil and South Africa on
December 18, and judged a "meaningful agreement" by the United States government. It
was "recognised", but not "agreed upon", in a debate of all the participating countries the
next day, and it was not passed unanimously. The document recognised that climate
change is one of the greatest challenges of the present and that actions should be taken to
keep any temperature increases to below 2°C. The document is not legally binding and
does not contain any legally binding commitments for reducing CO2 emissions. Leaders
of industrialised countries, including Barack Obama and Gordon Brown, were pleased
with this agreement but many leaders of other countries and non-governmental
organisations were opposed to it.
Although developing countries are still not satisfied by the outcome of the summit, there
is now the prospect of limiting the negative effects on the climate. Moreover, huge sums
will be released, in addition to the money spent on development cooperation, to reduce
damage from climate change (such as starvation due to drought which is now visible in
Africa, or destruction of houses due to flooding).
New opportunities
The US, the European Union, India and China take the issue of climate change very
seriously and Chinese Premier Wen is willing to take concrete steps in years to come,
even though CO2 emissions per capita in China are low in comparison to the US and
Europe.
Despite the absence of a new formal UN treaty, Copenhagen summit is a turning point in
history, now that the international community has decided to make a real transition to
sustainable energy and to an economy that produces less carbon dioxide. This decision
provides new opportunities for industries which are already strong in sustainable energy,
including production of solar cells, wind and hydropower.
Similarly, countries can produce more energy by converting the sun's rays into electrical
power, for example in southern Europe or North Africa. Africa can become a producer of
electricity from solar energy and sustainable use of biomass (for example plant remains
or cow manure) for biogas production.
More insightful
This revolution will not happen without a fight and will involve a substantial financial
commitment. This commitment can be made manageable by reducing the cost of energy
for fossil fuels and because sustainable energy will be increasingly cheaper in the future.
Countries will be able to achieve economies of scale and will have to be more discerning,
for example in the use of solar energy. The old energy facilities will be replaced by new
technologies. It will be necessary to adjust energy prices and activities that require high
levels of energy, for example by limiting air traffic to a bare minimum. Countries should
make use of biofuels in planes or compensate for CO2 emissions in a sustainable way,
such as reforestation.
Obviously it was not possible in Copenhagen to reach a treaty that regulates the climate
problem directly and definitely. In the coming years, climate policy will really start to
take shape. However, what has come out of the summit is clear: an increasing number of
countries around the world are aware that we must address the problem of global
warming and are willing to contribute to that in a major way. With new technologies,
better control over population growth and modifying our lifestyles, change is definitely
possible.
An inversion can lead to pollution such as smog being trapped close to the
ground, with possible adverse effects on health. An inversion can also suppress
convection by acting as a "cap". If this cap is broken for any of several reasons,
convection of any moisture present can then erupt into violent thunderstorms.
Temperature inversion can notoriously result in freezing rain in cold climates.
Usually, within the lower atmosphere (the troposphere) the air near the surface of
the Earth is warmer than the air above it, largely because the atmosphere is heated from
below as solar radiation warms the Earth's surface, which in turn then warms the layer of
the atmosphere directly above it e.g. by thermals (convective heat transfer). Under certain
conditions, the normal vertical temperature gradient is inverted such that the air is colder
near the surface of the Earth. This can occur when, for example, a warmer, less dense air
mass moves over a cooler, denser air mass. This type of inversion occurs in the vicinity
of warm fronts, and also in areas of oceanic. With sufficient humidity in the cooler layer,
fog is typically present below the inversion cap. An inversion is also produced whenever
radiation from the surface of the earth exceeds the amount of radiation received from the
sun, which commonly occurs at night, or during the winter when the angle of the sun is
very low in the sky. This effect is virtually confined to land regions as the ocean retains
heat far longer. In the polar regions during winter, inversions are nearly always present
over land.
A warmer air mass moving over a cooler one can "shut off" any convection which
may be present in the cooler air mass. This is known as a capping inversion. However, if
this cap is broken, either by extreme convection overcoming the cap, or by the lifting
effect of a front or a mountain range, the sudden release of bottled-up convective energy
— like the bursting of a balloon — can result in severe thunderstorms. Such capping
inversions typically precede the development of tornadoes in the midwestern United
States. In this instance, the "cooler" layer is actually quite warm, but is still denser and
usually cooler than the lower part of the inversion layer capping it.
• Greenhouse gases are gases in an atmosphere that absorb and emit radiation
within the thermal infrared range. This process is the fundamental cause of the
greenhouse effect. The main greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere are water
vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone. .Greenhouse gases
greatly affect the temperature of the Earth; without them, Earth's surface would be
on average about 33 °C (59 °F) colder than at present. water vapor, which
contributes 36–72%
• carbon dioxide, which contributes 9–26%
• methane, which contributes 4–9%
• ozone, which contributes 3–7%
Water vapor accounts for the largest percentage of the greenhouse effect, between
36% and 66% for water vapor alone, and between 66% and 85% when factoring in
clouds. However, the warming due to the greenhouse effect of cloud cover is, at least
in part, mitigated by the change in the earth's albedo. According to NASA, "The
overall effect of all clouds together is that the Earth's surface is cooler than it would
be if the atmosphere had no clouds." Water vapor concentrations fluctuate regionally,
but human activity does not significantly affect water vapor concentrations except at
local scales, such as near irrigated fields. air can hold more water vapor per unit
volume when it warms. This and other basic principles indicate that warming
associated with increased concentrations of the other greenhouse gases also will
increase the concentration of water vapor.
Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere behave much like the glass panes in a
greenhouse. Sunlight enters the Earth's atmosphere, passing through the blanket of
greenhouse gases. As it reaches the Earth's surface, land, water, and biosphere absorb
the sunlight’s energy. Once absorbed, this energy is sent back into the atmosphere.
Some of the energy passes back into space, but much of it remains trapped in the
atmosphere by the greenhouse gases, causing our world to heat up.
When glaciers melt they set free chemicals which have been locked for decades in the
"eternal ice." Researchers have analyzed sediment layers in the Oberaarsee and have
been able to reconstruct the processes by which long-lived organic compounds have
accumulated in the ice over the last sixty years. A study just published in the journal
Environmental Science and Technology describes how shrinking glaciers have, for about
ten years now, become a secondary source of pollutants which have long been banned
and are no longer produced in industrial quantities.
When glaciers shrink due to the effects of global warming, the retreating tongues
sometimes reveal things which have been buried in the ice mass for decades or even
centuries. This includes chemical substances which have been banned for years and
which really ought to be kept under lock and key anyway, such as those known as POPs
-- short for persistent organic pollutants. These are organic environmental pollutants
which take a long time to decompose and include for example chemicals used as
plasticizers (softeners) in various synthetic materials, pesticides and also dioxins.
Many of these POPs are endocrine disrupters and carcinogenic, and are suspected of
interfering with human and animal development. In addition they are extraordinarily
long-lived, and can be transported great distances through the atmosphere. POPs can
therefore be found all over the world, even in glaciers in environments high in the Alps,
where ecosystems are extremely sensitivity.
The atmosphere has been divided into layers according to the behaviour of temperatures
in their relationship to altitude.
1. The lowest layer is the troposphere, the layer in which we live and in which our
weather is experienced. It extends up roughly 10 km (oh, about 6 miles-ish).It is
characterized by an inverse relationship between air temperatures and altitude.
Temperatures drop as you climb up the troposphere. In still air, it cools by an average of
6.5° C for every kilometre (1,000 meters) gain in elevation.
2. The tropopause is the top of the troposphere: The troposphere stops here.It is situated
about 10 km up.It's more like 8 km (5 mi.) over the polar regions in winter (cold air tends
to settle downward) and 18 km (11 mi.)over the equatorial regions, due to greater
convection there (heating caused by the direct rays of the sun).In the mid-latitudes, it's
lower in winter and higher in summer,for the same sorts of reasons. At the tropopause,
temperatures stop dropping with gains in altitude.
3. The stratosphere is the next major division.It extends from the tropopause up to about
50 km.It is characterized by a direct relationship between temperatures and altitude:
Temperatures climb as you climb. This warming with altitude has to do with the presence
of the ozone layer in the stratosphere. Remember the ozone. Ozone absorbs high energy,
shortwave, ultraviolet radiation from the sun. Absorption of energy heats the absorbing
object, and so it is here: Ozone heats up by absorbing UV radiation, and that accounts for
the climb in temperatures with a climb in altitude here in the stratosphere.
4.The mesosphere is the layer above the stratotosphere. It extends up from the stratopause
to about 80 km.It is characterized by resumption of an inverse relationship between
temperature and altitude: Temperatures go back to dropping as you climb.