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Hi, Alex here? What is sustainability?
Is there a definition that would be easy to understand and that we could
all agree upon? Well let's get drawing!
Sustainability. Sustainable development.
You must have heard these words a lot over the last number of years.
Well, at least I did. And maybe just maybe
sometimes you were not totally clear as to what people really meant.
So you may be familiar with the Brundtland definition
which is quite common: sustainable development
is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations
to meet their own needs. Although this doesn't exactly tell us what to do on
Monday morning
it's a very easy definition to understand and to communicate.
There's another one, one that was created in the late
nineteen eighties that is more of a scientific definition
it was created by a Swedish doctor his name is Karl-Henrick Robèrt
and he was frustrated with the lack
of common language around sustainability so he thought
what if he managed to get a group of scientists together
and to agree on what sustainability means
based on science and thermodynamics and maybe
that will lead to understanding what the root causes of
unsustainability are. So that's what he did
he put together a group of 50 scientists: mathematicians, physicists,
chemists, etc.
and after 22 drafts they agreed on several things.
First they agreed on the fact that we live in the biosphere
so the biosphere is this very thin layer
at the surface of the earth where life is possible
proportionally speaking it's as
thin and fragile as the skin on an onion. And within this biosphere
there are plants and animals. Plants produce
oxygen and food which are consumed by the animals
and in return the animals produce fertilizer
and CO2 (carbon dioxide) which
are used by the plants and we have a cycle that is well balanced.
So this is a very quick cycle
we eat every day and we breath every second and it works very well
Then they agreed on the fact that this system,
the biosphere, is open with respect to energy
So this means that energy
from the Sun comes in and radiations come out
And they also agreed on the fact that this system
is closed with respect to matter so
maybe you remember this very famous phrase from Lavoisier that says
nothing is created, nothing disappears, everything is only transformed.
So this is also known as the first law of thermodynamics
the law of conservation of matter and
it means that except for a few satellites and meteorites
all the matter that was on earth
4 billion years ago is still here today
it has changed form and the molecules
reorganized themselves over time but
it is still the same matter and the other thing that comes with this
is that everything has a tendency to disperse
So for example take an iPhone
and wait for a million years, it's very likely that you will get a pile of dust.
Take a pile of dust and wait for a million years
you will never get an iPhone. It works only in one direction.
This is also known as the second law of thermodynamics,
the law entropy. So
if everything disperses all the time, how is it possible
that we live here in such a beautiful world
with beautiful nature, cities, people,
flowers and so on. Well this is what
photosynthesis does for us. Photosynthesis
pays the bills. It enables plants
to use the energy from the Sun in order to reorganize
matter and create new structure. So the group of scientists
also agreed on the fact that there are other cycles,
very slow geological cycles, that bring matter
from the lithosphere, that we also call the earth's crust,
to the biosphere and these cycles
are also very well balanced: some matter
moves from the earth's crust to the biosphere
through things like volcano eruptions and weathering.
And just about the same amount of matter goes back from the biosphere to the
earth's crust
via things like mineralization and sedimentation
and all this is well balanced. These cycles take millions of years
they're very slow unlike the previous ones and
they also work very well. So this is what the scientific community agreed upon
so this is the world we live in and
so we can ask a question what is sustainability? Well
sustainability is actually the capacity of
our human society to continue indefinitely within these natural cycles
and sustainable development would be
a development towards this state of sustainability. So you may be thinking well
this does not exactly tell us what to do on Monday morning either.
Well that's right but it enabled the group of scientists
to look at the things that we do to interfere with these natural cycles
and they found 4 root causes of
unsustainability and these are the 4 things
that we need to stop doing to be sustainable
And that will be the next video. Before moving to the next one, here are the key
points to keep in mind: all the matter that was on earth
four billion years ago is still here today there is no "away"
everything has a tendency to disperse and lose its structure over time
photosynthesis pays the bills it
uses the energy from the Sun to reorganize matter
left to their own devices natural cycles
are well-balanced and sustainability
is the capacity of our human society to continue indefinitely within
the natural cycles. So I hope this is helpful.
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