Explain the sustainable development.
Sustainable development is a development that meets the needs of the
present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their
own needs. It contains within it two key concepts:
· The concept of needs, in particular
the essential needs of the world’s poor, to which overriding priority should be
given; and
· The idea of limitations imposed by
the state of technology and social organization on the environment’s ability to
meet present and future needs.
The concept of sustainable development is comprehensively explained in
the following UN document on the subject. The document also highlights the need
and measures for sustainable development.
1.
The
satisfaction of human needs and aspirations is the major objective of
development. The essential needs of a vast number of people in developing
countries food, clothing, shelter, and jobs – are not being met and beyond
their basic needs, these people have legitimate aspirations for an improved
quality of life. A world in which poverty and inequity are endemic will always
be prone to ecological and other crises. Sustainable development requires
meeting the basic needs of all and extending to all the opportunity to satisfy
their aspirations for a better life.
2.
Living
standards that go beyond the basic minimum are sustainable only if consumption
standards everywhere have regard for long-term sustainability. Yet many of us
live beyond the world's ecological means, for instance in our patterns of
energy use. Perceived needs are socially and culturally determined, and
sustainable development requires the promotion of values that encourage
consumption standards within the bounds of the ecological possible and
to which all can reasonably aspire.
3.
Meeting
essential needs depends in part on achieving full growth potential, and
sustainable development clearly requires economic growth in places where such
needs are not being met. Elsewhere, it can be consistent with economic growth,
provided the content of growth reflects the broad principles of sustainability
and the non-exploitation of others. But growth by itself is not enough. High levels
of productive activity and widespread poverty can coexist and endanger the
environment. Hence sustainable development requires that societies meet human
needs both by increasing productive potential and by ensuring equitable
opportunities for all.
4.
An
expansion in numbers can increase the pressure on resources and slow the rise
in living standards in areas where deprivation is widespread. Though the issue
is not merely one of population size of the distribution of resources;
sustainable development can only be pursued if demographic developments are in
harmony with the changing productive potential of the ecosystem.
5.
A
society may in many ways compromise its ability to meet the essential needs of
its people in the future - by overexploiting resources, for example. The
direction of technological developments may solve some immediate problems but
lead to even greater ones. Large sections of the population may be marginalized by ill-considered development.
6.
Settled
agriculture, the diversion of watercourses, the extraction of minerals, the
emission of heat and noxious gases into the atmosphere, commercial forests, and
genetic manipulation are all examples of human intervention in natural systems
during development. Until recently, such interventions were small
in scale and their impact limited. Today's interventions are more drastic in
scale and impact, and more threatening to life-support systems both locally and
globally. This need not happen. At a minimum, sustainable development must not
endanger the natural systems that support life on Earth: the atmosphere, the
waters, the soils, and the living beings.
7.
Growth
has no set limits in terms of population or resource use beyond which lies
ecological disaster. Different limits hold for the use of energy, materials,
water, and land. Many of these will manifest themselves in the form of rising
costs and diminishing returns, rather than in the form of any sudden loss of a
resource base. The accumulation of knowledge and the development of technology
can enhance the carrying capacity of the resource base. But ultimate limits
there are, and sustainability requires that long before these are reached, the
world must ensure equitable access to the constrained resource and reorient
technological efforts to relieve the presume.
8.
Economic
growth and development obviously involve changes in the physical ecosystem.
Every ecosystem everywhere cannot be preserved intact. A forest may be depleted
in one part of a watershed and extended elsewhere, which is not a bad thing if
the exploitation has been planned and the effects on soil erosion rates, water
regimes, and genetic losses have been taken into account. In general, renewable
resources like forests and fish stocks need not be depleted provided the rate
of use is within the limits of regeneration and natural growth. But most
renewable resources are part of a complex and interlinked ecosystem, and
maximum sustainable yield must be defined after considering the system-wide
effects of exploitation.
9.
As
for non-renewable resources, like fossil fuels and minerals, their use reduces
the stock available for future generations. But this does not mean that such
resources should not be used. In general, the rate of depletion should take into
account the criticality of that resource, the availability of technologies for
minimizing depletion, and the likelihood of substitutes being available. Thus
land should not be degraded beyond reasonable recovery. With minerals and
fossil fuels, the rate of depletion and the emphasis on recycling and economy
of use should be calibrated to ensure that the resource does not run out before
acceptable substitutes are available. Sustainable development requires that the
rate of depletion of non-renewable resources should foreclose as few future
options as possible.
10. Development
tends to simplify ecosystems and reduce the diversity of species. And
species, once extinct, are not renewable. The loss of plant and animal species
can greatly limit the options of future generations; so sustainable development
requires the conservation of plant and animal species.
11. So-called
free goods like air and water are also resources. The raw materials and energy
of production processes are only partly converted to useful products. The rest
comes out as waste. Sustainable development requires that the adverse impacts
on the quality of air, water, and other natural elements are minimized to
sustain the ecosystem’s overall integrity.
12. In
essence, sustainable development is a process of change in which the
exploitation of resources, the direction of investments, the orientation of
technological development; and institutional change are all in harmony and
enhance both current and future potential to meet human needs and aspirations
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