Transcript Document
Sustainability
Homes, Communities, World
HCE P.O.O.L., 2013
Overview
Introduction to The Natural Step
Small Group Discussion – applying The Natural Step at
home.
Eco-municipalities in WI
Next steps
Most common definition of sustainability:
"meets the needs of the present generation
without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs.”
From “Our Common Future”, by the Brundtland Commission, UN World
Commission on the Environment and Development (1987)
Chair Gro Harlem Brundtland
Living sustainably means …
Living a life that is deeply
satisfying, fulfilling, and appealing
because
it is socially, environmentally, and
economically responsible.
Jon Prichard and Catherine Elliott
University of Maine Cooperative Extension
It is about making changes and
informed choices that balance the
quality of our lives with the
quality of the planet for future
generations.
Jon Prichard and Catherine Elliott
University of Maine Cooperative Extension
A Framework
TNS Canada
TNS Canada
TNS Canada
TNS Canada
System Conditions in The Natural Step
1. Substances from the Earth's crust must not systematically
increase in the ecosphere. Fossil fuels, metals and other
minerals must not be extracted at a faster pace than their
slow redeposit and reintegration into the Earth's crust.
2. Substances produced by society must not systematically
increase in the biosphere. Substances must not be
produced at a faster pace than they can be broken down
and integration into the cycles of nature or deposited into
the Earth's crust.
3. The physical basis for productivity and diversity of nature
must not be systematically deteriorated. We cannot harvest
or manipulate ecosystems in such a way that productive
capacity and diversity systematically diminish.
4. There must be fair and efficient use of resources with
respect to meeting human needs world-wide. Basic human
needs must be fairly met with the most resource efficient
methods possible.
THE NATURAL STEP GUIDELINES
Reduce dependence on fossil fuels,
extracted underground metals and
minerals;
Reduce dependence on chemicals and
other manufactured substances that can
accumulate in nature;
Reduce dependence on activities that
harm life-sustaining ecosystems;
Meet the hierarchy of present and future
human needs fairly and efficiently.
Source: American Planning Association, 2000. Planning for Sustainability Policy Guide
www.planning.org/policyguides/sustainability.htm
Small Group Discussion
What other frameworks do
we use to make decisions?
How do these compare and
contrast with The Natural
Step?
Practice Using the Framework
Practice Using the Framework
To which issues in your
community could the framework
be applied: immediately and
easily? With the most significant
impact?
Eco-municipalities
Next Steps
Start a study circle to read The Natural Step discuss it
together.
References
The Natural Step for Communities: How Cities and
Towns can Change to Sustainable Practices by Sarah
James and Torbjörn Lahti
Lynn Markham, UW-Extension Center for Land Use
Education
Jay Moynihan, UW-Extension Shawano County
Sustain Dane www.SustainDane.org
TNS Canada www.NaturalStep.ca
Diana Hammer Tscheschlok, UW-Extension Fond du Lac
County
UW-Extension Sustainability Team
www.capacitycenter.org