06548oam 2200877M 450 991078549100332120230207213814.01-280-87453-897866137158451-136-53061-41-136-53060-61-84977-665-29781844079001(CKB)2670000000058395(EBL)605285(OCoLC)689997473(SSID)ssj0000490423(PQKBManifestationID)12167606(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000490423(PQKBWorkID)10467225(PQKB)10012327(MiAaPQ)EBC605285(OCoLC)1148071331(OCoLC-P)1148071331(FlBoTFG)9781849776653(EXLCZ)99267000000005839520100225j20100908 uy 0engur|n|||||||||txtccrSustainability Unpacked Food, Energy and Water for Resilient Environments and SocietiesFirst edition.New York RoutledgeSept. 2010Florence Taylor & Francis Group [distributor]1 online resource (329 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-84407-900-7 Sustainability UnpackedFood, Energy and Water for Resilient Environments and Societies; Copyright; Contents; Authors and Contributors; Preface; List of Figures and Tables; Part 1: From the Beginning; 1. Sustainability - Clues for Positive Societal and Ecosystem Change; Defining Sustainability; Why Sustainability Needs to be Unpacked; Decoding Our Current Perceptions of Sustainability and Is There a Right Model?; Large Datasets and Moving Beyond Irrational Human Choices; Using Human Development Ranking to Understand Large Datasets; 2. Learning From the PAST:Why Societies Collapsed or SurvivedWhy People Live Where They DoWhere is it easier for humans to live within their footprints?; Where is it difficult for humans to live within their footprints?; Industrialization Fuelled by Carbon; A history of how society became dependent on 'artificial' products made from fossil carbon; Agrarian societies are dependent on renewable carbon; The 'carbonization' of society and the importance of coal; Oil made our 'synthetic' world possible; The Norm:Transboundary Consumption of Someone Else's Resources; Human History: A Search for Food Security; Food and social statusFood preservation for food securityRestaurants and our perceptions of food security; A Long Human History of Poor Health; Accidental Reductions in Human Resource Uses; Part 2: Scientific Approach to Decoding Sustainability; 3. TODAY: Decoding Country Resource Stories; Indices and How they Characterize Sustainable Choices; Indices rank environmental/ecological metrics well; Human and resource capital disconnect; Indices and Advanced-Economy Countries; Indices and Emerging-Economy Countries; Indices and Growing-Economy Countries; Lessons Learnt From Indices; Part 3: The Real Country Stories4. Fossil Energy Endowments and ExternalitiesCO2 Emissions Link to Energy; CO2 emissions and total fossil fuel consumption; CO2 emissions and gasoline consumption; Societies and Fossil Energy Options; Diverse fossil energy portfolios the norm; Energy security after becoming a net importer of oil; Energy Production Is Water Demanding; 5. Forests - The Backbone and Circulatory System for Human Societies; Where do you Find Forests Today?; Energy Choices and Satisfying Human Survival Needs; Forests and Fossil Energies: Incompatible in a Conservation and Sustainable Development World?CO2 Emissions, Land Use Changes and Forest Sequestration of CarbonLiquid Fuels from Forests to Mitigate CO2 Emissions; Environmental challenges to biofuels; Forest energy and sustainability from distributed energy production; Forest Uses have Negative Environmental Repercussions Elsewhere; 6. The Soil and Water Connection to Food: Adapt, Mitigate or Die; What Constrains Local Food Production?; Soil chemistry - sets the threshold for food production; Severely degraded lands and food production; Water Security and Soils; Part 4: Climate and Soils: Unavoidable Constraints to Solar Capital7. The FUTURE: Climate Change as a Global Driver Impacting SustainabilityAnnotationFood, water and energy form some of the basic elements of sustainability considerations. This ground-breaking book examines and decodes these elements, exploring how a range of countries make decisions regarding their energy and bio-resource consumption and procurement. The authors consider how these choices impact not only the societies and environments of those countries, but the world in general. To achieve this, the authors review the merits of various sustainability and environmental metrics, and then apply these to 34 countries that are ranked low, medium or high on the human development index. The book assesses their resource capacities and the environmental impacts, both within and outside their country boundaries, from consuming food, water, and energy. The final section uses the lessons derived from the earlier analyses of resource consumption to explore the importance of geography, climates and sustainable management of forests and other natural resources for building resilient societies in the future.EnvironmentEnvironmental responsibilitySustainable livingSustainable livingEnvironmental responsibilityAnthropologyHILCCSocial SciencesHILCCAnthropogeography & Human EcologyHILCCEnvironment.Environmental responsibility.Sustainable living.Sustainable livingEnvironmental responsibilityAnthropologySocial SciencesAnthropogeography & Human Ecology333.72Vogt Kristiina A.869373Patel-Weynand TorelShelton MauraVogt Daniel J.Gordon John C.Mukumoto CalSuntana Asep S.Roads Patricia A.OCoLC-POCoLC-PBOOK9910785491003321Sustainability Unpacked3829252UNINA