scholarly journals KONTRIBUSI BUDDHIS DALAM MEMELIHARA KELESTARIAN LINGKUNGAN

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mulyana

The mistakes of human views on the environment cause human treatment in utilizing the natural environment does not pay attentuon to its sustainability. Issues such as air pollution, water and soil pollution, waste, global warming, and environmental degradation are the effects of uncontrolled exploitation of natural resources. It takes a change in the human perspective in caring for the natural environment in fullfill the needs and improving the welfare. Teere are many Buddhist values that can be implemented in the use and preservation of the environment. This paper aims to explore the values of Buddhism that can be implemented to preserve the environment. The paper is also aims to teveal some movements or activities of Buddhist aimed on preserving the environment.

Author(s):  
Andrew Farmer

The physical environment of western Europe (its air, water, and soil) has been affected by a wide range of pollutants for centuries. Localized pollution of water from anthropogenic sources has been observed since the time of the Roman Empire and by the medieval period cities already experienced air pollution problems. As will be seen, proposals to tackle pollution in the Rhine stretch back to the fifteenth century. However, extensive pollution of the environment was a characteristic of the industrial revolution and major and widespread impacts have been observed throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Only in the last few decades have the emissions (and, therefore, impacts) of many of these pollutants declined due to measures taken by the countries of the region, both collectively and individually (Farmer 1997). This chapter presents an overview of trends in air, water, and soil pollution. In each case the pollutants of most concern will be discussed, indicating their sources and impacts; locations are indicated in Fig. 19.1. In each case the measures that have been adopted to reduce these pollutants will be described, not least to suggest trends for the future. The monitoring of pollutant emissions, concentrations in the environment, and their specific impacts have generated enormous quantities of data over many years. Basic ‘state of environment’ information is produced at the municipal, regional, national, and international level. The latter includes reports produced by EU institutions, especially the European Commission and the European Environment Agency, as well as other multilateral co-operative institutions such as the Rhine Commission. Severe air pollution sources are concentrated, among other regions, in the traditional heavy industry complexes in north-eastern France, Luxembourg, the Meuse valley in Belgium, and in the huge Ruhr industrial complex in western Germany. The range of air pollutants produced by human activity, as well as the impacts that they cause, are extensive. This section will focus on the following pollutants: ammonia, nitrogen oxides, ozone, particulates, and sulphur dioxide. These result in a range of impacts from direct effects on human health and on vegetation to damage to buildings and materials and acidification and eutrophication of soils and water.


Author(s):  
Daniel K. Gardner

What Are the Major Health Consequences of Air, Water, and Soil Pollution? When the smog settles in, coughing, wheezing, watering of the eyes, and shortness of breath are common, but these are relatively benign effects of air pollution. More serious respiratory problems associated with exposure...


2014 ◽  
Vol 889-890 ◽  
pp. 1600-1603
Author(s):  
Sha Chen ◽  
Wan Bin Wang

Environmental pollution problems in the copper industry are studied from the water pollution, air pollution and soil pollution. The threshold of copper industry access should be improved and elimination of three-high backward productivity should be accelerated to solve environmental contamination in the copper industry. Meanwhile, promoting of energy conservation and emission reduction and rational exploitation for natural resources also should be valued.


1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 39-54
Author(s):  
Mladen Črnjar ◽  
Miro Šverko

Within conditions of increased environmental degradation caused by growth of production, transport, population and tourist activities, balance of the environment has deteriorated. In this essay we analyse typology of environmental damages caused by tourism - air, sea, water and soil pollution, noise and waste, traffic congestion, spatial deviations, deteriorating of cultural-historical values, loss of domicile population, increasing of crime, etc. The following methods of estimation of environmental damages caused by tourism have been specially presented: economic (monetary) estimations, indirect assessment, global evaluations, as well as possibilities of internalization of external environmental costs.


Today’s world is witnessed by a drastic increase in the products that are either substitutes or complementary. The consumers are in a dilemma with regard to their purchase decision. The availability of the products is a boon to the economy, but are these products being utilized in a proper manner where in the environmental issues are taken into consideration. The resources that are available in the economy are less as compared to what is needed. Therefore a proper balance is to be kept between the utilization and its disposal. The producers may be concerned about their profit margin, still keeping the objectives the production could be effectively done without harming the environment. In recent days, environmental issues have received a great deal of discussion in the field of marketing. When the society becomes more concerned with the natural environment, businessmen have begun to modify their behavior to address the society’s new concern. With the growing awareness about the implication of global warming, non-bio degradable solid waste, harmful impact of pollutants etc, both marketer and consumers are switching to eco-friendly products and many companies have accepted their responsibility not to harm the environment and not to waste the natural resources. This paper aims to understand the perception of consumers towards eco-friendly goods and its influence on their buying decision.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Guo ◽  
Laura Wilcox ◽  
Massimo Bollasina ◽  
Steven Turnock ◽  
Marianne Lund ◽  
...  

<p>The occurrence of severe haze events remains a serious problem in Beijing. Previous studies suggested that the frequency of weather patterns conducive to haze may increase with global warming. The new Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) cover a wide range of uncertainties in aerosol and greenhouse gases emissions. Global and Chinese aerosol emissions are projected to decrease in most SSPs, while increases in greenhouse gases and global warming will continue for the rest of the century. The future, therefore, remains unclear.</p><p>We quantified the air pollution over Beijing and associated weather patterns using multiple indices calculated from the SSPs</p><p>We show that the occurrence of weather patterns conducive to the formation of haze significantly increases by the end of the century due to increases in greenhouse gases. Aerosol reductions also cause an increase in their occurrence, but reduce the severity of haze, and overall reducing aerosol emissions will be beneficial.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 365-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geert Jan van Oldenborgh ◽  
Sjoukje Philip ◽  
Sarah Kew ◽  
Michiel van Weele ◽  
Peter Uhe ◽  
...  

Abstract. On 19 May 2016 the afternoon temperature reached 51.0 °C in Phalodi in the northwest of India – a new record for the highest observed maximum temperature in India. The previous year, a widely reported very lethal heat wave occurred in the southeast, in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, killing thousands of people. In both cases it was widely assumed that the probability and severity of heat waves in India are increasing due to global warming, as they do in other parts of the world. However, we do not find positive trends in the highest maximum temperature of the year in most of India since the 1970s (except spurious trends due to missing data). Decadal variability cannot explain this, but both increased air pollution with aerosols blocking sunlight and increased irrigation leading to evaporative cooling have counteracted the effect of greenhouse gases up to now. Current climate models do not represent these processes well and hence cannot be used to attribute heat waves in this area. The health effects of heat are often described better by a combination of temperature and humidity, such as a heat index or wet bulb temperature. Due to the increase in humidity from irrigation and higher sea surface temperatures (SSTs), these indices have increased over the last decades even when extreme temperatures have not. The extreme air pollution also exacerbates the health impacts of heat. From these factors it follows that, from a health impact point of view, the severity of heat waves has increased in India. For the next decades we expect the trend due to global warming to continue but the surface cooling effect of aerosols to diminish as air quality controls are implemented. The expansion of irrigation will likely continue, though at a slower pace, mitigating this trend somewhat. Humidity will probably continue to rise. The combination will result in a strong rise in the temperature of heat waves. The high humidity will make health effects worse, whereas decreased air pollution would decrease the impacts.


2021 ◽  
Vol 250 ◽  
pp. 01005
Author(s):  
Manuela Tvaronavičienė

Adaptation strategies to the climate change include measures that can be taken to take account of the new climatic conditions. This paper aims at assessing the effects of climate change on environmental sustainability. This sustainability constitutes a major problem in many countries and regions around the world that experience industrial pollution, degradation of land as well as natural disasters caused by the global warming. The paper shows that adaptation strategies are often parallel strategies that can be integrated simultaneously with the management of natural resources. They can make resources more efficient and resilient to climate change. The paper shows that reducing the carbon footprint by more than 50 percent by 2030 and eliminating it by 2050 might be a viable solution how to tackle the climate change and support the environmental sustainability.


2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-15
Author(s):  
Sabrina Soares da Silva ◽  
Ricardo Pereira Reis ◽  
Patrícia Aparecida Ferreira

More attention has been paid to environmental matters in recent years, mainly due to the current scenario of accentuated environmental degradation. The economic valuation of nature goods can contribute to the decision-making process in environment management, generating a more comprehensive informational base. This paper aims to present, in a historic perspective, the different concepts attributed to nature goods and were related to the current predominant perspectives of nature analyses. For this purpose, this paper presents the different concepts attributed to value since the pre-classical period, when nature were viewed as inert and passive providers of goods and services, this view legitimized nature's exploration without concern over the preservation and conservation of nature. The capacity of nature to absorb the impact of human action appears to be reaching its limit, considering the irreversibility, the irreproducibility and the possibility of collapse. The appropriate method for valuing natural resources is not known, but more important than the method is to respect and incorporate the particular characteristics of the nature goods into this process. These characteristics must be valuated in order to arrive at a more consistence approach to nature value and promote sustainability.


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