Restore! Biocapacity and Beyond: Living Within a Finite Biosphere
The underlying premise of this book is as follows, taken from the first paragraph: "Every substance and raw material required for our existence comes from Earth's biosphere, and all depleted or discarded substances and materials are returned to the biosphere as waste to be assimilated and recycled by Earth's ecological systems. These materials and processes are literally our life support systems. They are also the foundation upon which all economic activity and every other human endeavor are based. Consequently, Earth's ability to provide these essential materials and to regulate these critical processes establishes the limit for all human enterprise." The book is an accessible scientific explanation and assessment of Earth's fundamental biogeochemical systems and natural resources. The book provides a detailed explanation of the functioning of the carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, water, methane, and phosphorus cycles, along with critical natural resources such as water, soil, rare earth minerals, phosphates, reactive nitrogen, and arable land. Along with the explanation of each cycle and resource, you will find a detailed explanation of how human activities are disrupting each of these ecological cycles and depleting and damaging these resources. Through the course of the book, the reader learns that linear economic growth, a wide assortment of injurious land-use practices, and population momentum are the primary global drivers that have led us to collectively exceed the biogeochemical boundaries of our Earth systems. The book closes with the principles of the steady-state economy of H.E. Daly, along with economic and natural resource accounting models that could provide the tools for quantifying and accounting for the environmental impacts of human enterprise. We are at a juncture in the history of our planet and our species where we must return to thinking about our economy and sustainability as fully interdependent factors and begin to measure our economic progress in ways that account for our environmental and social impacts. Now that we can measure, we can manage. The road to a healthier environment will be paved with a shared vision of a world where we recognize natural capital as valuable, or some some cases, more valuable, than economic capital and begin to treat it as such in the choices we make at every level of human enterprise.
1137411164
Restore! Biocapacity and Beyond: Living Within a Finite Biosphere
The underlying premise of this book is as follows, taken from the first paragraph: "Every substance and raw material required for our existence comes from Earth's biosphere, and all depleted or discarded substances and materials are returned to the biosphere as waste to be assimilated and recycled by Earth's ecological systems. These materials and processes are literally our life support systems. They are also the foundation upon which all economic activity and every other human endeavor are based. Consequently, Earth's ability to provide these essential materials and to regulate these critical processes establishes the limit for all human enterprise." The book is an accessible scientific explanation and assessment of Earth's fundamental biogeochemical systems and natural resources. The book provides a detailed explanation of the functioning of the carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, water, methane, and phosphorus cycles, along with critical natural resources such as water, soil, rare earth minerals, phosphates, reactive nitrogen, and arable land. Along with the explanation of each cycle and resource, you will find a detailed explanation of how human activities are disrupting each of these ecological cycles and depleting and damaging these resources. Through the course of the book, the reader learns that linear economic growth, a wide assortment of injurious land-use practices, and population momentum are the primary global drivers that have led us to collectively exceed the biogeochemical boundaries of our Earth systems. The book closes with the principles of the steady-state economy of H.E. Daly, along with economic and natural resource accounting models that could provide the tools for quantifying and accounting for the environmental impacts of human enterprise. We are at a juncture in the history of our planet and our species where we must return to thinking about our economy and sustainability as fully interdependent factors and begin to measure our economic progress in ways that account for our environmental and social impacts. Now that we can measure, we can manage. The road to a healthier environment will be paved with a shared vision of a world where we recognize natural capital as valuable, or some some cases, more valuable, than economic capital and begin to treat it as such in the choices we make at every level of human enterprise.
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Restore! Biocapacity and Beyond: Living Within a Finite Biosphere

Restore! Biocapacity and Beyond: Living Within a Finite Biosphere

by Nancy G. Kling
Restore! Biocapacity and Beyond: Living Within a Finite Biosphere

Restore! Biocapacity and Beyond: Living Within a Finite Biosphere

by Nancy G. Kling

eBook

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Overview

The underlying premise of this book is as follows, taken from the first paragraph: "Every substance and raw material required for our existence comes from Earth's biosphere, and all depleted or discarded substances and materials are returned to the biosphere as waste to be assimilated and recycled by Earth's ecological systems. These materials and processes are literally our life support systems. They are also the foundation upon which all economic activity and every other human endeavor are based. Consequently, Earth's ability to provide these essential materials and to regulate these critical processes establishes the limit for all human enterprise." The book is an accessible scientific explanation and assessment of Earth's fundamental biogeochemical systems and natural resources. The book provides a detailed explanation of the functioning of the carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, water, methane, and phosphorus cycles, along with critical natural resources such as water, soil, rare earth minerals, phosphates, reactive nitrogen, and arable land. Along with the explanation of each cycle and resource, you will find a detailed explanation of how human activities are disrupting each of these ecological cycles and depleting and damaging these resources. Through the course of the book, the reader learns that linear economic growth, a wide assortment of injurious land-use practices, and population momentum are the primary global drivers that have led us to collectively exceed the biogeochemical boundaries of our Earth systems. The book closes with the principles of the steady-state economy of H.E. Daly, along with economic and natural resource accounting models that could provide the tools for quantifying and accounting for the environmental impacts of human enterprise. We are at a juncture in the history of our planet and our species where we must return to thinking about our economy and sustainability as fully interdependent factors and begin to measure our economic progress in ways that account for our environmental and social impacts. Now that we can measure, we can manage. The road to a healthier environment will be paved with a shared vision of a world where we recognize natural capital as valuable, or some some cases, more valuable, than economic capital and begin to treat it as such in the choices we make at every level of human enterprise.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781098313166
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication date: 07/29/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 190
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Nancy Kling is a retired business executive and attorney who now dedicates her time to writing and photography. She is a life-long student of natural history and the earth sciences and enjoys sharing her knowledge through the written word. Motivated by the limitations of the youth climate movement and frustrated by the inaction of global political leaders, she has written this book to offer a comprehensive, science-based exploration of vital environmental issues beyond climate change. All profits from the sale of this book will be directed to non-profit environmental organizations.

Table of Contents

Introduction 6

Chapter 1 Biocapacity Planet Earth 11

Chapter 2 Critical Threats to Biocapacity 21

Nitrogen and the nitrogen cycle 22

Phosphorus and the phosphorus cycle 26

Fresh water and the water cycle 33

Arable land and soil 42

Rare earth elements 45

Nonrenewable metals 48

Biodiversity loss 51

Chapter 3 Greenhouse Effects 53

Carbon and the carbon/oxygen cycle 53

Mechanism of the greenhouse effect 63

Methane and the methane cycle 70

Nitrous oxide 75

Water vapor 76

Chapter 4 Population Impacts 79

Population and sustainability 79

An historical view of population 85

Population dynamics 87

Chapter 5 Food Production Impacts 103

Livestock agriculture 103

Fish and aquaculture 118

Food crop agriculture 123

Chapter 6 Toward Sustainability 130

Chapter 7 A New Economic Paradigm 156

Conclusion 174

Citations 178

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