DEFINITION, SCOPE AND IMPORTANCE

Environmental studies deals with every issue that
affects an organism. It is essentially a
multidisciplinary approach that brings about an
appreciation of our natural world and human
impacts on its integrity. It is an applied science
as its seeks practical answers to making human
civilization sustainable on the earth’s finite resources.
Its components include biology, geology, chemistry,
physics, engineering, sociology, health,
anthropology, economics, statistics, computers
and philosophy.
1.1.2 Scope
As we look around at the area in which we live,
we see that our surroundings were originally a
natural landscape such as a forest, a river, a
mountain, a desert, or a combination of these
elements. Most of us live in landscapes that have
been heavily modified by human beings, in villages,
towns or cities. But even those of us who
live in cities get our food supply from surrounding
villages and these in turn are dependent on
natural landscapes such as forests, grasslands,
rivers, seashores, for resources such as water
for agriculture, fuel wood, fodder, and fish. Thus
our daily lives are linked with our surroundings
and inevitably affects them. We use water to
drink and for other day-to-day activities. We
breathe air, we use resources from which food
is made and we depend on the community of
living plants and animals which form a web of
life, of which we are also a part. Everything
around us forms our environment and our lives
depend on keeping its vital systems as intact as
possible.
Our dependence on nature is so great that we
cannot continue to live without protecting the earth’s environmental resources. Thus most traditions
refer to our environment as ‘Mother
Nature’ and most traditional societies have
learned that respecting nature is vital for their
livelihoods. This has led to many cultural practices
that helped traditional societies protect and
preserve their natural resources. Respect for
nature and all living creatures is not new to India.
All our traditions are based on these values.
Emperor Ashoka’s edict proclaimed that all
forms of life are important for our well being in
Fourth Century BC.
Over the past 200 years however, modern societies
began to believe that easy answers to the
question of producing more resources could be
provided by means of technological innovations.
For example, though growing more food by
using fertilizers and pesticides, developing better
strains of domestic animals and crops, irrigating
farmland through mega dams and
developing industry, led to rapid economic
growth, the ill effects of this type of development,
led to environmental degradation.
The industrial development and intensive agriculture
that provides the goods for our increasingly
consumer oriented society uses up large
amounts of natural resources such as water,
minerals, petroleum products, wood, etc. Nonrenewable
resources, such as minerals and oil
are those which will be exhausted in the future
if we continue to extract these without a
thought for subsequent generations. Renewable resources, such as timber and water, are
those which can be used but can be regenerated
by natural processes such as regrowth or
rainfall. But these too will be depleted if we continue
to use them faster than nature can replace
them. For example, if the removal of
timber and firewood from a forest is faster than
the regrowth and regeneration of trees, it cannot
replenish the supply. And loss of forest cover
not only depletes the forest of its resources, such
as timber and other non-wood products, but
affect our water resources because an intact
natural forest acts like a sponge which holds
water and releases it slowly. Deforestation leads
to floods in the monsoon and dry rivers once
the rains are over.
Such multiple effects on the environment resulting
from routine human activities must be
appreciated by each one of us, if it is to provide
us with the resources we need in the long-term.
Our natural resources can be compared with
money in a bank. If we use it rapidly, the capital
will be reduced to zero. On the other hand, if
we use only the interest, it can sustain us over
the longer term. This is called sustainable
utilisation or development.
Importance
Environment is not a single subject. It is an integration
of several subjects that include both
Science and Social Studies. To understand all
the different aspects of our environment we
need to understand biology, chemistry, physics,
geography, resource management, economics
and population issues. Thus the scope of environmental
studies is extremely wide and covers
some aspects of nearly every major discipline.
We live in a world in which natural resources
are limited. Water, air, soil, minerals, oil, the
products we get from forests, grasslands, oceans
and from agriculture and livestock, are all a part
of our life support systems. Without them, life
itself would be impossible. As we keep increasing
in numbers and the quantity of resources each of us uses also increases, the earth’s resource
base must inevitably shrink. The earth
cannot be expected to sustain this expanding
level of utilization of resources. Added to this is
misuse of resources. We waste or pollute large
amounts of nature’s clean water; we create
more and more material like plastic that we discard
after a single use; and we waste colossal
amounts of food, which is discarded as garbage.
Manufacturing processes create solid waste
byproducts that are discarded, as well as chemicals
that flow out as liquid waste and pollute
water, and gases that pollute the air. Increasing
amounts of waste cannot be managed by natural
processes. These accumulate in our environment,
leading to a variety of diseases and other
adverse environmental impacts now seriously affecting
all our lives. Air pollution leads to respiratory
diseases, water pollution to
gastro-intestinal diseases, and many pollutants
are known to cause cancer.
Improving this situation will only happen if each
of us begins to take actions in our daily lives
that will help preserve our environmental resources.
We cannot expect Governments alone
to manage the safeguarding of the environment,
nor can we expect other people to prevent
environmental damage. We need to do it ourselves.
It is a responsibility that each of us must
take on as ones own.Improving this situation will only happen if each
of us begins to take actions in our daily lives
that will help preserve our environmental resources.
We cannot expect Governments alone
to manage the safeguarding of the environment,
nor can we expect other people to prevent
environmental damage. We need to do it ourselves.
It is a responsibility that each of us must
take on as ones own-
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