Good for the Planet: Difference between revisions

From Goodness Community

Line 24: Line 24:
*[[Water]]
*[[Water]]
*[[Foodwaste|Foodwaste]]
*[[Foodwaste|Foodwaste]]
*[[Global Warming]]
*Climate
*Biodiversity
*Biodiversity



Revision as of 11:32, 9 October 2022

Doing good for the planet has many angles, each focussing on specific, sometimes overlapping elements.

The Sustainability pillars

Sustainable development is based on three fundamental pillars: environmental, social and economic.

    • Environmental sustainability, Environmental sustainability is the responsibility to conserve natural resources and protect global ecosystems to support health and wellbeing, now and in the future.
    • Social sustainability, Social sustainability is about identifying and managing business impacts, both positive and negative, on people. The quality of a company's relationships and engagement with its stakeholders is critical.
    • Economic sustainability, Economic sustainability refers to practices that support long-term economic growth without negatively impacting social, environmental, and cultural aspects of the community.

Environmental sustainability

In simple terms, environmental sustainability is the practice of interacting with the planet responsibly. The survival of humanity and other species on the planet is threatened by the negative impact of irresponsible behaviour:

to be classified

This a (non-structured) list of the various topics related to "Good for the Planet"

Based on the issue behind the action

  • Resources depletion
    • Focus areas to reduce risk
      • Materials efficiency
      • Energy efficiency
      • Water efficiency
  • Environmental risk (risk to biodiversity and living conditions)
    • Pollution
    • Climate change
    • Radiation
    • Noise
    • Land use patterns

Another angle

If we want to survive as Human species we need a healthy, sustainable biosystem. We are not Ecological overshoot occurs when human demand exceeds the regenerative capacity of a natural ecosystem. Global overshoot occurs when humanity demands more than what the biosphere can renew. In other words, humanity's Ecological Footprint exceeds what the planet can regenerate.

Related

  • Resource Conservation
  • Agriculture and forestry
  • Private households and consumption
  • Environment and economy

https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/en/data/environmental-indicators