2. Session Outcomes
By the end of the session learners will;
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Be introduced to the principles of
environmental awareness by:
Understanding the meaning of some
common terminology.
Having an awareness of the impact of
environmental change.
Have an awareness of resource efficiency.
Identifying practical ways to reduce
environmental impacts.
3. What do we mean by
‘Environmental Awareness’?
Highlight environmentally friendly
working practices, relating to
ï‚— Waste
ï‚— Energy
ï‚— Transport
ï‚— Water use
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4. Group Exercises
Define the following terms;
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Climate change
Ecological footprint
Carbon footprint/management
Sustainable development
The three strands of sustainable development
GROUP TASK 1
6. Ecological Footprint
Ecological footprint
is a measure of
human demand on
the Earth's
resources
ï‚— Amount of natural
resources required
to sustain our
consumption and
deal with our waste
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10. Group Exercises
Identify the following;
The key features of an ecological footprint
ï‚— The key features of the science of climate
change
ï‚— The major impacts of climate change and
global warming
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GROUP TASK 2
11. Impacts of Environmental
change
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Key features of an Ecological
Footprint
◦ Average footprint measured in ‘Planets’
â—¦ Speed in which it takes to regenerate
what we use in a year
â—¦ Developed world resource use - higher
â—¦ Developing world resource use - less
â—¦ Need for food, transport, energy
use, agriculture, deforestation
â—¦ Population growth
12. Impacts of Environmental
change
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Key features of the science of climate
change
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Global temperature rise
Natural reasons (solar cycles, volcanoes etc…)
Man-made reasons (emissions, change in land use
etc…)
CO2 and other greenhouse gases
Reduced ice caps, sea temperatures and
levels increase, release of greenhouse
gases
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13.
14. CO2 Emissions
Agriculture (CO2, Nitrous Oxide)
 Fluorinated gases (CFC’s, HFC’s)
ï‚— Waste industry (CO2, Methane)
ï‚— Transport (CO2)
ï‚— Industry (CO2, Nitrous Oxide)
ï‚— Household (CO2)
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15. Global Warming
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The main cause of global warming is the
emission of ‘greenhouse gases’ such as
carbon dioxide, methane (25x) and nitrous
oxide (300x).
Human activity over the past 250 years,
including the burning of fossil fuels, change of
land use and agriculture, has increased the
concentration of greenhouse gases in the
earth’s atmosphere.
As these gases build up in the atmosphere
they strengthen what is known as the
‘greenhouse effect’.
16. Impacts of Environmental
change
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Major Impacts:
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Global warming
Sea level rise
Ocean acidification
Health
Temperature rise
Extreme weather events
Deforestation
Ecosystem strain
Loss of biodiversity
17. Global Warming
Arctic summer ice levels decreasing year
on year since 1979.
ï‚— Sea levels risen by 10cm around the UK
during the 20th century.
 The Earth’s surface has warmed by 1 C in
last 100 years.
ï‚— In 160 years of records the 10 hottest years
have been since 1997.
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18. Group Activity
In order to minimise the impact of
waste products on the environment
there are actions that we can take
by reducing what we use, reusing
products and recycling waste.
In groups complete the ‘waste
hierarchy’ activity and then feedback
your answers to the other groups
20. Group Exercises
Identify the following;
Ways to reduce consumption of
commonly used resources
ï‚— Ways to reuse commonly used
resources
ï‚— Identify recyclable resources
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GROUP TASK 4
21. Ways to reduce….
Boil only water you need
ï‚— Buy only what you need
ï‚— Buy things with less packaging
ï‚— Cook food for only those eating
ï‚— Switch off lights, monitors, appliances
ï‚— Print on both sides of paper
ï‚— Flush toilet only when needed
ï‚— Solar power
ï‚— Insulation in homes
ï‚— Service vehicles and equip regularly
ï‚— Use public transport
 Walk…
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22. Ways to reuse….
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New ways of using materials
Reuse wrapping, boxes, plastic
bags
‘Bag for life’
Repair rather than dispose
Composting (paper, wood, food)
Chip fat from local chip shop used
as diesel
Sell unwanted items
Re-use coffee cups
Print on both sides
Rechargeable batteries
Grey water harvesting
Rain water harvesting
23. Rainwater Harvesting
Collects water from
rainfall
ï‚— Garden use
ï‚— Supply water for
cleaning and flushing
ï‚— Not for use as drinking
water
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24. Greywater Harvesting
Collects water from
cleaning and bathing
ï‚— Clean and filter
ï‚— Used for flushing
ï‚— Can reduce the need
for water from main
supply
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27. Recycling materials into.....
Paper
 More paper, depending on quality – 7 times
Cardboard
ï‚— Paper, jiffy bags, loft insulation, car bodies, packaging, animal bedding,
coffins
Cans
ï‚— New cans, car and aviation , bike frames, train tracks, pipes. Never loses
quality
Plastics
ï‚— New bottles, car parts, bins, home composters . It can also be used to make
clothing such as fleece jackets and hats or fibre filling for sleeping bags and
duvets. Plastic milk bottles are used in street and garden furniture
Glass
ï‚— Reused where possible (brown, clear) or crushed and turned into fine sand to
be used as building sand, if processed further can be used as floor and wall
insulation and lightweight construction aggregate.
Tyres
ï‚— Surfaces for playgrounds, shock absorption, car parts, retreads, fuel, mulch
for landscaping, 3G sports pitches
28. Group Exercises
Identify the following;
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Meaning of renewable and non-renewable
resources
Commonly used resources
Reasons why a business should be more
resource efficient
How resource efficiency affects climate
change
GROUP TASK 3
29. Commonly used resources
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Renewable
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Non-renewable
â—¦ Can be replenished
through biological or
natural processes
â—¦ Solar
â—¦ Wind
â—¦ Tides
â—¦ Hydro power
â—¦ Biomass (plants, trees etc,
when harvested
sustainably)
â—¦ Food stuffs
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Cannot be grown,
replenished in the same
rate it is consumed
Fossil fuels
â—¦ Coal
â—¦ Gas
â—¦ Oil (fuel, petrol etc)
Radioactive fuel
Metals
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30. A few facts
We throw away more than 7 million tonnes of
food and drink every year from our homes most of which could have been safely
consumed.
ï‚— By pursuing opportunities for re-use, the UK
could reduce its reliance on raw
materials, including rare earths, by as much
as 20% by 2020.
ï‚— Our research shows doubling the number of
sofas re-used, could save 52,000 tonnes of
CO2 equivalent. At the moment, 83% of
sofas are not re-used and are sent to landfill
or recycled.
 Tip of the iceberg……
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31. Business Reasons for Resource
Efficiency
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Regulation and
legislation
Reputation
Cost reduction
Staff retention
Profitability
Development of
industrial capability
Standard of living in
less developed
countries
32. Links between resource
efficiency and climate change
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Emissions of greenhouse gases
from manufacturing, agriculture,
transport, forestry, aviation,
shipping
Embodied energy
â—¦ Total sum of energy to produce
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Emissions from
â—¦ waste
â—¦ transport
â—¦ energy use
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Transfer of greenhouse gases
from one part of a cycle to
another e.g. hybrid cars reduce
fuel consumption but use
inefficient coal fired power
stations to charge batteries
33. Waste Types
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Hazardous
ï‚– Waste which may contain hazardous substances,
may cause harm to the environment or react with
other materials
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Non-Hazardous
ï‚– Soils, builder materials, sludge, inert materials
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Clinical/Biological
ï‚– Sharps, infected material, some hospital waste,
waste from surgeries hospitals and clinics,
infectious organisms, absorbent materials, human
and animal tissue
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Inert and Active
ï‚– Building waste such as rubble, bricks, stone (Inert)
and wood, old window frames, guttering, pipework,
downspouts and other building related matter
(Active)
35. If you want to research
more...
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www.wrap.org.uk
www.letsrecycle.com
www.defra.gov.uk
www.recyclenow.com
www.recycling-guide.org.uk
footprint.wwf.org.uk/
to see your personal ecological footprint
www.carbonindependent.org/
to see your personal carbon footprint
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37. Practice Questions
Complete the crossword and the
practice questions on your own.
We will then go through the answers as
a group to see how you all did.
This will prepare you for the on-line test.