Suite101

Ecological Footprints


© Kenneth Friedman

Step in the mud or wet beach sand and you leave footprints. Children leave little ones. Adults leave big ones. Wildlife leaves footprints of various shapes and sizes too. Apparently nations leave footprints too - ecological footprints. So do states, cities, businesses and households, and our print is much bigger than it should be.

One source, the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, defines an ecological footprint as "The size and impact of the 'footprints' of companies, communities or individuals," which reflects "a number of interlinked factors, among them human population numbers, consumption patterns and the technologies used."

Without looking this up further, I take this to mean more than just the physical space a company, communities or individuals take up. A manufacturing company that uses raw materials, for example, may physically occupy X amount of space with its facilities but it also has an impact wherever it gets its raw materials and other goods it uses in manufacturing. In reality, the footprint is larger than one might think. Individuals and communities are the same way. Each of us has an environmental impact far beyond the physical area of our houses or apartments. Think about it.

Indeed, an explanation by R. H. (Dick) Richardson in a course on Natural Resource Management at the University of Texas, Austin, teaches us the following: "Each organism uses resources from the ecosystem to exist. We express this essential requirement as an area of the planet that annually supplies these requirements each year and define this as the organism's ecological footprint. For humans, we can record the consumption data and convert it into an area that supplies these ecosystem resources that are annually appropriated by each person. This is an example of a "systems analysis" that is very helpful for us to understand the connections between our behavior and our dependency on the ecosystem. Our ecological footprint helps appreciate what we get for free from ecosystem services.

Put another way, "the Ecological Footprint of any defined population (from a single individual to a whole city or country) is the area of biologically productive land and water area occupied exclusively to produce the resources consumed and to assimilate the wastes generated by that population, using prevailing technology. As people use resources from all over the world and affect far away places with their wastes, footprints sum up these ecological areas wherever that land and water may be located on the planet."

Go To Page: 1 2 3


The copyright of the article Ecological Footprints in Environment is owned by . Permission to republish Ecological Footprints in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo