The limits of technological solutions to sustainable development

Michael H. Huesemann1
1Marine Science Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Sequim, USA

Tóm tắt

Từ khóa


Tài liệu tham khảo

Abbasi SA, Abbasi N, Nipaney PC, Ramasamy EV (1995) Environmental impact of non-conventional energy sources. J Sci Ind Res 54:285–293

Allenby BR (1999) Industrial ecology: policy framework and implementation. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.

Allenby BR, Richards DJ (1994) The greening of industrial ecosystems. National Academy of Engineering, National Academy Press, Washington, D.C.

Atkins PW (1984) The second law. Scientific American Books, WH Freeman, New York

Ausubel J (1996) Can technology spare the Earth? Am Sci 84:166–178

Ayres RU (1994) Industrial metabolism: theory and policy. In: Allenby BR, Richards DJ (eds), The greening of industrial ecosystems. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., pp 23–37

Ayres RU (1996) Statistical measures of unsustainability. Ecol Econ 16:239–255

Aryes RU (1998a) Eco-thermodynamics: economics and the second law. Ecol Econ 26:189–209

Ayres RU (1998b) Toward a zero-emission economy. Environ Sci Technol August 1 Issue: 366A–367A

Ayres R (1999) The second law, the fourth law, recycling and limits to growth. Ecol Econ 29:473–483

Ayres RU, Ayres LW (1996) Industrial ecology: towards closing the materials cycle. Edward Elgar, Brookfield, Vt.

Ayres R, Martinas K (1995) Waste potential entropy: the ultimate ecotoxic? Econ Appl 48:95–120

Ayres R, Miller SM (1980) The role of technological change. J Environ Econ Manage 7:353–371

Ayres RU, Nair I (1984) Thermodynamics and economics. Phys Today November:62–71

Ayres RU, Simonis UE (1994) Industrial metabolism: restructuring for sustainable development. United Nations University Press, New York

Azar C, Holmberg J, Lindgren K (1996) Socio-ecological indicators for sustainability. Ecol Econ 18:89–112

Balzhiser RE, Samuels MR, Elisassen JD (1972) Chemical engineering thermodynamics. The study of energy, entropy, and equilibrium. Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.

Bezdek RH (1993) The environmental, health, and safety implications of solar energy in central station power production. Energy 18:681–685

Bezdek RH, Wending R, Bennington GE, Chew HR (1982) National goals for solar energy: economic and social implications. Nat Resour J 22:337–360

Bianciardi CE, Tiezzi E, Ulgiati S (1993) Complete recycling of matter in the frameworks of physics, biology, and ecological economics. Ecol Econ 8:1–5

Boyle G (1996) Renewable energy: power for a sustainable future. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK

Braun E (1995) Futile progress: technology's empty promise. Earthscan, London

Brower M (1992) Cool energy: renewable solutions to environmental problems. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Campbell CJ, Laherrere JH (1998) The end of cheap oil. Sci Am March:78–83

Carlsmith RS et al. (1990) Energy efficiency: how far can we go? U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge National Laboratory Report ORNL/TM-11441

Clark CW (1997) Renewable resources and economic growth. Ecol Econ 22:275–276

Clarke A (1994) Comparing the impacts of renewables. Int J Ambient Energy 5:59–72

Cleveland CJ, Ruth M (1997) When, where and by how much does thermodynamics constrain economic processes? A survey of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen's contribution to ecological economics. Ecol Econ 22:203–223

Cleveland CJ, Ruth M (1999) Indicators of dematerialization and the materials intensity of use. J Ind Ecol 2:15–50

Connelly L, Koshland CP (1997) Two aspects of consumption: using an exergy-based measure of degradation to advance the theory and implementation of industrial ecology. Resour Conserv Recycling 19:199–217

Constanza R, Daly HE (1992) National capital and sustainable development. Conserv Biol 6:37–46

Constanza R, Patten BC (1995) Defining and predicting sustainability. Ecol Econ 15:193–196

Daly HE (1980) Economics, ecology, ethics: assays toward a steady-state economy. WH Freeman, New York

Daly H (1994) Steady-state economics. In: Merchant C (ed) Ecology key concepts in critical theory. Humanities Press, Atlantic Highlands, N.J.

Daly HE (1996) Beyond growth: the economics of sustainable development. Beacon Press, Boston, Mass.

Davidson C (2000) Economic growth and the environment: alternatives to the limits paradigm. BioScience 50:433–440

DeSimone LD, Popoff F (1997) Eco-efficiency: the business link to sustainable development. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Duales System Deutschland AG. For additional information on the German "Green Dot" program, visit http://www.gruener-punkt.de/e/index.htm

Duchin F, Lange G-M (1994) The future of the environment: ecological economics and technological change. Oxford University Press, New York

Durning AT (1992) How much is enough? The consumer society and the future of the Earth. WW Norton, New York

Ehrlich PR (1989) The limits to substitution: meta-resource depletion and a new economic–ecological paradigm. Ecol Econ 1:9–16

Ehrlich PR, Ehrlich AH. (1991) The population explosion. Touchstone Books

Ehrlich PR, Holdren J (1971) Impact of population growth. Science 171:1212–1217

Ehrlich PR, Wolff G, Daily GC, Hughes JB, Daily S, Dalton M, Goulder L (1999) Knowledge and the environment. Ecol Econ 30:267–284

Faber M, Niemes H, Stephan G (1995) Entropy, environment, and resources. Springer, Berlin Heidelberg New York

Gaffin SR (1998) World population projections for greenhouse gas emission scenarios. Mitigation Adaptation Strategies Global Change 3:133–170

Georgescu-Roegen N (1971) The entropy law and the economic process. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Georgescu-Roegen N (1977) The steady-state and ecological salvation: a thermodynamic analysis. BioScience 27:266–270

Georgescu-Roegen N (1980) The entropy law and the economic problem. In: Daly HE (ed) Economics, ecology, ethics: assays toward a steady-state economy. WH Freeman, New York

Glasby GP (1988) Entropy, pollution and environmental degradation. Ambio 17:330–335

Graedel TE (2000). The evolution of industrial ecology. Environ Sci Technol 34:28A–31A

Graedel TE, Allenby BR (1995) Industrial ecology. Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.

Graedel TE, Allenby BR (1998) Industrial ecology and the automobile. Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, N.J.

Greenhalgh G (1990) Energy conservation policies. Energy Policy, April:293–299

Gutes MC (1996) The concept of weak sustainability. Ecol Econ 17:147–156

Haefele W (1981) Energy in a finite world: a global systems analysis. Chapter 10: Energy and climate. Ballinger, Cambridge, Mass.

Hayes D (1977) Rays of hope: the transition to a post-petroleum world. WW Norton, New York

Holdren JP (1990) Energy in transition. Sci Am September:157–163

Holdren JP (1991) Population and the energy problem. Popul Environ 12:231–255

Holdren JP, Morris G, Mintzer I (1980) Environmental aspects of renewable energy sources. Annu Rev Energy 5:241–291

Houghton JT (1997) Global warming: the complete briefing. 2nd edn. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK

Huesemann MH (2001) Can pollution problems be effectively solved by environmental science and technology? An analysis of critical limitations. Ecol Econ 37:271–287

Hueting R, Reijnders L (1998) Sustainability is an objective concept. Ecol Econ 27:139–147

Kuemmel R (1989) Energy as a factor of production and entropy as a pollution indicator in macroeconomic modeling. Ecol Econ 1:161–180

Kuik O, Verbruggen H (1991) In: Search of indicators of sustainable development. Kluwer, Boston, Mass.

Lovins AB (1977) Soft energy paths: toward a durable peace. Ballinger, Cambridge, Mass.

Mayumi K, Giampietro M, Gowdy JM (1998) Georgescu-Roegen/Daly versus Solow/Stiglitz revisited. Ecol Econ 27:115–117

Nelson RR (1996) The sources of economic growth. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Nicolis G, Prigogine I (1977) Self-organization in non-equilibrium systems: from dissipative structures to order through fluctuations. Wiley, New York

O'Connor M (1994) Entropy, liberty and catastrophe: the physics and metaphysics of waste disposal. In: Burley P, Foster J (eds) Economics and thermodynamics: new perspectives on economic analysis. Kluwer, Boston, Mass., pp 119–182

O'Neill BC, MacKellar FL, Lutz W (2001) Population and climate change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) (1998) Eco-efficiency, OECD, Paris

O'Riordan T (1993) The politics of sustainability. In: Turner RK (ed) Sustainable environmental economics and management. Belhaven, New York, pp 37–69

Pearce DW, Atkinson GD (1993) Capital theory and the measurement of sustainable development: an indicator of weak sustainability. Ecol Econ 8:103–108

Pimentel D, Rodrigues G, Wang T, Abrams R, Goldberg K, Staecker H, Ma E, Brueckner L, Trovato L, Chow C, Govindarajulu U, Boerke S (1994) Renewable energy: economic and environmental issues. BioScience 44:536–547

President's Council on Sustainable Development (PCSD) (1996) Sustainable America: a new consensus for the prosperity, opportunity and a healthy environment for the future. http://www.whitehouse.gov/PCSD/Publications/

Prigonine I (1961) Thermodynamics of irreversible processes. Wiley, New York

Prigogine I (1989) What is entropy? Naturwissenschaften 76:1–8

Rees WE, Wackernagel M (1995) Our ecological footprint: reducing human impact on the Earth. New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, BC

Reid D (1995) Sustainable development: an introductory guide. Earthscan, London

Reijnders L (1998) The factor X debate: setting targets for eco-efficiency. J Ind Ecol 2:13–21

Reisner M (1986) Cadillac desert: the American West and its disappearing water. Viking Penguin, New York

Renning K, Wiggering H (1997) Steps towards indicators of sustainable development: linking economic and ecological concepts. Ecol Econ 20:25–36

Rifkin J (1980) Entropy a new world view. Viking, New York

Romm JJ, Curtis CB (1996) Mideast oil forever? Atlantic Mon 277:57

Ruth M (1993) Integrating economics, ecology and thermodynamics. Kluwer, Dortrecht, The Netherlands

Ruth M (1995) Information, order and knowledge in economic and ecological systems: implications for material and energy use. Ecol Econ 13:99–114

Ruth M (1996) Evolutionary economics at the crossroads of biology and physics. J Social Evolutionary Syst 19:125–144

Ruth M, Bullard CW (1993) Information, production, and utility. Energy Policy 21:1059–1066

Sagoff M (1995) Carrying capacity and ecological economics. BioScience 45:610–620

Samuelson PA, Nordhaus WD (1989) Economics, 13th edn. McGraw-Hill, New York

Schmidheiny S (1992) Changing course: a global business perspective on development and environment. MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.

Schnaiberg A, Gould KA (1994) Environment and society: the enduring conflict. St. Martins Press, New York

Skinner BJ (1987) Supplies of geochemically scarce metals. In: McLaren DJ, Skinner BJ (eds) Resources and world development. Wiley, New York, pp 305–325

Stunkel KR, Sarsar S (1994) Ideological values and technology in political life. University Press of America, Lanham, Md.

Tainter JA (1988) The collapse of complex societies. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK

Trainer FE (1995a) Can renewable energy sources sustain affluent society? Energy Policy 23:1009–1026

Trainer T (1995b) The conserver society: alternatives for sustainability. Zed Books, London

Vitousek PM, Ehrlich PR, Ehrlich AH, Matson PA (1986) Human appropriations of the products of photosynthesis. BioScience 36:368–373

Von Weizsacker EU, Lovins A, Lovins H (1997) The factor four. Earthscan, London

Welford R (1997) Hijacking environmentalism: corporate responses to sustainable development. Earthscan, London

Williams RH (1987) Exploring the global potential for more efficient use of energy. In: McLaren DJ, Skinner BJ (eds) Resources and World development. Wiley, New York, pp. 211–244

World Commission on Environment and Development (1987) Our common future. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK

Wright DH (1990) Human impacts on energy flow through natural ecosystems, and implications for species endangerment. Ambio 19:189–194

Youngquist W (1997) GeoDestinies: the inevitable control of Earth resources over nations and individuals. National Book Company, Portland, Oreg.