Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world

In a globalizing world, trade has become essential to supporting the needs and wants of billions of people. Virtually everyone now consumes resource commodities and manufactured products traded all over the world; the ecological footprints of nations are now scattered across the globe. The spatial s...

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Main Author: Kissinger, Meidad
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1021
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-10212018-01-05T17:22:49Z Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world Kissinger, Meidad Interregional ecology Globalization Trade Ecological footprint analysis Material flows Ecological deterioration Sustainability In a globalizing world, trade has become essential to supporting the needs and wants of billions of people. Virtually everyone now consumes resource commodities and manufactured products traded all over the world; the ecological footprints of nations are now scattered across the globe. The spatial separation of material production (resource exploitation) from consumption eliminates negative feedbacks from supporting eco-systems. Most consumers remain unaware of the impacts that their trade dependence imposes on distant ecosystems (out of sight out of mind). I take the first steps in developing a conceptual and practical framework for an ‘interregional ecology’ approach to exploring and analyzing sustainability in an increasingly interconnected world. Such an approach accounts for some of the ‘externalities’ of globalization and international trade. It underscores the increasing dependence and impact of almost any country on resources originating from others and recognizes that the sustainability of any specified region may be increasingly linked to the ecological sustainability of distant supporting regions. I empirically describe and quantify some of the interregional material linkages between selected countries. I document the flows of renewable resources into the U.S. and quantify the U.S. external material footprint (EF) on specific countries. I then document the physical inputs involved in production of most agricultural export products from Costa Rica and Canada. Finally, I focus on major export products such as bananas, coffee and beef in Costa Rica and agricultural activities in the Canadian Prairies and document some of the ecological consequences (loss of habitat, soil degradation, water contamination and biodiversity loss) of that production. My research findings show increasing U.S. imports, increasing reliance on external sources and growing external ecological footprints. They also show how production activities mostly for overseas consumption led to changes in ecological structure and function in the studied export countries. This dissertation adds a missing trans-national dimension to the sustainability debate effectively integrating the policy and planning domain for sustainability in one region with that in others. While my research focuses mainly on documenting the nature and magnitude of interregional connections I also consider some of the implications of the interregional approach for sustainability planning. Applied Science, Faculty of Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of Graduate 2008-07-17T17:35:26Z 2008-07-17T17:35:26Z 2008 2008-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1021 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 2669592 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Interregional ecology
Globalization
Trade
Ecological footprint analysis
Material flows
Ecological deterioration
Sustainability
spellingShingle Interregional ecology
Globalization
Trade
Ecological footprint analysis
Material flows
Ecological deterioration
Sustainability
Kissinger, Meidad
Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
description In a globalizing world, trade has become essential to supporting the needs and wants of billions of people. Virtually everyone now consumes resource commodities and manufactured products traded all over the world; the ecological footprints of nations are now scattered across the globe. The spatial separation of material production (resource exploitation) from consumption eliminates negative feedbacks from supporting eco-systems. Most consumers remain unaware of the impacts that their trade dependence imposes on distant ecosystems (out of sight out of mind). I take the first steps in developing a conceptual and practical framework for an ‘interregional ecology’ approach to exploring and analyzing sustainability in an increasingly interconnected world. Such an approach accounts for some of the ‘externalities’ of globalization and international trade. It underscores the increasing dependence and impact of almost any country on resources originating from others and recognizes that the sustainability of any specified region may be increasingly linked to the ecological sustainability of distant supporting regions. I empirically describe and quantify some of the interregional material linkages between selected countries. I document the flows of renewable resources into the U.S. and quantify the U.S. external material footprint (EF) on specific countries. I then document the physical inputs involved in production of most agricultural export products from Costa Rica and Canada. Finally, I focus on major export products such as bananas, coffee and beef in Costa Rica and agricultural activities in the Canadian Prairies and document some of the ecological consequences (loss of habitat, soil degradation, water contamination and biodiversity loss) of that production. My research findings show increasing U.S. imports, increasing reliance on external sources and growing external ecological footprints. They also show how production activities mostly for overseas consumption led to changes in ecological structure and function in the studied export countries. This dissertation adds a missing trans-national dimension to the sustainability debate effectively integrating the policy and planning domain for sustainability in one region with that in others. While my research focuses mainly on documenting the nature and magnitude of interregional connections I also consider some of the implications of the interregional approach for sustainability planning. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of === Graduate
author Kissinger, Meidad
author_facet Kissinger, Meidad
author_sort Kissinger, Meidad
title Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
title_short Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
title_full Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
title_fullStr Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
title_full_unstemmed Interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
title_sort interregional ecology - resource flows and sustainability in a globalizing world
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1021
work_keys_str_mv AT kissingermeidad interregionalecologyresourceflowsandsustainabilityinaglobalizingworld
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