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Ecological Footprint. Environment & Resource Management www.CraigMarlatt.com/school. Ecological Footprint. Difference Between Wants & Needs Your Impact Reducing Our Footprint. If I Had a Million Dollars . Look over the past twenty-four hours.
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Ecological Footprint Environment & Resource Management www.CraigMarlatt.com/school
Ecological Footprint • Difference Between Wants & Needs • Your Impact • Reducing Our Footprint
If I Had a Million Dollars • Look over the past twenty-four hours. • Generalize what you did during that time. Include activities, eating, places you were… • Describe what you needed in order to survive and complete these tasks. • From this developed list of make a sub-list outlining which were needs of survival for you to live here in Ontario. • From the original list make another sub-list outlining which were wants/extras that made life a more comfortable here in Ontario
YOUR Ecological Footprint • Ecological Footprints are a measure of human impact on the Earth. The footprint equals the Earth’s cost to sustain one person. It’s measured in hectares and represents the land area needed to provide resources and absorb waste and greenhouse gases produced by an individual.
Ecological Footprint of Nations • The map on the following slide shows various countries and regions of the world proportionate to their production and consumption of commercially traded fuels. • All figures are in million metric tons of oil equivalent.
Ecological Footprint of Nations • World Average – 2.2 hectares • Biggest Footprint – United States – 9.6 hectares • Smallest Footprint – Bangladesh – 0.5 hectares • Average Canadian Footprint – 8.6 hectares • Canada has the 3rd highest footprint in the world! • Why is Canada’s average footprint so big? • What can we do to reduce our footprint?
Reducing Our Footprint • In small groups (one for each category of the footprint calculator), create a poster that shows how we all could reduce the size of our footprint without reducing our standard of living. • Transportation • Water Use • Clothing • Recreation • Food • Garbage