Glossary

All Definitions Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8

Chapter 7

20-20-20 package

Agreement of all EU members about three targets, to be realised in 2020: to cut greenhouse gas emissions by at least 20%, compared to 1990; to obtain at least 20% sustainable energy; and to increase energy efficiency with at least 20%

Chapter 3

Absolute poverty

State of a person who is unable to afford a minimum of basic human needs, including clean and fresh water, nutrition, health care, education, clothing and shelter

Chapter 8

Accountability

Obligation of an individual or organization to account for its activities and to disclose the results in a transparent manner. Is often wrongly equated with responsibility (qv)

Chapter 4

Action without action

See: Wei wu wei

Chapter 1

Adaptation

Paradigm according to which an attempt is made to adapt to the forces of nature or of the human nature in order to co-exist in a harmonic way

Chapter 8

Aerosols

Suspension of fine solid particles (particulate matter, qv) or liquid droplets in a gas, e.f. in the atmosphere, e.g. clouds, and air pollution such as smog and smoke

Chapter 5

Ageing

See: Population ageing

Chapter 4

Agenda 21

International action programme on environment and sustainable development, agreed at the UNCED (1992): the "Agenda for the 21st century"

Chapter 5

Ahimsa

Religious and philosophical principle of nonviolence and respect for all life. See also: Gandhi

Chapter 7

Albedo

Reflectivity of a planet, expressed as the percentage of the sunlight that is directly reflected back into space

Chapter 3

Analytical approach

View in which aspects of a system are described or understood by studying its constituing elements. Opposite of a holistic approach

Chapter 7

Anthropogenic greenhouse effect

Greenhouse effect caused by humans, adding to the natural greenhouse effect

Chapter 6

Anticipate

Foresee or expect certain future developments and take appropriate advance action

Chapter 4

Aquaculture

Farming of aquatic organisms such as fish, crustaceans, molluscs and aquatic plants

Chapter 2

Automation

Introduction of control systems and information technologies to reduce the need for human work in the production of goods and services

Chapter 7

Backloading

Postponing the auctioning of emission allowances

Chapter 3

Basel Ban

International treaty designed to reduce the movements of hazardous waste between nations, and specifically to prevent transfer of hazardous waste from developed to less developed countries

Chapter 2

Biocapacitty

Carrying capacity of the ecosystems of the Earth or of a region, enabling a human population to produce resources and to mitigate waste, expressed in 'global hectares'. See also: ecological footprint

Chapter 1

Biodiversity

Totality of genes, species, and ecosystems of a region

Chapter 7

Biofuels

Fuel produced from crops and other living organisms, such as linseed oil, wood chips or algae

Chapter 2

Bioindustry

Industrial type of livestock farming, with a high attention to efficiency and less to animal welfare and environmental care

Chapter 8

Biological Cycle

One of the two cycles of a circular economy. Also called 'technological cycle' or 'technology cycle'

Chapter 8

Biomimicry

Imitating biological principles and practice

Chapter 7

Biosphere

Layers of the earth, the coeans and the atmosphere in which life is impossible

Chapter 7

Bitumen

Sticky, black and highly viscous liquid or semi-solid form of petroleum. See: oil sand

Chapter 1

Bottom-up

Approach in which initiatives are taken by individuals or groups of individuals, in their own initiative. When many people participate, this can have huge effects. The opposite of top-down.

Chapter 1

Brundtland Commission

See: World Commission on Environment and Development

Chapter 8

C2C

See: Cradle to cradle (C2C)

Chapter 7

Cap-and-trade system

See: Emission Trading System (ETS)

Chapter 7

Carbon capture and storage (CCS)

Storing carbon dioxide underground

Chapter 7

Carbon footprint

Measure of the CO2 emissions resulting from the use of fossil fuels, or reducing CO2 uptake for example by deforestation, expressed as a component of the ecological footprint (qv)

Chapter 7

Carbon sink

Natural or artificial reservoir in which CO2 is absorbed and stored

Chapter 7

Causal relationship

See: Cause-effect relationship

Chapter 7

Cause-effect relationship

Relationship between events which occur consecutively in time, for which the earlier event is seen as the cause of the later, which is seen as the result of the earlier event

Chapter 8

Caux Round Table

International network of senior executives from major companies, who together reflect on societal guidelines for business. See also: kyosei; human dignity

Chapter 6

CFC's

See: Chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s)

Chapter 8

Chain

Series of steps that make up the life cycle (qv) of a product, from extraction through the production and use to the waste phase, including - if any - the feedback into the chain through reuse or recycling. See also: integral chain management.

Chapter 7

Chaotic behaviour

Behavior of a system (e.g. a gas, a crowd, the atmosphere, a computer, Internet) that is complex and disorderly to such a degree that it is completely unpredictable

Chapter 2

Child labour

Employment of children in economic or domestic work in a way that is harmful to the child, exceeding a minimum number of hours, depending on the age of a child and on the type of work (definition by UNICEF)

Chapter 3

Child soldier

Any person under 18 years of age who is part of any kind of regular or irregular armed force or armed group in any capacity, including but not limited to cooks, porters, messengers and anyone accompanying such groups, other than family members, including girls recruited for sexual purposes and for forced marriage. (Cape Town Principles, UNICEF 1997)

Chapter 6

Chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s)

Certain chemical compounds that have a strong destructive effect on the ozone layer and contribute to global warming

Chapter 7

CHP

See: Cogeneration

Chapter 8

Circular economy

Regenerative system in which resource input and waste, emission, and energy leakage are minimised by slowing, closing, and narrowing material and energy loops

Chapter 4

CITES

See: Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)

Chapter 4

Citizen

One of three main roles an individual can have within society: someone feeling a responsibility towards society, and acts accordingly. See also: Consumer, Professional

Chapter 4

Civil society

Complex system of empowered and active people and organizations in society, including NGOs, churches, schools and universities, continuing or one-time action groups and individual citizens

Chapter 7

Climate refugee

Someone who left the original home and residential area, fleeing from conditions caused by climate change such as drought or floods

Chapter 2

Closed cycle

Closed loop in which the resources used for the production of goods return to their origin, e.g. through recycling, decreasing the amount of resources that are lost. The opposite is one-way traffic

Chapter 6

Club of Rome

Scientific group, founded in 1968, that brought the issue of sustainable development to a strong attention by politicians and society

Chapter 7

CO2 equivalent

Unit for the radiative forcing (qv) of a greenhouse gas (qv), compared with that of CO2. The value for CO2 is 1 by definition

Chapter 7

Cogeneration

Utilizing the heat generated in electricity production, created in specially designed facilities. Also called: Combined heat and power (CHP)

Chapter 6

Collapse

Rapid reversal of trends in a system, such that previously orderly developments turn into chaotic processes with disastrous consequences

Chapter 7

Combined heat and power (CHP)

See: Cogeneration

Chapter 4

Commission for Sustainable Development (CSD)

Commission, established in 1992 following the UNCED, which is responsible for reviewing progress in the implementation of Agenda 21 and the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, as well as providing policy guidance to follow up the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation (JPOI) at the local, national, regional and international levels

Chapter 7

Complex system

System exhibiting some properties as a whole that can not be deduced from the properties of each component separately

Chapter 7

Concentrated solar power (CSP)

System generating solar power by using mirrors or lenses to concentrate a large area of sunlight, or solar thermal energy, onto a small area

Chapter 7

Conference of the Parties (COP)

Annual conference held in the framework of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

Chapter 4

Consensus

Result of a group decision making process that seeks the agreement of all participants

Chapter 5

Consequence period

The time it takes before all consequences of a decision have faded away

Chapter 5

Consequence scope

Overall volume of people, nature and the environment experiencing the consequences of a decision, a practice or a lifestyle

Chapter 4

Consumer

One of three main roles an individual can have within society: someone who purchases and uses products and services. See also: Citizen, Professional

Chapter 1

Control

Paradigm according to which an attempt is made to control the forces of nature or of the human nature with power and force

Chapter 4

Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)

Multilateral treaty, aiming to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten the survival of the species in the wild, according varying degrees of protection to many species of animals and plants

Chapter 7

Copenhagen Accord

International agreement on climate change, concluded at a conference in Copenhagen in 2009 (COP15)

Chapter 8

Corporate governance

Good governance of a company, including integrity and transparency, proper supervision and accountability

Chapter 8

Corporate mission

See: Mission

Chapter 8

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

Conscientiously embracing responsibility for the positive or negative social impacts of a company's activities

Chapter 7

Correlation

Coherence between two phenomena, such that both increase or decrease simultaneously, or (negative correlation) one increases while the other decreases

Chapter 8

Cradle to cradle (C2C)

Principle of a closed loop or life cycle (qv)

Chapter 2

Crash

Sudden dramatic decline of stock prices across a significant cross-section of a stock market, resulting in a significant loss of paper wealth

Chapter 4

CSD

See: Commission for Sustainable Development (CSD)

Chapter 8

CSR

See: Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)

Chapter 2

Cycle

See: Life cycle; Closed cycle; Cradle to cradle

Chapter 5

Dalits

Self-designation for a group of people in India traditionally regarded as Untouchables. Also called Outcastes

Chapter 5

Debt slave

Someone who is not legally a slave, but lives like one, due a debt to a company he / she works for, that can never be repaid or only in many years

Chapter 3

Debt trap

Situation where a country, an organisation or an individual adds new debts in order to pay existing ones, through which the total amount of debts and of interests increases to levels where it becomes difficult or impossible to pay them off

Chapter 7

Decommissioning

Demolition phase of a nuclear power plant, including all the necessary organizational, legal and technical activities

Chapter 3

Dehumanisation

Process or state in which persons are considered as economic entities rather than as human beings, and where contacts between humans become less personal thanks to the replacement of humans by machines, cameras etc., leading to feelings of alienation and a loss of personal dignity and involvement in society

Chapter 3

Dematerialisation

Economic concept of reducing the quantity of materials required to serve economic functions (doing more with less)

Chapter 4

Depillarization

Process of weakening or vanishing societal segregation based on religious or ideological devides

Chapter 8

Design for disassembly (DFD)

Design of a product in a way that, at the end of the user phase, it can easily be disassembled into parts, resulting in a maximum of parts that can be reused

Chapter 8

DFD

See: Design for disassembly (DFD)

Chapter 4

Diversity

Variety, e.g. between people, cultures and species

Chapter 8

DJSI

See: Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI)

Chapter 6

Doubling time

Time a growth process needs to reach twice the original size. With exponential growth, the doubling time is constant

Chapter 8

Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI)

International stock market indicator for large companies, indicating the level of sustainable of businesses

Chapter 8

Downcycling

Recycling materials in a way where the original quality is reduced

Chapter 4

Earth Charter

International declaration of fundamental values and principles for building a just, sustainable, and peaceful global society in the 21st century

Chapter 3

Earth Summit

See: United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)

Chapter 8

Eco points

See: Eco-indicator

Chapter 4

Eco-bridge

See: Wildlife crossing

Chapter 4

Ecoduct

See: Wildlife crossing

Chapter 8

Eco-indicator

Figure representing the total environmental impact of a particular product throughout its life cycle, expressed as (milli-) eco points. The number is established by combining the results of a life cycle assessment (qv), using weight factors to add them

Chapter 2

Ecological footprint

Measure of human demand on the Earth's ecosystems, expressing the natural capital that is used a human population to produce resources and to mitigate waste in 'global hectares' of biologically productive land and sea area. See also: biocapacity; carbon footprint

Chapter 1

Ecological network

Interconnected network of extant and yet to be created nature reserves in a country or region

Chapter 8

Ecological rucksack

Sum of all resources, processes and emissions that were needed to manufacture a particular product

Chapter 5

ECOMOG

See: ECOWAS Monitoring Group (ECOMOG)

Chapter 5

Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)

Group of 15 countries in West Africa south of the Sahara, which seek a union similar to the European Union

Chapter 7

Economic extractability

Situation where resources are not only technically recoverable, but in which extraction is also profitable

Chapter 3

Economic refugees

Refugees fleeing for economic reasons, i.e. the inability to provide an acceptable income

Chapter 2

Ecosystem

Biological environment consisting of all the organisms living in a particular area, as well as all the nonliving (abiotic), physical components of the environment with which the organisms interact, such as air, soil, water and sunlight

Chapter 5

ECOWAS

See: Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)

Chapter 5

ECOWAS Monitoring Group (ECOMOG)

Multilateral armed force established by the ECOWAS

Chapter 5

EEA

See: European Environment Agency (EEA)

Chapter 5

EIR

See: Environmental Impact Reporting (EIR)

Chapter 7

El Niño

Change in the weather patterns in large parts of the world, occurring once every three to seven years because of changes in the pattern of wind currents over the Pacific Ocean

Chapter 7

Electric cars

Automobile that is propelled by one or more electric motors, using electrical energy stored in rechargeable batteries

Chapter 7

Emission allowances

Tradeable allowances for companies to emit greenhouse gases, based on the Emission Trading System (ETS)

Chapter 7

Emission Trading System (ETS)

Market-based approach used to control climate change by providing economic incentives for achieving reductions in the emissions of greenhouse gases. Also called: cap-and-trade system

Chapter 7

Emissions

Release of substances, e.g. into the atmosphere or into surface water

Chapter 4

Empowerment

Process or state in which an individual is able and authorized to think, behave, take action, and control work and decision making in autonomous ways, based on a feeling of self-awareness and control of one's own destiny

Chapter 5

End-of-pipe technology

Technology that does not prevent the causes of environmental damage but fights its effects during a production or application process, for example by placing filters on chimneys or charge pipes

Chapter 8

Energy recovery

Burning of waste, where the energy is regained

Chapter 7

Energy Roadmap 2050

EU agreement of 2011 to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25% in 2020, 40% in 2030, 60% in 2040, and 80% to 95% in 2050, compared to 1990 emissions

Chapter 3

Environmental accounting

Method of calculating financial results, such as the GNP, that include environmental damage and the depletion of stocks, resulting in a 'Green GNP'

Chapter 5

Environmental Impact Reporting (EIR)

Assessment of the potential environmental impacts resulting from the construction and operation of a proposed project

Chapter 8

Environmental, social and governance (ESG)

Three main aspects of sustainability and corporate social responsibility: environmental, social and governance

Chapter 5

Erosion

Process by which material is removed from a region of the Earth's surface, e.g. due to transport by wind or water

Chapter 8

ESG

See: Environmental, social and governance (ESG)

Chapter 7

ETS

See: Emission Trading System (ETS)

Chapter 5

EU

See: European Union (EU)

Chapter 7

EU-MENA

Europe, the Middle East and North Africa

Chapter 5

European Commission

Executive body of the European Union, responsible for proposing legislation, implementing decisions and general day-to-day running of the Union

Chapter 4

European Court of Human Rights

Supra-national court, established by the European Convention on Human Rights, acting when a member nation has violated the human rights enshrined in the Convention and its protocols, according to a citizen of that nation or to another nation

Chapter 5

European Environment Agency (EEA)

Agency of the European Union devoted to establishing a monitoring network for the monitoring of the European environment

Chapter 5

European Union

Economic and political union of 27 independent member states which are located primarily in Europe

Chapter 5

Eutrophication

Process by which a body of water acquires a high concentration of nutrients, typically leading to excessive growth of algae

Chapter 6

Exponential growth

Growth with a fixed rate per unit time, uninhibited growth. In this type of growth the doubling time is constant.

Chapter 7

Extensification

Reducing energy consumption by technical means due to improvement of the efficiency of the energy use

Chapter 2

Extinction

Total disappearance of a species due to the death of its last individual, either locally or globally

Chapter 2

Extinction peak

Period of mass extinction, in which animal and plant species become extinct at an unusually high rate in a relatively short period of time

Chapter 7

Extractability

See: Economic extractability

Chapter 2

Fair share

Size of an ecological footprint a person, company or country may used in such a way that the available biocapacity is shared fairly and not exceeded

Chapter 4

FAO

See: Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

Chapter 2

Feedback

Situation where effects of a process or development influence the same process or development

Chapter 2

Flaw in the fabric

Unsustainability problem that is inextricably linked in the fabric of the global human system

Chapter 4

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)

specialised agency of the UN that leads international efforts to defeat hunger

Chapter 4

Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)

Independent, non-governmental, not for profit organization established to promote the responsible management of the world's forests. Owner of the FSC certificate

Chapter 7

Fracking

Process in which liquid is injected at high pressure into subterranean rocks, crushing them and releasing natural gas

Chapter 4

FSC

See: Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)

Chapter 4

FSC certification

Voluntary, market-based certificate for wood and other forest products, aiming at guaranteeing that the products are from responsibly managed forests

Chapter 6

Futurology

Science of investigating possible, probable, and preferable future developments

Chapter 3

G20

Intergovernmental forum of twenty leading economic powers: 19 countries and the EU, together comprising more than 85% of the global GNP. See also: G8

Chapter 3

G8

Intergovernmental forum of eight leading industrial nations. See also: G20

Chapter 5

Gandhi, Mohandas (‘Mahatma’)

Famous spiritual leader and politician (1869 - 1948) in India,considered as the Father of the Nation. His leadership, based on the principles of 'ahimsa' and 'satyagraha' (nonviolent resistance), lead to India's independence in 1947

Chapter 1

GE

See: Genetically modified (GM) organism (GMO)

Chapter 1

Genetically engineered (GE)

See: Genetically modified (GM) organism (GMO)

Chapter 1

Genetically modified (GM) organism (GMO)

Organism whose genetic material has been altered using genetic engineering techniques. Also called: Genetically Engineered (GE)

Chapter 3

Genocide

The intent and action to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, by killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction, imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group, or forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. (Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide, 1948)

Chapter 2

Gha

See: Global hectare (Gha)

Chapter 4

Global civil society

Civil society that is organized cross-border, partly thanks to the internet, thus creating a counterbalance to the growing influence of countries, international organizations and multinational companies

Chapter 2

Global extinction

Extinction in the entire world, which can never be undone

Chapter 2

Global hectare (Gha)

Unit in which the ecological footprint and the biocapacity are expressed

Chapter 8

Global Reporting Initiative (GRI)

See: Global Reporting Initiative (GRI)

Chapter 7

Global warming

See: Greenhouse effect

Chapter 1

GM

See: Genetically modified (GM) organism (GMO)

Chapter 1

GMO

See: Genetically modified (GM) organism (GMO)

Chapter 3

GNP per capita

GNP of a country divided by the number of people in that country. Considered as a measure for the (average) wealth of a nation.

Chapter 3

Green GNP

See: environmental accounting

Chapter 7

Green power

Electricity generated from renewable energy

Chapter 7

Greenhouse effect

Phenomenon in which the temperature on Earth increases, due to the presence of certain gases in the atmosphere that cause the Earth's heat to be less easily radiated to the cosmos, causing global warming

Chapter 7

Greenhouse gases

Main gases responsible for the greenhouse effect, e.g. carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), water vapor (H2O) and various fluoride compounds, including CFC's and HFC's. See also: radiative forcing: CO2 equivalent

Chapter 8

GRI

1. Globally recognized standard method for companies to report about the CSR aspects of their activities. 2. Organization that developed and manages this standard

Chapter 1

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

Value of all the goods and services produced in an economy, plus the value of the goods and services imported, less the goods and services exported

Chapter 2

Growth resources

See: renewable resources

Chapter 7

Gulf Stream

The part of the thermohaline circulation (qv) in the Atlantic Ocean

Chapter 2

Habitat

Natural environment of an organism or ecological community

Chapter 2

Habitat loss

Diminishment, quality loss or disappearance of a habitat

Chapter 7

HFC's

See: Hydrofluorocarbons (HFC's)

Chapter 3

HFI

See: Human Freedom Index (HFI)

Chapter 8

Hippocratic Oath

Oath or pledge that medical students take upon graduation

Chapter 3

Holistic approach

View in which a system is considered as a whole, having characteristics that cannot be described or understood by just considering the constituing elements. Opposite of an analytic approach

Chapter 7

Hubbert peak

See: Peak oil

Chapter 8

Human dignity

Business principle: the sacredness or value of each person is an goal in itself, not simply as a means to the fulfilment of others' purposes or even of a majority. See also: Caux Round Table

Chapter 3

Human Freedom Index (HFI)

Number expressing the rate of freedom of individuals in a country, defined by UNDP, to be found in the Human Development Reports

Chapter 5

Human Rights Watch

International non-governmental organization that conducts research and advocacy on human rights

Chapter 7

Hybrid cars

Car withs two engines, a combustion engine and an electric motor, having a substantially lower fuel consumption

Chapter 7

Hydrofluorocarbons (HFC's)

Certain chemical compounds related to chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s, qv) having comparable destructive effects

Chapter 7

Hydrogen economy

Economy and society in which, thanks to a transition process, hydrogen has become a primary fuel

Chapter 4

ICC

See: International UN Criminal Court (ICC)

Chapter 4

IGO

See: Intergovernmental Organisation (IGO)

Chapter 4

ILO

See: International Labour Organization (ILO)

Chapter 4

IMF

See: International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Chapter 8

Incomparable

Impossible to weigh against each other, in the case of a choice between alternatives whose significance is not comparable, "comparing apples to oranges"

Chapter 7

Indirect land use change (ILUC)

Unintentional effect of biofuel development, pushing deforestation into new areas

Chapter 2

Industrialisation

Process of social and economic change that transforms a human group from an agrarian society into an industrial one

Chapter 1

Infrastructure

Basic facilities, services, and installations needed for the functioning of a community or society, such as transportation and communications systems, water and power lines, and public institutions including schools and post offices

Chapter 6

Inhibited growth

Growth that, perhaps after a period of unrestrained growth, is limited by environmental factors and thus slows down until a stable level may be reached

Chapter 8

Integral chain management

Efforts of companies to manage the full life cycle of a product, in order to minimize the environmental impact

Chapter 8

Integral healthcare

Form of health care that aims to align all aspects of care, both medical and psychosocial

Chapter 4

Interdisciplinary

Cooperation within a team composed of experts from various disciplines, such that the combination of their skills renders more or different results than when each of them would work separately

Chapter 4

Intergovernmental Organisation (IGO)

Organization composed primarily of sovereign nations, or of other intergovernmental organizations

Chapter 7

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

See: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

Chapter 4

International Criminal Court (ICC)

Permanent tribunal to prosecute individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and the crime of aggression

Chapter 4

International Labour Organization (ILO)

Specialized agency of the United Nations that deals with labour issues pertaining to international labour standards

Chapter 4

International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Intergovernmental organization that oversees the global financial system by taking part in the macroeconomic policies of its established members, in particular those with an impact on exchange rate and the balance of payments

Chapter 2

International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)

International organization dedicated to the conservation of nature and the protection of natural habits. Maintains the Red List

Chapter 7

IPCC

Scientific intergovernmental body, established by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), tasked with reviewing and assessing the most recent scientific, technical and socio-economic information produced worldwide relevant to the understanding of climate change

Chapter 2

IUCN

See: International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)

Chapter 4

Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS (UNAIDS)

UN section leading and supporting the response to HIV and AIDS, including preventing transmission of HIV, providing care and support to those already living with HIV, reducing the vulnerability of individuals and communities to HIV and alleviating the impact of the epidemic

Chapter 8

Just in time (JIT)

Production process where materials and components are made available at the moment they are needed, thus reducing storage costs

Chapter 8

Kyosei

Business principle: living and working together for the common good enabling cooperation and mutual prosperity to coexist with healthy and fair competition. See also: Caux Round Table

Chapter 4

Kyoto Protocol

Protocol to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), aimed at fighting global warming

Chapter 6

Lag

See: System lag

Chapter 8

LCA

See: Life cycle assessment (LCA)

Chapter 8

LCCA

See: Life-Cycle Cost Assessment (LCCA)

Chapter 5

Lewisian turning-point

Moment at which a shortage of labour forces leads to a sharp increase of salaries

Chapter 8

Life cycle

Complete history of a product - from raw materials extraction, through production, shipping, sales and use by consumers, to the waste phase, including recycling, reuse and dumping. See also: Chain

Chapter 8

Life cycle assessment (LCA)

Method to determine the total environmental impact of a particular product, paying attention to the full lifecycle. The result is a series of numbers representing the different types of environmental damage and depletion of scarce resources. See also: Eco-indicator; Life-Cycle Cost Assessment (LCCA)

Chapter 8

Life-Cycle Cost Assessment (LCCA)

Method to determine the total financial impact of a particular product, paying attention to its full life cycle. Equivalent of a Life Cycle Assessment (qv), but paying attention to financial costs instead of environmental ones

Chapter 8

Lifelong learning

Voluntary participation in formal or informal learning for personal or professional development during a considerable part of one's life

Chapter 6

Limits to growth

Title of a book by Meadows et al (1972), addressed to the Club of Rome. The book, which received a lot of attention, was based on the 'World3' simulation model, developed by the authors , with which scenarios can be studied for possible future development of the global ecosystem and society

Chapter 7

Linear processes

Processes in which the effects are directly proportional to their causes. See also: non-linear processes

Chapter 4

Local Agenda 21

Action plans for local areas, such as (parts of) municipalities, based on Agenda 21

Chapter 2

Local extinction

Extinction in a certain region or habitat. May later be undone when specimens from elsewhere inhabit the region

Chapter 6

Logistic growth

Inhibited growth, following a certain mathematical model

Chapter 6

MA

See: Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA)

Chapter 6

Malthus, Thomas

In 1798, Malthus wrote about the danger of an exponential population growth, for with the growth of food production would have to stay behind sooner or later

Chapter 7

Market Stability Reserve (MSR)

System in which emission allowances can be added to, or taken from the auctioning market, in order to create stable prices

Chapter 8

Maslow’s hierarchy of needs

Theory in psychology about needs and motivations of humans, designed by Abraham Maslow, often portrayed in the shape of a pyramid, with the largest and most fundamental levels of needs at the bottom, and the need for self-actualization at the top

Chapter 4

MDG's

See: Millennium Development Goals (MDG's)

Chapter 2

Mechanisation

Development where processes performed or powered by humans or animals are replaced with processes performed or powered by mechanical devices

Chapter 4

Microcredit

Small loans designed to spur entrepreneurship for individuals who lack collateral, steady employment and a verifiable credit history, and therefore cannot meet even the most minimal qualifications to gain access to traditional credit

Chapter 7

Migration

Displacement of people, animals or plants into new areas

Chapter 4

Millennium Development Goals (MDG's)

Set of eight international development goals that all UN member states and several international organizations agreed to achieve between 2000 and 2015

Chapter 6

Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA)

Large-scale investigation into all aspects of sustainable development, conducted by over 1300 scientists from various disciplines.

Chapter 8

Mission

Essence of an organization, the reason why it exists. Often defined in a 'mission statement'

Chapter 6

Model

Simplified representation of reality or a part thereof

Chapter 4

Montreal Protocol

Protocol to the Vienna Convention for the Protection of the Ozone Layer: an international treaty designed to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the production of numerous substances responsible for depletion of the ozone layer

Chapter 1

Multifunctional use of space

Combination of different socio-economic functions in the same area, aiming at dealing with land scarcity

Chapter 6

Nanotechnology

Technology that seeks to develop devices with a size near one nanometer (one millionth of a millimeter), such as engines, computers, robots, energy generators

Chapter 4

National Strategy for Sustainable Development (NSSD)

Concrete implementation of Agenda 21 by an individual country

Chapter 4

Natura 2000

Ecological network of protected areas in the territory of the European Union, connected through wildlife crossings

Chapter 2

Natural equilibrium

Stable situation in an ecosystem

Chapter 7

Natural greenhouse effect

Greenhouse effect due to natural causes, not by human activities, already existing for hundreds of millions of years

Chapter 4

Network

Group of organizations and individuals in mutual interaction, relationships and communication

Chapter 7

New Entrants Reserve (NER)

Reserve, made by the EU, aiming at funding the deployment of innovative renewable energy technologies and carbon capture and storage

Chapter 4

NGO

See: Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO)

Chapter 4

Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO)

Legally constituted organization created by natural or legal persons that operates independently from any government

Chapter 7

Non-linear processes

Processes in which the size the effects is not directly proportional to their causes, e.g. increasing or decreasing faster or slower as the causes vary, which may have unexpected implications. See also: linear processes

Chapter 3

Normative integration

Process or condition of acceptance of generally accepted values ​​and norms in a given society, especially by foreigners

Chapter 4

Novel protein food

Food with a high protein content, produced with modern techniques from plants, yeast or fungi, that is suitable as a meat substitute

Chapter 4

NSSD

See: National Strategy for Sustainable Development (NSSD)

Chapter 7

Nuclear fission

Physical process in which heavy atomic nuclei such as uranium, plutonium or thorium are split in order to generate energy

Chapter 7

Nuclear fusion

Physical process by which atomic nuclei of hydrogen are combined in order to to generate energy

Chapter 7

Oil sand

Sand or partially consolidated sandstone, saturated with bitumen. Also known as tar sand or bituminous sand

Chapter 5

One-child policy

Strict family planning policy according to which every family is allowed only one child, aiming at reducing population growth

Chapter 2

One-way traffic

Process that is not closed, in which the resources used for the production of goods don't return to their origin, this creating a shortage in one place and a surplus in another. The opposite is a cycle.

Chapter 4

Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)

International economic organisation stimulating economic progress and world trade: a forum of countries committed to democracy and the market economy, providing a platform to compare policy experiences, seek answers to common problems, identify good practices, and co-ordinate domestic and international policies of its members

Chapter 5

Outcastes

See: Dalits

Chapter 5

Outsourcing

Contracting out of a business function - commonly one previously performed in-house - to an external provider, in many cases in another country

Chapter 2

Overexploitation

Harvesting a renewable resource to the point of diminishing returns, possibly leading to the destruction of the resource

Chapter 6

Ozone layer

Upper layer of the stratosphere, at an altitude of about 50 km, whit a relatively high ozone (O3) concentration

Chapter 1

Paradigm

Term representing an entire way of thinking in one word

Chapter 1

Paradigm shift

Development during which certain paradigms, previously determining the dominantr world view, disappear or change drastically, to be replaced with entirely new paradigms

Chapter 7

Paris Agreement

International agreement on climate change, concluded at a conference in Paris in 2015 (COP21)

Chapter 4

Participation

Taking part or sharing in activities, processes, groups or society in general, as an accepted, valued and self-aware member

Chapter 4

Participatory democracy

Societal system in which many people and civilian organizations are actively engaged in opinion-and decision-making, not only through a parliament and voting, but also through various forms of participation

Chapter 8

Particulate matter

Tiny parts of solid matter suspended in a gas or liquid. See also: Aerosols

Chapter 7

Peak oil

Moment when the total economically extractable world oil supply has reached its maximum, after which it declines

Chapter 1

People

One of the three main aspects of sustainability, cencerning topics like culture, human rights, participation, education, health, empowerment. See also: planet, profit, Triple P

Chapter 3

Per capita

"per head", i.e. per person

Chapter 7

Phytoplankton

Photosynthesizing organisms in plankton, mainly unicellular algae and cyanobacteria

Chapter 1

Planet

One of the three main aspects of sustainability, cencerning topics like biodiversity, environment, nature. See also: people, profit, Triple P

Chapter 3

Political refugees

Refugees fleeing for political reasons, i.e. for e fear of being persecuted for reasons of a political nature

Chapter 5

Population ageing

Increase in the number and proportion of older people in society, mainly due to longer life expectancy and decreased birth rate

Chapter 5

Population explosion

Rapid increase in the size of a population in a relatively short period of time

Chapter 3

Poverty

State of a person who lacks a certain amount of material possessions or money. See: relative poverty; absolute poverty.

Chapter 3

Poverty trap

A state in which self-reinforcing mechanisms (positive feedback) cause poverty to persist or even to worsen

Chapter 3

PPP

See: (1) Triple P; (2) Purchasing Power Parity; (3) Public-Private Partnership

Chapter 3

PPP dollars

Unity in which purchasing power parity is expressed

Chapter 7

Precautionary principle

Principle that policy decisions are based on the prevention of certain undesired effects, even if the occurrence of these effects in the absemce of such decisions is not sure

Chapter 5

Prisoner’s Dilemma

Aspect of game theory that shows why two individuals, organizations or countries might not agree, even if appears that it is best to do so

Chapter 4

Professional

One of three main roles an individual can have within society: someone who contributes to society by particpating in the delivery of products or services. See also: Citizen, Consumer

Chapter 1

Profit

One of the three main aspects of sustainability, cencerning topics like investments, profitability, economic stability, GNP. See also: people, planet, Triple P and prosperity

Chapter 1

Prosperity

Term proposed as a replacement of 'profit' in the Triple P, enlarging the concept to incomes and welfare of individuals, families, local communities

Chapter 4

Public-private partnership (PPP)

Partnership in which public organizations (governments and NGOs) cooperate with private companies, to the benefit of both

Chapter 3

Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)

Method of recalculating incomes, correcting for local price level, thus expressing the real purchasing power of people. The recalculated income is expressed in PPP 'dollars'

Chapter 7

Radiative forcing

Degree to which a particular substance influences the balance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing thermal radiation, thus 'pushing up' the Earth's temperature. See also: greenhouse gases; CO2 equivalent

Chapter 7

Radioactive waste

Materials containing or contaminated with radioactive isotopes, at concentrations higher than the minimum measurable concentration, for which no practical applications are known

Chapter 3

Real GNP

Version of the GNP that has been adjusted for the effects of inflation

Chapter 1

Rebound effect

Effect occurring when the success of certain actions has side-effects that diminish or even cancel the positive results, or perhaps even cause the opposite

Chapter 1

Recycling

Processing used materials (waste) into new products

Chapter 2

Red list of threatened species

Inventory, maintained by the IUCN, of the global conservation status of biological species, e.g. describing species that are conservation dependent, threatened or extinct

Chapter 8

Redefining the corporate mission

Abandoning existing ideas about the mission of a company and determining from scratch why the company exists

Chapter 3

Refugee

Person who has been pushed away from his or her home and seeks refuge elsewhere, owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion, or fleeing from war or other violence

Chapter 3

Relative poverty

Lack of wealth and income of a person relative to other people or groups in the same environment or country, making it impossible to live according to accepted habits, values ​​and standards in that environment or that country

Chapter 2

Renewable resources

Resources that are replaced or replenished by natural processes. Also called growth resources

Chapter 8

RESFIA+D

Schedule of six general professional competences for sustainable development, each with three sub-competences, plus disciplinary competencies that are specific to each course or profession

Chapter 2

Resource

Something, such as a forest, a mineral deposit, or fresh water, that is found in nature and is necessary or useful to humans

Chapter 5

Responsibility

Task or duty to care for something or someone. Is often wrongly equated with accountability (qv)

Chapter 1

Reuse

Processing components of used products into new products

Chapter 4

Rio

See: United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)

Chapter 4

Rio Declaration

Full name: Rio Declaration on Environment and Development. A document produced at the UNCED (1992), consisting of 27 principles intended to guide future sustainable development around the world

Chapter 7

Rising sea levels

Increase in sea level, either because the water level in the oceans is rising ('absolute sea level rise'), or because the land falls ('relative sea level rise')

Chapter 6

Robust trend

Trend that can be expected to persist, even when strong changes in related areas occur

Chapter 1

Room for the river

Dutch program aiming at lowering the risks of flooding by river water by giving more space to the rivers and restoring their original natural state

Chapter 8

Rucksack model

See: Ecological rucksack

Chapter 2

Salinisation

Accumulation of salts in the soil

Chapter 6

Scenario

A scenario of a play or movie is a description of the scenes of which the story consists. A future scenario is a description of the events that might take place in a possible future

Chapter 5

Schengen Agreement

Treaty between most members of the European Union, creating a borderless zone across large parts of Europe

Chapter 7

Second generation biofuels

Biofuels from waste from forestry and agriculture, such as wood chips and straw from corn and grain

Chapter 3

Second generation immigrants

First-generation descendants of immigrants to a certain nation, themselves being born in this nations

Chapter 3

SEEA

See: System of integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting (SEEA)

Chapter 3

Segregation

Creation or escalation of separate groups within a society, in such a way that it is detrimental to the social cohesion

Chapter 8

Shareholder value

Value of a company for its shareholders (stockholders). See also: Stakeholder value

Chapter 6

Simulation

Imitation of reality in the form of a model, usually constructed as a computer program

Chapter 7

Slash and burn

Land use by farmers, where they repeatedly clear new land by burning off the forest after their own lands were exhausted through intensive cultivation

Chapter 4

Small or medium sized enterprise (SME)

The EU defines businesses with fewer than 50 employees as small, and less than 250 employees as medium sized entreprises

Chapter 4

SME

See: Small or medium sized enterprise (SME)

Chapter 3

Social exclusion

Situation in which individuals or communities are systematically blocked from rights, opportunities and resources that are normally available to members of society and which are key to social integration

Chapter 5

Soil erosion

See: Erosion

Chapter 4

Source of vigour

Strength within a society, a person or an ecosystem providing opportunities for sustainable development

Chapter 1

Space

One of the two dimensions of sustainable development: also described as 'here and there'. Focuses on the fair distribution of prosperity and well-being across the world. See: Time

Chapter 3

SSA

See: Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)

Chapter 4

Stakeholder

Person or group having some interest in a particular process, conversation, event, development etc.

Chapter 5

Stakeholder analysis

Research into who has interests in a specific project, process or business, either positive or negative ones

Chapter 8

Stakeholder value

Value of a company for all of those who hqave ab interest in it, either positive or negative. See also: Shareholder value

Chapter 6

Standard scenario

Development of a society according to a certain, more or less fixed pattern, which has occurred in reality in several cultures and historic episodes

Chapter 7

Stewardship cessation

Termination of supervision, in particular of radioactive waste that is stored in such a way that it is supposed to be safe forever

Chapter 3

Stigmatisation

Attribution of negative characteristics to people based on expectations about the group the person belongs to

Chapter 7

Stratosphere

Layer of the atmosphere between about 15 and 50 km altitude

Chapter 3

Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA)

Area of the African continent which lies south of the Sahara

Chapter 4, 8

Substitution

Replacement of single-use or scarce resources by less scarce resources such as renewable materials or energy

Chapter 1

Sustainable development

Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs

Chapter 4

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG's)

Set of seventeen international development goals that all UN member states and several international organizations agreed to achieve between 2015 and 2030

Chapter 7

Sustainable energy

Form of energy generation that (by human standards) can be continued indefinitely, and causing a minimum of damage to people, cultures, nature and environment

Chapter 8

Sustainable product development

Design of a product in a manner that takes into account the interests of sustainable development

Chapter 1

Sustainable society

Imaginary society that has realised sustainable development completely. In reality, such a society will probebnly never be realised, as solutions to present problems will always create new ones. Nevertheless, if sustainable development is successful, a sustainable society will be approached more and more

Chapter 4

Sustainable tourism

Form of tourism that attempts to minimize damage to nature and environment and to local cultures, while contributing to the awareness of tour operators and tourists

Chapter 7

System boundary

State in which a system is on the border between a stable and an unstable situation, where a trend break may immediately lead to a different, often unpredictable situation

Chapter 6

System lag

Slowness with which a system responds to changes or external influences, e.g. due to physical factors ro to slow human decision processes

Chapter 3

System of integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting (SEEA)

Well-known method for environmental accounting

Chapter 7

Tar

Viscous liquid of hydrocarbons and free carbon. See: oil sand

Chapter 8

Technical Cycle

One of the two cycles of a circular economy. Also called 'technological cycle' or 'technology cycle'

Chapter 7

Thermohaline circulation

Extensive flow of seawater through the oceans, flowing on the surface of the Pacific and Indian Ocean to the North Atlantic, and conversely on the ocean floor. See also: Gulf Stream

Chapter 4

Three capitals

Three forms of wealth and resilience a society possesses: people, nature and environment, economy

Chapter 1

Time

One of the two dimensions of sustainable development: also described as 'now and later'. Focuses on the ability of future generations to maintain an acceptable level of prosperity and well-being. See: Space

Chapter 1

Top-down

Approach in which initiatives are taken and decisions are made at a high level, e.g. governments, international organizations, boards of companies, usually with consequences for many people. The opposite of bottom-up.

Chapter 6

Trade-off

Situation where an increase in output of specific ecosystem services (notably food) leads to degradation of other services. Exchange often takes place in conjunction with transfer (qv), where the increase in services to benefit certain groups and the decline of other services has implications for other groups

Chapter 5

Tragedy of the Commons

Dilemma arising from the situation in which multiple individuals, acting independently and rationally consulting their own self-interest, will ultimately deplete a shared limited resource, even when it is clear that it is not in anyone's long-term interest for this to happen

Chapter 4

Transdisciplinary

Cooperation in an interdisciplinary team, which also includes people who do not participate because of a particular discipline, but because of their practical experience, personal stake or any other form of involvement.

Chapter 3

Transfer

Shifting the negative effects of a lifestyle to others, such as environmental damage or depletion of resources. This may involve transferring problems toward people in other countries, people in future generations, or people in the own environment in a different social group. See also: trade-off

Chapter 1

Transition

Fundamental change to a system, based on a paradigm shift

Chapter 4

Transition management

Guidance to transitions, not by controlling the transition process from a central management but going through an adaptation process guided by a cooperation network

Chapter 8

Transparency

Open display and accountability of companies for what they do, through the disclosure of internal data towards employees, governments, NGOs, the press, in short, to society, e.g. in the form of social reports and websites

Chapter 6

Trend break

Sudden sharp change in what until recently was a trend

Chapter 6

Trend extrapolation

The extension of a trend into the future, assuming that the trend will continue for some time

Chapter 6

Trend shift

Gradual change of a trend

Chapter 1

Triple bottom line

Triple P, expressed as a term commonly used by companies to describe an aspect of the company mission

Chapter 1

Triple P

The three main aspects of sustainable development: people, planet. profit. See also: prosperity, triple bottom line

Chapter 7

Troposphere

Lowest layer of the atmosphere, to about 10 to 15 km altitude

Chapter 5

Tsunami

Massive water wave caused by the displacement of a large volume of a body of water following an earthquake under the sea floor

Chapter 4

UNAIDS

See: Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS (UNAIDS)

Chapter 4

UNCED

See: United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)

Chapter 4

UNDESD

See: United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (UNDESD)

Chapter 3

UNDP

See: United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

Chapter 4

UNEP

See: United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)

Chapter 4

UNESCO

See: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)

Chapter 7

UNFCC

See: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

Chapter 4

UNICEF

See: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)

Chapter 6

Uninhibited growth

See: Exponential growth

Chapter 4

United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)

UN section working for children's rights, their survival, development and protection, guided by the Convention on the Rights of the Child. (The abbreviation stands for 'United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund', a name that was replaced with the current, shorter name.)

Chapter 4

United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED)

Major UN Conference on Environment and Sustainable Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, where Agenda 21 was agreed. Also known as "Rio" and as the Earth Summit.

Chapter 4

United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (UNDESD)

Decade (2005 - 2015) for which the UN called for special attention to education for sustainable development

Chapter 3

United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)

Section of the United Nations aiming at improving the conditions of underdeveloped people

Chapter 4

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)

UN section encouraging international peace and universal respect by promoting collaboration among nations

Chapter 4

United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)

UN section coordinating environmental activities, assisting developing countries in implementing environmentally sound policies and practices

Chapter 7

United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)

International environmental treaty with the goal of achieving the "stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic interference with the climate system. See also: Kyoto Protocol

Chapter 1

Unsustainability

Instable situation, in which causes exist that are not sustainable to such a level that the situation cannot stay the same indefinitely

Chapter 1

Waste disposal fee

Money that consumers pay when buying electronic or meachnical devices, which is used for waste treatment

Chapter 8

Waste hierarchy

Hierarchy of preferences within the technical cycle of a circular economy: maintenance and repairs; component reuse; recycling; energy recovery; landfill or emissions

Chapter 8

WBCSD

See: World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD)

Chapter 1

WCED

See: World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED)

Chapter 6

Weakly inhibited growth

Inhibited growth, for which the strength of the limiting factors is not strong, due to with the growth slows down only slightly. This may allow a growth overshoot beyond a situation where equilibrium is possible

Chapter 4

Wei wu wei

Action without action': effective action, truly achieving something by the right kind of action on the right moment, without acting up, forcing, pushing through

Chapter 6

What-if question

Thinking exercise in which assumptions are made ​​for a possible scenario - e.g. on the nature of the applied model, of the initial conditions, or of external influences - after which the likely consequences are examined

Chapter 8

Whistleblower

Person who informs the public or the authorities about alleged dishonest or illegal activities occurring in an organization, e.g. a government department or a company

Chapter 4

WHO

See: World Health Organization (WHO)

Chapter 8

Whole-Life Cost

Total cost of a product during its entire lifecycle, including environmetal costs

Chapter 4

Wildlife crossing

Structures that allows animals to cross human-made barriers safely, such as underpass tunnels, viaducts (also called: ecoduct, eco-bridge), fish ladders

Chapter 8

World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD)

International association of some 200 multinational companies that collectively focus on sustainability

Chapter 1

World Commission on Environment and Development (WCED)

Commission created by the United Nations to address growing concerns "about the accelerating deterioration of the human environment and natural resources and the consequences of that deterioration for economic and social development." Also called the Brundtland Commission.

Chapter 4

World Health Organization (WHO)

Specialised agency of the UN acting as a coordinating authority on international public health

Chapter 7

Zero-energy building

Building where, on average over the year, no energy from elsewhere is needed, because at least as much internally generated energy is supplied to the external grid as is taken from that grid