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1
- #1
kbits
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 15, 2007
- 19
I have to get this question out of my head: is sustainable development really a code word for "Environmentalism"? So what comes to your mind when you see the words "Sustainable Development"?
Organic, perpetual motion machines that operate and repair themselves without expense? Living, breathing structures made entirely from plants? Technology born from and relying on infrastructure produced and self-replenished by Mother Gaia? New computers wired by the very nerves from our own human nervous system? I can't help but think of those things, but I don't understand those as the be all, end all of sustainable development.
I think, thus far, our development in the USA and elsewhere has been sustainable. Rigid pavement, concrete highways were sustainably planned. Typical gas-guzzling SUV's hogging parking lot spaces are sustained by the world. Mass-produced, Acme PC's, one for every person on earth, are being sustainably dreamed into existence. But in some past, present or future moment, the next sustainable-minded product produced cannot be sustained. Without hundreds of thousands of natural gas fuel stations, NGV's will never be sustainable, and therefore, not "green". Buildings made from recycled junk are not only too expensive to build out of pocket, but also too expensive in terms of time. The capacity to build these en masse does not exist, and therefore that sort of green technology is not sustainable.
My definition of sustainable development involves not only "green" technology, but more importantly the know-how to build, operate and maintain it. Development is sustained not only by the earth and environment, but also by the beings who rely on it for life. As engineers, we are the ones who design and build the world we occupy. We train people how to run it. We organize the maintenance crews. We pray for funds to keep it going. So are we confident we'll be able to develop and transform technology in order to ensure that we develop sustainably? Anyway, what makes any development sustainable, if sustainability is even possible?
Organic, perpetual motion machines that operate and repair themselves without expense? Living, breathing structures made entirely from plants? Technology born from and relying on infrastructure produced and self-replenished by Mother Gaia? New computers wired by the very nerves from our own human nervous system? I can't help but think of those things, but I don't understand those as the be all, end all of sustainable development.
I think, thus far, our development in the USA and elsewhere has been sustainable. Rigid pavement, concrete highways were sustainably planned. Typical gas-guzzling SUV's hogging parking lot spaces are sustained by the world. Mass-produced, Acme PC's, one for every person on earth, are being sustainably dreamed into existence. But in some past, present or future moment, the next sustainable-minded product produced cannot be sustained. Without hundreds of thousands of natural gas fuel stations, NGV's will never be sustainable, and therefore, not "green". Buildings made from recycled junk are not only too expensive to build out of pocket, but also too expensive in terms of time. The capacity to build these en masse does not exist, and therefore that sort of green technology is not sustainable.
My definition of sustainable development involves not only "green" technology, but more importantly the know-how to build, operate and maintain it. Development is sustained not only by the earth and environment, but also by the beings who rely on it for life. As engineers, we are the ones who design and build the world we occupy. We train people how to run it. We organize the maintenance crews. We pray for funds to keep it going. So are we confident we'll be able to develop and transform technology in order to ensure that we develop sustainably? Anyway, what makes any development sustainable, if sustainability is even possible?