The first
wave of environmentalism is a response to industrialization, while the second
is an intellectual response that gained “shape and force” by public support and
transformed into a movement.
The “first wave” followed the industrial revolution step by step. “The industrialization of the world dramatically altered the natural world through new methods of resource extraction, production, and transportation.” Nature was being use and abused more than ever. “Simultaneously, advances in medical technology led to a steady increase in human populations. More humans producing more and consuming more led axiomatically to greater pollution and habitat degradation. The pace of environmental destruction greatly accelerated. Nature became a source of cheap raw material as well as a sink for dumping the ever-growing appetite of industry decimated forests and wild-lands. New and dangerous chemicals were excreted into rivers and the atmosphere.”
The “first wave” followed the industrial revolution step by step. “The industrialization of the world dramatically altered the natural world through new methods of resource extraction, production, and transportation.” Nature was being use and abused more than ever. “Simultaneously, advances in medical technology led to a steady increase in human populations. More humans producing more and consuming more led axiomatically to greater pollution and habitat degradation. The pace of environmental destruction greatly accelerated. Nature became a source of cheap raw material as well as a sink for dumping the ever-growing appetite of industry decimated forests and wild-lands. New and dangerous chemicals were excreted into rivers and the atmosphere.”
“Environmental problems were certainly not unknown in the past, but possibly for the first time in human history there [is] now the perception of an environmental crisis”
No comments:
Post a Comment