Table 10.1.
Global environmental issues and the associated sectors of
industry
Global environ mental
issue
Primary production
Secondary use
Climate change
Extraction of fossil fuel
Energy production,
pro vision of transport
system
Flow of toxic waste
Waste recovery and
disposal
Use of recycled materials
Decrease in biodiversity
and biosafety
Agricultural, bio techno-
logical and pharma-
ceutical industries
Use of mineral fertilizers,
pesticides and modified
organisms in farms
Ozone depletion
Chemical industry
Production of refrige ra-
tors, electronic goods
and aerosols
Spread of stable organic
compounds
Chemical industry
Agriculture
Decrease in forest areas
Chemical and forestry
industry
Timber industry
Pollution of the World
Ocean
Oil extraction and
transportation
Sectors that use oil
products
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ENVIRONMENT, POLLUTION, DEVELOPMENT: THE CASE OF UZBEKISTAN
10.4.
Role of science and scientists
in identification and tackling of
environmental problems
Scientists definitely play a prominent role in the development
of international documents pertaining to environ mental policy.
Although it was traditionally believed that scientists were not directly
involved in the process, the UN Conference on the Human Environ-
ment in Stockholm, 1972, actually brought out their special role.
At the intellectual level, problems are identified and
scientifically described. In this regard, J. Evelyn’s research is
notable; he announced that the quality of air in London was poor
in a publication in 1661. Similarly, the French engineer Jean-
Antoine Fabre (1748-1834), after having carried out research in the
mountains, informed the public about soil erosion in the Alps.
J. A. Fabre’s observations concerning soil erosion did not offer
solutions to the problem. The same can be said about the talented
and versatile polyglot George Perkins Marsh, ambassador of the
USA to Italy, who in his book Man and Nature (1864) explained, in
the scope of contemporary knowledge, the role of rivers, banks and
surrounding wetlands in the origin of floods in continental Europe.
He predicted the possibility of floods as long as humans would
continue industrialising and adapting rivers to their needs. However,
he did not solve the problem either.
In the early 20
th
century, the Swedish scientist Einar Naumann
explained the principles of eutrophication. He discovered that
an excessive amount of nitrates and phosphates causes biological
activity. The results turned out to be correct although no one gave
careful attention to them until the problem gained topicality in
connection with a massive loss of fish. Consequently, scientific
research was necessary, yet it had been insufficient.
Speaking of scientists as discoverers of problems, the name of
the Swedish chemist Svante Oden (1924-1986) is often mentioned.
He discovered the complex and large-scale acidification mechanism
and studied it in relation to burning fossil fuels. Indeed, for about
a century scientists had had some general knowledge on it, but
S. Oden’s article, which was published in the Swedish newspaper
Dagens Nyheter in 1967, turned out pivotal in tackling the situation
in practice. The novelty was the more recent and precise data; yet
most importantly, this information could be introduced to politicians
who used it in decision-making. As a result, the concept of environ-
mental protection was worked out in the 1960s, and practical tasks
were outlined. ‘Acid precipitation’ became an issue to be discussed in
political circles, but the problem formulated by S. Oden became an
environ mental problem as well.
Figure 10.9.
The
Swedish chemist Svante
Oden (1924-1986)
was the first to study
the consequences of
burning fossil fuel
He realised that
sulphurous compounds
in fuel can be oxidised in
the process of burning
and later might turn into
sulphuric acid, which has
a devastating impact
on the environment. It
was tested by the Inter‑
national Meteorological
Institute in Stockholm,
which since the 1950s has
carried out measuring of
atmospheric pollution.
10. INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION IN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
217
In the 19
th
century, global warming had not yet become an en vi-
ron mental problem. However, there were scientists who saw a link
between the temperature rise and human activity. Svante Arrhenius
(1859-1927), a physico-chemist at the Stockholm Högskola, had
put forward the theory of the greenhouse effect already in 1896,
but in 1938 the British scientist Guy Stewart Callendar (1898-
1964) published an article in which he demonstrated a connection
between this phenomenon and burning of fossil fuel. As a result of
burning, carbon dioxide is emitted, and with its concentration in
the atmo sphere rising, the air temperature also rises. However, even
G. S. Callendar himself did not consider that to constitute an environ-
mental problem because it was not socially recognised. It did not gain
recognition up to 1960 when the concept of the greenhouse effect
was already in wide use and the global temperature rise had become
a topical environ mental problem. The process of global warming was
gradually progressing, and the problem had to be included in the
programme of human activity.
Environ mental problems are not new, they have existed for
hundreds of years and have arise in many places of the world. Yet
they have been problems of local importance, dispersed and isolated
in both time and space. They have emerged in various places and
evaluated as well as tackled differently – by individuals and by
society at large. Scientists and government officials have been
involved, but sometimes these problems were left untreated, as was
the case of the London smog. Londoners had complained about it
already in the 13
th
century, but practical measures were taken only
in the 1950s – 700 years later.
When these social problems surfaced and were explained,
their nature changed. People’s inconsiderate attitude to their
environ ment was reflected in these problems. Along with the idea
of the possibilities of nature and opportunities of environ mental
protection, a convincing interpretation method was created and
introduced to journalists, scientists, international organisations and
individuals concerned about environ mental problems. Scientists
created environ mental models, concepts and theories; to the general
public, scientists were the activators of environ mental problems;
it was only scientists who could use their methods to identify the
borderline between what was ‘normal’ and ‘problematic’.
The scientist as a discoverer of environ
mental problems
performs other important functions in the modern society. The
scientist is a teacher who disseminates knowledge on research
and thus carries out the mission of educating the public about the
questions of nature and the environ ment. The scientist is also a
consultant who helps decision-makers to prepare optimum solutions;
as a creator of new knowledge, the scientist works out the best
Figure 10.10.
Major
contribution of the
outstanding Swedish
chemist Svante
Arrhenius (1859-1927)
to science was his
electrolytic dissociation
theory
However, Arrhenius
was a pioneer in many
different spheres.
Already in 1896 he had
advanced the theory
that the rise of carbon
dioxide concentration
in the atmosphere was
going to cause the effect
of global warming. He
may have got interested
in this problem after it
was widely discussed in
relation to the discovery
of the recent Ice Age. He
calculated that doubled
concentration of carbon
dioxide would result in a
temperature rise by five
degrees. His calculations
are very close to our
present‑day notions.
218
ENVIRONMENT, POLLUTION, DEVELOPMENT: THE CASE OF UZBEKISTAN
technical and social solutions for the problems of nature and the
environ ment. The scientist also assumes the role of a responsible
intellectual by entering discussions and explaining the interrelation
between environ mental and political issues in the mass media.
Application and scientific interpretation of data on the environ-
ment are instrumental in assessing global tendencies and developing
future tendencies. The case of the Danish scientist Bjorn Lomborg
is an enlightening example. In 2001 he published the book The
Skeptical Environ mentalist to prove that the existing state of the
environ ment was not as bad as other scientists found it. Lomborg
was severely criticised for a methodologically unjustified selection
of separate environ
mental data to draw general conclusions
inconsistent with the reality. However, he was not the only one to
take a stand against the propagators of environ mental problems.
Such has been the case with the problem of ozone depletion, the
currently topical climate warming and other issues. This urges the
environ mentalists to work even more assiduously and consider the
complex and intricate nature of the phenomenon as well as be better
prepared for the eventual attacks by sceptics and critics.
Science can take pride in being the driving force behind
activity programs for nature and environ mental protection. How-
ever, its history has not been a linear process, clearly outlined
and progressive. It has rather been a meandering advance, with
numerous attempts, failures and the significant achievements of the
second half of the 20
th
century in creating models of nature and the
environ ment. Science is also responsible for huge disasters, including
harm to nature; yet future without science in inconceivable. Science
remains a consequential factor in tackling problems of nature and
the environ ment the humanity faces worldwide and in the Baltic Sea
Region in particular.
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