Defining 'sustainability'
One of the most commonly used and widely adopted definitions of sustainable development is "meeting the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs." Essentially, sustainability is about the relationship between people and planet; remembering that we are inextricably part of this planet, and that our societies (including economies) depend upon healthy biological and physical systems.
At its most literal level, 'sustainability' refers to the quality of a state or process that allows it to be maintained indefinitely. At present, the way we are living is not sustainable. If we carry on as we are, the Earth's natural resources and physical systems will be irreversibly damaged and depleted.
This will have serious consequences for the ability of humans to produce enough food to meet our needs, changes in climate will displace millions of people and destroy the livelihoods of others, increasing scarcity of resources may lead to conflict and war, and loss of natural ecosystems resulting in massive species loss.
The Global Footprint Network
The measures how much land and water area the human population requires to produce the resource it consumes and to absorb its wastes, and whether we are consuming nature's resources faster than the planet can renew them. Currently, humanity uses the equivalent of 1.6 planets to provide the resources we use and absorb our waste. This means it now takes the Earth one year and six months to regenerate what we use in a year. We are depleting the resources on which we depend for survival. A sustainable society is one in which people can lead healthy, satisfying lifestyles which are within the capacity of the planet to support. New Zealand's footprint has been steadily declining over the last 50 years, and if this trend continues, our ecological footprint will soon overreach our biocapacity.
New ways of thinking
The problems we face in achieving sustainability are large, but they can be overcome. They can't be solved just by changing your light bulbs (though that is certainly a good start). We will require new ways of thinking about how we live our lives – how we work, how we do business, how we eat, shop, travel and participate in our communities. We need to view resource use not as a linear process – turning raw materials into useful items, then disposing of them when they are no longer useful – but a cyclical process, where resources are instead reused indefinitely.
Our commitment to sustainability
That's why سԹ has made a commitment to sustainability, not just in terms of reducing our current impact but also in our role as educators preparing students for the future. The University has adopted a Sustainability Policy and a Sustainability Plan. The Policy states that ‘The University views sustainability as a broad, multi-faceted concept in which ecological, social, cultural and economic systems mutually reinforce and support one another into the long term. In particular, the University supports the notion of ‘strong sustainability’, in which the ‘econo-sphere’ rests within the ‘socio-sphere’, which in turn is dependent on a strong ‘bio-sphere’.’