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Sustainability Principles in Management

Environmental Science
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Sustainability Principles in Management

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Sustainability Principles Applied to Environmental Management

The six sustainability principles provide a framework for evaluating environmental management decisions. Applied rigorously, they transform abstract sustainability goals into concrete criteria for assessing whether management strategies are adequate.

Quick Reference: The Six Principles

Principle One-line Summary
Conservation of biodiversity and ecological integrity Maintain living systems and their processes
Efficiency of resource use Maximise benefit per unit of resource consumed
Intergenerational equity Preserve options for the future
Intragenerational equity Fair distribution in the present
Precautionary principle Act cautiously under uncertainty
User pays principle Those who cause harm bear the cost

Applying Each Principle to Environmental Management Decisions

Conservation of Biodiversity and Ecological Integrity

Management strategies should maintain or restore:
- Species diversity and population viability
- Habitat extent and quality
- Ecological processes (nutrient cycling, water flow, fire regimes)
- Resilience — the capacity of ecosystems to absorb disturbance

Test question: Does this management strategy maintain ecological processes, or does it merely slow their degradation?

Example application: A water management plan that allocates environmental flows for ecological purposes uphold this principle; one that only allocates water for human use does not.

Efficiency of Resource Use

Management resources (funding, time, personnel) are finite. Efficiency means:
- Targeting interventions where they deliver greatest ecological benefit
- Using technologies that reduce waste (e.g. precision agriculture reducing fertiliser runoff)
- Integrated pest management rather than blanket pesticide application
- Life-cycle analysis to minimise environmental impact of products

Example application: Controlling a key feral predator species (e.g. foxes) in a region protects dozens of native species simultaneously — highly efficient compared to single-species management.

Intergenerational Equity

Management strategies should:
- Avoid irreversible actions (extinctions, permanent soil degradation)
- Maintain renewable resources within sustainable yield
- Apply long-term planning horizons (decades to centuries)
- Invest in ecological rehabilitation to improve conditions for the future

Example application: A 20-year forest management plan that maintains a network of old-growth reserves upholds intergenerational equity; one that converts all old growth to plantation harvested every 30 years does not.

Intragenerational Equity

Management strategies should:
- Distribute the costs and benefits of environmental management fairly
- Engage marginalised communities (Indigenous peoples, low-income groups) in decision-making
- Not require poorer nations or communities to bear disproportionate conservation costs
- Provide compensation where livelihoods are affected by conservation restrictions

Example application: A marine park that restricts commercial fishing without compensating affected fishers, while allowing recreational fishing to continue, raises intragenerational equity concerns.

Precautionary Principle

Where there is scientific uncertainty about potential harm, management should:
- Err on the side of caution before authorising potentially harmful activities
- Not delay protective action waiting for complete certainty
- Require proponents of potentially harmful activities to demonstrate safety

Trigger conditions: The precautionary principle is most relevant when potential harm is:
- Severe (significant ecological or health impacts)
- Irreversible (extinction, permanent habitat destruction)
- Uncertain (not yet fully understood)

Example application: When a new pesticide is proposed for broad-scale application near a Ramsar wetland, the precautionary principle supports requiring comprehensive environmental impact assessment before approval, even if short-term data does not show obvious harm.

User Pays Principle

Management strategies should ensure:
- Polluters pay for remediation of harm caused
- Resource extractors pay for habitat rehabilitation
- Developers fund biodiversity offsets equivalent to losses caused
- Full environmental costs are reflected in market prices

Policy instruments: Carbon taxes; mining rehabilitation bonds; discharge licences; nutrient trading schemes; biodiversity offsets.

Example application: Requiring mining companies to post a rehabilitation bond before commencing operations ensures they bear the cost of site restoration rather than leaving it to taxpayers.

Tension and Trade-offs Between Principles

Real-world management decisions often involve trade-offs:

Tension Example
Efficiency vs. Intragenerational equity Prioritising ‘high-value’ ecosystems may neglect disadvantaged communities’ local environments
Conservation vs. Intragenerational equity Strict protection limits local economic activities
User pays vs. Precautionary principle Full cost recovery may deter innovation in clean technology

EXAM TIP: When evaluating a management strategy, systematically work through all six principles rather than focusing on just one or two. Show that you understand the nuances — a strategy may uphold some principles while violating others.

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