Practice Flashcards
Define natural resources.
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All Flashcards in Topic 7.1
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7.1.115 cards
Define natural resources.
Natural resources are materials and components from nature that humans use for survival and economic activity.
Nature → humans use it
List two renewable and two non-renewable resources.
Renewable: timber, freshwater (if managed), fish stocks, wind/solar. Non-renewable: coal, oil, natural gas, metals/minerals.
2 + 2 examples
What is the general relationship between development and resource use?
As countries develop, resource consumption typically increases due to industrialisation, urbanisation, and rising consumption of goods and energy.
Development → more demand
State two reasons why industrialisation increases resource demand.
Industrialisation increases demand for energy (fuels/electricity) and materials (metals, minerals, construction inputs) for factories, infrastructure, and production.
Energy + materials
What is the key difference between renewable and non-renewable resources?
Renewable resources can be replenished naturally on human timescales; non-renewable resources have a finite supply formed over geological time and cannot be replaced once depleted.
Human timescale vs geological
What does “renewable if not overexploited” mean?
A resource can regenerate, but only stays renewable when extraction stays at/below regeneration; overuse can deplete it and make recovery very slow or impossible.
Rate matters
Give three examples of natural resources.
Examples include fossil fuels (coal/oil/gas), freshwater, timber, minerals/metals (e.g., copper), fertile soil/land, fish stocks.
Be specific: “copper” not “minerals”
What do ecological footprint and biocapacity measure?
Ecological footprint measures human demand on natural resources; biocapacity measures nature’s ability to supply resources and absorb wastes.
Demand vs supply
State one key global pattern about resource use.
Per-capita resource use is much higher in HICs than LICs, even though total demand is rising globally.
Per-capita vs total
When can a renewable resource become effectively non-renewable?
When it is used faster than it regenerates (harvest rate exceeds regeneration rate), causing long-term depletion (e.g., overfishing).
Use rate language
What is a common exam skill for this topic?
Describing trends in resource extraction/use from data by stating overall trend, differences between regions, and rate of change (with figures when possible).
Trend + compare + numbers
What is a resource conflict?
A dispute or violence linked to competition for control, access, or distribution of resources (e.g., water, oil, minerals).
Competition for resources
Define the “resource curse”.
The resource curse is when countries rich in natural resources experience poor governance, corruption, conflict, or slower development despite resource wealth.
Paradox of plenty
State the rule for sustainable use of renewable resources.
Sustainable use occurs when the harvest/extraction rate is at or below the natural regeneration rate.
Harvest ≤ regeneration
Why can resource distribution drive inequality or conflict?
Because resources are unevenly distributed, creating dependence, power imbalances, and competition over access and profits.
Uneven distribution
7.1.215 cards
State two economic benefits of resource extraction.
Benefits include employment, export revenue/tax income, and infrastructure development funded by resource profits.
Jobs + revenue
List three environmental impacts of resource extraction.
Habitat destruction, pollution (water/air/soil), and landscape degradation (subsidence/erosion) are major impacts.
Env impacts list
State two ways mining can cause habitat destruction.
Open-pit/strip mining removes vegetation and topsoil, and creates large disturbed areas that fragment or eliminate habitats.
Mining removes ecosystems
What is acid mine drainage?
Acid mine drainage is acidic water formed when exposed sulfide minerals react with oxygen and water, dissolving metals and polluting waterways.
Acid + dissolved metals
List one benefit and one cost of resource extraction for societies.
Benefit: jobs and revenue. Cost: displacement and health impacts from pollution or accidents.
1 + 1
Give two social costs of resource extraction.
Social costs include displacement/relocation, health impacts from pollution and accidents, and cultural disruption (often for indigenous groups).
Think people impacted
State what the resource curse suggests.
It suggests resource-rich countries may experience corruption, conflict, and weak institutions, which can reduce development outcomes.
Wealth ≠ wellbeing
Give three types of pollution linked to resource extraction.
Water pollution (oil spills/heavy metals), air pollution (dust/SO2), and soil contamination (tailings/chemicals) are common extraction-related pollutants.
Water + air + soil
What is meant by “boom-bust cycle” in resource-dependent regions?
A boom-bust cycle is rapid growth during high commodity prices followed by economic decline when prices fall, leaving communities vulnerable.
Price-driven instability
Define environmental justice in the context of extraction.
Environmental justice means extraction harms and risks should not fall disproportionately on low-income or indigenous communities; decision-making should be fair and inclusive.
Who bears the costs?
Explain one cause → effect chain for extraction impacts.
Open-pit mining removes vegetation (cause) which increases soil erosion and sediment runoff into rivers (effects), reducing water quality and aquatic habitats.
Cause then effects
What is a high-scoring exam technique for impacts questions?
Use cause → effect chains and (when possible) add a named case study (e.g., Niger Delta oil impacts) to support points.
Cause → effect
What is a strong evaluation approach for extraction essays?
Present both benefits and costs, discuss who gains vs who loses, and reach a justified conclusion using a named example where possible.
Balanced + equity + example
State one way extraction can increase greenhouse gas emissions.
Extraction, processing, and transport use energy and can release methane (e.g., coal mining, gas leaks), increasing greenhouse gas emissions.
Methane leaks matter
Why do examiners like named examples for extraction?
Named examples show real-world understanding and make evaluation more specific (impacts, stakeholders, and outcomes are clearer).
Specific beats generic
7.1.315 cards
Give two regulatory approaches for resource management.
Examples include quotas (limits on extraction) and protected areas (no-extraction zones), plus legislation like EIA requirements.
Rules & limits
Define sustainable resource management.
Sustainable resource management is using resources at a rate that meets current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs.
Present + future
What does “intergenerational equity” mean?
Resources should be managed so future generations have access to natural capital and ecosystem services, not depleted by present use.
Future generations matter
What is a certification scheme? Give one example.
A certification scheme sets sustainability standards and labels compliant products, e.g., FSC (timber) or MSC (fish).
FSC/MSC
What are the three pillars of sustainability?
Environmental (ecosystem health), economic (long-term viability), and social (equity and wellbeing).
Env + Econ + Social
List one regulatory, one economic, and one behavioural strategy for sustainability.
Regulatory: quotas/protected areas. Economic: taxes/subsidies/permits. Behavioural: demand reduction, reuse, and recycling habits.
One from each bucket
Why is equity an evaluation criterion?
A strategy may be effective but unfair if costs fall on vulnerable groups; equitable strategies improve acceptance and long-term success.
Fair distribution
State the precautionary principle.
Act to prevent serious harm even if scientific evidence is incomplete or uncertain.
Prevent harm under uncertainty
Give two economic instruments for sustainable management.
Taxes/levies (pollution charges), subsidies for sustainable alternatives, tradeable permits, or payment for ecosystem services (PES).
Money changes behaviour
What is a circular economy strategy for resources?
Design products for reuse, repair, and recycling so materials stay in use longer and waste is minimised.
Keep materials in use
State the polluter pays principle.
Those who cause pollution should bear the costs of managing it to prevent damage to human health or the environment.
Costs belong to polluter
What is meant by “scalability” in management strategies?
Scalability is whether a strategy can be expanded to larger areas or populations while remaining effective and affordable.
Works bigger?
What’s a strong essay structure for evaluating sustainable management?
Define sustainability, present multiple strategies (regulatory/economic/tech/behaviour), evaluate each using criteria, then conclude with a justified recommendation.
Define → strategies → evaluate → conclude
Define maximum sustainable yield (MSY).
MSY is the largest harvest that can be taken indefinitely without depleting the resource, assuming the stock can regenerate.
Largest sustainable harvest
Name four evaluation criteria for management strategies.
Effectiveness, cost, feasibility/enforcement, equity (who pays/benefits), time scale, and side effects/co-benefits.
Pick 4 criteria
Topic 7.1 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Natural resources—uses and management
ESS exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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