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NotesESS HLTopic 7.1Types of natural resources
Back to ESS HL Topics
7.1.11 min read

Types of natural resources

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 7

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Contents

  • What are natural resources?
  • Resource use and development
  • Exam-style question (step by step)

What are natural resources?

Big idea: Natural resources are everything we take from the environment to meet our needs — from the air we breathe to the metals in our phones.

Categories of natural resources

Renewable resources

  • Can be replenished naturally
  • Examples: solar energy, wind, timber, freshwater, fish
  • Sustainable IF harvest rate ≤ regeneration rate
  • Can become non-renewable if overexploited

Non-renewable resources

  • Finite supply; formed over geological time
  • Examples: fossil fuels, minerals, metals
  • Cannot be replaced once depleted
  • Must be conserved or substituted

Key natural resources

  • Fossil fuels: Coal, oil, natural gas — energy for transport, electricity, heating
  • Minerals and metals: Iron, copper, aluminium, rare earths — construction, electronics, manufacturing
  • Timber: Construction, paper, fuel — can be renewable if sustainably managed
  • Freshwater: Drinking, agriculture, industry — only 2.5% of Earths water is fresh
  • Land/soil: Agriculture, housing, ecosystem services — finite and degradable
  • Fish and wildlife: Food, materials — renewable but heavily overexploited
A resource is only renewable if we use it at or below its regeneration rate. Overfishing can make fish stocks effectively non-renewable!
Exam tip: Be ready to classify resources as renewable or non-renewable AND explain the conditions under which renewable resources can become depleted.

Resource use and development

Big idea: Resource consumption is closely linked to economic development. As countries develop, their resource use typically increases — creating tensions between growth and sustainability.

Trends in resource use

  • Global resource extraction has tripled since 1970
  • Per capita consumption varies hugely — HICs use 10x more than LICs
  • Demand is accelerating due to population growth and rising living standards
  • Some resources are peaking — e.g., peak phosphorus, peak oil debates

The development-resource link

  • Industrialisation requires massive inputs of metals, fuels, and materials
  • Urbanisation increases demand for construction materials and energy
  • Rising consumption drives demand for consumer goods and their inputs
  • The environmental Kuznets curve suggests pollution may decrease after a certain income level — but this is debated
Ecological footprint measures resource demand; biocapacity measures supply. Currently, humanity uses ~1.7 Earths worth of resources annually.

Resource distribution and conflict

  • Resources are unevenly distributed globally
  • This creates resource dependence and trade relationships
  • Can lead to resource conflicts (e.g., oil, water, minerals)
  • Resource curse: Countries rich in resources often have poor governance and conflict
Exam tip: Questions often ask you to describe trends in resource use from data. Practice identifying patterns, rates of change, and differences between regions.

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IB-style question — Classifying natural resources [2]

A coastal town relies on its offshore wind farm, a granite quarry, the surrounding pine forest and the local groundwater aquifer. Identify which two of these are renewable resources and which two are non-renewable. [2]

How to answer it, step by step

  1. Renewable

    • Wind farm — wind replenished continuously

    • Pine forest — regrows if harvested sustainably
  2. Non-renewable

    • Granite quarry — rock forms over millions of years

    • Aquifer — groundwater recharges far slower than it is pumped

Final answer

Examiner tip: 'renewable' means it replenishes on a human timescale — a forest only counts if regrowth keeps pace with harvesting.

IB-style question — Natural capital and natural income [2]

A managed bamboo plantation is described as natural capital that yields a natural income. Outline what is meant by natural capital and natural income, using bamboo as the example. [2]

How to answer it, step by step

  1. Natural capital

    • The bamboo stock itself — a resource that holds value

    • Like money in an account that can generate returns
  2. Natural income

    • The new bamboo grown each year that can be harvested

    • Sustainable only if you cut no more than the yearly growth

Final answer

Examiner tip: capital is the stock, income is the yield — harvesting only the income keeps the capital intact.

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A teacher asks students to sort a set of resource cards into categories. One card shows a diagram of crude oil being pumped from an underground reservoir that took millions of years to form.

whether crude oil is classified as a renewable or a non-renewable natural resource. [1 mark]

Related ESS HL Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

7.1.2Impacts of resource extraction
7.1.3Sustainable resource management
7.2.1Non-renewable energy sources
7.2.2Renewable energy sources
View all ESS HL topics

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