Social Sciences, asked by zainabziyas, 4 months ago

why do we need to make laws for the protection of the environment

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Promoting economic growth with environmental, human health, and cultural safeguards in place seems to be the path forward for most governments, but decades of environmental mismanagement have created severe legacy issues in most countries. ... environmental impacts of reservoirs and water abstraction. impacts of mining.

Answered by nittalard
1

Explanation:

1.3 Why do we need international environmental law?

The environmental challenges facing individuals, communities, private companies and governments throughout the world are numerous and complex. Most governments, companies and civil society organisations now recognise that environmental issues are intertwined with social, cultural and economic issues.

Promoting economic growth with environmental, human health and cultural safeguards in place seems to be the path forward for most governments, but decades of environmental mismanagement have created severe legacy issues in most countries.

Two huge challenges are determining how to clean up legacy problems, restore natural resources, and achieve human health protection and health ecosystems; and designing strategies to enable future growth while protecting the environment, maintaining biodiversity, safeguarding human health, and preserving cultural and social values. This results in a very complex set of decisions for government at all levels, and a regulatory framework that is supportive, facilitating and enabling is essential.

A very summarised list of global environmental issues includes:

air and water pollution

climate change

deforestation

depletion of non-renewable energy sources

environmental impacts of reservoirs and water abstraction

impacts of mining

invasive species

land and soil degradation

loss of biodiversity and habitat fragmentation and degradation

non-sustainable depletion of natural resources

nuclear risks and waste management

ocean and freshwater deoxygenation

ozone depletion

persistent toxins

population pressure

waste management

Many of these problems and issues traverse national and other administrative boundaries, and many of the natural resources affected are examples of a global commons. Such transboundary challenges highlight the need for decision-making processes, management agreements and procedures for dispute resolution that go beyond the borders of individual nation states. They illustrate the necessity of creating administrative and legal structures capable of enabling ecologically sustainable and socially acceptable development

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