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Sustainability Principles in Energy

Environmental Science
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Sustainability Principles in Energy

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Sustainability Principles Applied to Energy Resources

The sustainability principles provide a framework for evaluating how energy resources are accessed, extracted, processed, transported and used. Applied systematically, they reveal what responsible energy choices look like.

The Energy Resource Lifecycle

Energy resources pass through several stages, each with environmental and social implications:

Stage Examples
Accessing Identifying and acquiring rights to energy resources
Extracting Mining coal; drilling oil/gas; clearing land for solar farms
Processing Refining crude oil; crushing and washing coal; manufacturing solar panels
Transporting Pipelines; shipping; transmission lines
Using Combustion; electricity consumption; industrial processes
Decommissioning/Rehabilitation Site remediation; asset disposal

Applying Each Sustainability Principle

1. Conservation of Biodiversity and Ecological Integrity

Energy extraction is among the most significant direct threats to biodiversity:

  • Coal mining: Open-cut mines destroy habitat over large areas; acid mine drainage contaminates waterways
  • Gas drilling (CSG): Dewatering affects groundwater-dependent ecosystems; fugitive emissions alter climate
  • Hydroelectric dams: River systems and valley ecosystems permanently altered
  • Transmission lines and roads: Habitat fragmentation; fauna mortality

What this principle demands:
- Avoid energy development in protected areas, critical habitat and biodiversity hotspots
- Require genuine ecological rehabilitation when extraction ceases
- Choose energy sources and technologies with the lowest ecological footprint per unit energy

2. Efficiency of Resource Use

  • Energy efficiency reduces total resource extraction needed for the same energy services
  • Combined-cycle gas turbines (~60%) use less fuel per kWh than simple steam turbines (~35%)
  • Energy efficiency standards for buildings, appliances and vehicles reduce total energy consumption
  • Cogeneration (using waste heat from electricity generation) dramatically improves overall resource efficiency

What this principle demands: Maximise the useful energy obtained from each unit of resource extracted; invest in efficiency before investing in new supply.

3. Intergenerational Equity

Fossil fuels are finite non-renewable resources:
- Burning today’s coal, oil and gas depletes reserves that future generations cannot use
- Climate change caused by fossil fuel emissions will fall disproportionately on future generations
- Nuclear waste requires management for thousands of years — placing a burden on future generations

What this principle demands:
- Transition to renewable energy to preserve future access to energy services without depleting finite reserves
- Invest in energy storage and grid infrastructure for reliable renewable supply
- Ensure nuclear waste management plans are funded upfront

4. Intragenerational Equity

Energy poverty and energy wealth are distributed very unequally:
- ~770 million people globally lack electricity access (predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia)
- Per capita energy consumption in Australia is ~5× the global average
- Coal mining communities face economic displacement in the transition to renewables
- Communities near gas fields or mines bear health and environmental burdens from which they receive limited benefit

What this principle demands:
- Equitable access to clean, affordable energy (including through energy concessions and subsidies for low-income households)
- Just transition support for fossil fuel workers and communities
- International climate finance to help developing nations leapfrog to clean energy

5. Precautionary Principle

Scientific evidence strongly links fossil fuel combustion to climate change and ocean acidification. Under the precautionary principle:
- Uncertainty about the exact severity of future impacts does not justify inaction
- The potential for irreversible harm (extinctions, ecosystem collapse, sea level rise) justifies precautionary emissions reduction
- New energy technologies (e.g. carbon capture and storage, nuclear) should undergo rigorous risk assessment before large-scale deployment

What this principle demands:
- Rapid transition away from fossil fuels even before every impact is fully quantified
- Cautious approach to untested energy technologies (e.g. large-scale geoengineering)

6. User Pays Principle

Fossil fuel combustion externalises environmental costs — polluters do not automatically pay for the harm they cause:
- Air pollution health costs (~AUD\$10 billion/year in Australia)
- Greenhouse gas emissions driving climate damage
- Site rehabilitation costs sometimes not fully funded by miners

Policy instruments that apply user pays:
- Carbon pricing (carbon tax or emissions trading scheme): Forces emitters to pay for GHG emissions
- Mining rehabilitation bonds: Ensure companies cannot walk away from contaminated sites
- Pollution levies: Tax emissions of SO$_2$, particulates, cooling water discharge

Summary Table

Principle Challenge in Energy Sector Principle Applied
Conservation of biodiversity Mining, drilling, transmission Avoid critical habitats; require rehabilitation
Efficiency of resource use Low-efficiency combustion; waste heat Efficiency standards; cogeneration
Intergenerational equity Fossil fuel depletion; climate change legacy Transition to renewables; nuclear waste management
Intragenerational equity Energy poverty; community impacts Equitable access; just transition
Precautionary principle Climate change uncertainty Act before certainty; assess new technologies
User pays principle Externalised pollution and climate costs Carbon pricing; rehabilitation bonds

VCAA FOCUS: Questions may present an energy development proposal and ask you to evaluate it against two or more sustainability principles. Select principles where you can make a substantive argument — for most energy scenarios, all six principles have relevance.

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