Environmental Cleanup Recommendation Report:
Problem:
The identified problem that led to the development of this study is the increasing levels of environmental degradation. The impact that environmental degradation has on society is long lasting and may influence climatic activities that would lead to challenges in human activities and uncontrollable conditions. The thesis of the study will investigate the link between human activities, and their economic importance creates challenges in fighting environmental degradation. These create a dire need for cleanup exercises that influence the development of a clean environment despite the occurrence of human activities.
Solution
Dealing with this problem requires the application of different environmental management approaches that will support protection of the environment from degradation. The development of environmental cleanup reports after conducting thorough cleanup results into an understanding of the significant effects of human activities on the environment. Through these, intervention measures result that supports the approach to solving the environmental challenges that the world faces today. An environmental cleanup exercise will identify different measures through which environmental protection proves possible and hence providing means through which protection is possible.
Background
The development of cleanup practices is based on the increase in the human activities that have effects on the environment. The development of environmental effects has an impact on the economic nature of a country. Providing for approaches through which environmental improvement proves possible results into improvement. Different human activities have had impacts on the natural resources and their application in day-to-day operations. These have led to their depletion in some areas and their decreased effectiveness in others. The increasing human activities have provided emissions that affect the earth cover leading to significant climatic implications that have indicated to future challenges including global warming and unpredictable climates. Human activities of military nature have continuously resulted in other effects to humans. The dropping of the Atomic Bomb on America by the US is a classical example of these effects. Developments of cleanup exercises based on the need to have the human activities covered in cleanup approaches that ensure the impact of their actions remains minimal. The causes of degradation have shifted to include highly engaging economic activities. These have resulted from necessary actions influenced by the dependence of humans on them to improve their livelihoods. The economic nature of these activities makes it challenging to reduce their effects and hence leading to continuous environmental impacts (Turner, Pearce & Bateman, 1994). The cleanup exercise is meant to provide alternatives and approaches through which human activities may still occur in a controlled environment, and the environmental protection proves possible. It is through these that the study is influenced and will provide positive approaches to improving the environment.
Data sources
Different lines of evidence from data sources will feature in this research. These will provide the information necessary for the study. The application of secondary data collection techniques will result in successful gathering and organization of data. Secondary data from textbooks, online sources, journals, magazines or websites will allow the study to gather successfully necessary data that will provide support for the research leading to the successful determination of the need for environmental cleanup exercises. The use of secondary data proves efficient for this study despite the numerous challenges involved (Kusek & Rist, 2004). Secondary data is highly exposed to errors and will, therefore; require a critical analysis through which selective data is used. It will include reliance on approved online texts, books, and journals on reducing the margin of error that may affect the results of the study.
Scope and Limitations
The study will focus on the development of cleanup exercises for the different human activities that have led to environmental degradation. It will aim at providing a detailed understanding of the cleanup activities and the importance it carries to the society. The study faces many limitations that may affect its ability to deliver highly reliable results. These include the following:
Limitation of resources:
These influence the entire research process and may lead to inadequate data collection. The limitation of resources will slow down the process considering limited personnel availed and challenges in gathering requisite data.
The time factor is a major constraint to the work considering some data may exist in experiment form that may require experimenting to develop an appropriate understanding of the environmental degradation aspects. Relating time and resources reveal the difficulty of having sufficient personnel working on the project with the length of time it takes to obtain appropriate results. The minimal the resources, the lower the number of personnel and the higher the duration of time needed to complete the study.
Examining the link between environmental degradation and human activities reveals numerous aspects that prove central to understanding the different approaches to developing a cleanup approach to reducing the effects of human activities. The study provided support for identifying the link and hence facilitating the development of cleanup measures that would support dealing with environmental issues arising from human activities. In conclusion, the cleanup of each human activity will result in improvement of the approaches to environmental challenges. It will support maintenance of economic activities that have an impact on the environment but with fewer impacts registered. It is, therefore, important that the link between the human activities and environmental degradation are established to support the cleanup process.
References:
Kusek, J. Z. & Rist, R. C. (2004). Ten Steps to a Results-Based Monitoring and Evaluation System. World Bank Publications.
Turner, R. K. Pearce, D. & Bateman, I. (1994). Environmental Economics: An Elementary Introduction. Viewed on March 15, 2016 from http://www.cabdirect.org/abstracts/19931861592.html;jsessionid=21C812D06FAD6CA408CDA1EA5308AA18