Definition: There are several ways to define sustainability. One, attributed to the “Brundtland Commission” considers sustainability to be the ability to satisfy current needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. This definition rests on intergenerational equity. The second generation focuses on equity at the current moment and holds the needs of classes, ethnic groups, or nations who are less empowered, to have a legitimate stake in the satisfaction of needs. A third definition can also be identified. It focuses on the capacity of people to live within the capacities of ecosystems to support them. This, in a sense, is the most fundamental definition of sustainability. It hews very close to the ordinary definition of sustainability in the sense of sustenance or support.
Examples: Applying the concept of sustainability to urban systems requires some caution. From an environmental standpoint, no urban area is strictly sustainable. Large urban areas, including suburbs, and their non-agricultural exurbs, do not supply their own food, cleansing capacities, or other environmental benefits (see Ecosystem Services). However, city, suburban, exurban systems that contribute toward their food needs, environmental cleansing, carbon storage, and pollution reduction, for example, can be said to be more sustainable than those which do not make the same kinds of contributions. Urban sustainability is thus a relative condition.
Sustainability has three components: environmental, social, and economic. There is a benefit to achieving sustainability in each realm, and the overlaps between each pair also have value, as noted by the grey boxes. However, true and lasting sustainability can only result from the overlap of all three areas. In other words, sustainability in any one area—environment, social, or economic—without attention to the other two will ultimately fail.
Why important: No activity that claims a sustainability benefit can be narrowly construed. All definitions of sustainability from the 1980s recognize that sustainability has three inextricably linked components – economic, social, and environmental. Thus, people often speak of a “triple bottom line” in making any decision, so that the health of the economy, of the environment, and social equity are all supported by decisions and actions that enhance sustainability. None of the three aspects of sustainability trumps the others. Given that urban sustainability is a relative condition, there are many activities and strategies cities, suburbs, and urbanized exurbs can make toward sustainability.
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