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Sustainable development encompasses economic, social, and
ecological perspectives of conservation and change in natural
resources. It is generally defined as development that meets the
needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs. This definition is based on
the ethical imperative of equity within and between generations.
Moreover, apart from meeting; "the basic needs of all"; sustainable
development implies sustaining the natural life support systems on
Earth, and extending to all the opportunity to satisfy their
aspirations for a better life. Hence, sustainable development is
more precisely defined as a process of change in which the
exploitation of resources, the direction of investments, the
orientation of technological development, and institutional change
are all in harmony and enhance both current and future potential to
meet human needs and aspiration. To date, various definitions and
stationary-state criteria of sustainability have been proposed.
Many authors have been concerned with only part of the problem,
such as the technological assumptions, the ability to substitute
natural resources in economic transformation processes, and the
resilience and importance of ecological processes. But, the social
dimension did not receive the same attention, and has not been
adequately integrated into formal analysis. The engineering
community has to play an important role in sustainable development
with appropriate evaluation of the engineering systems. In this
respect energy, water and environment systems require
multi-criteria evaluation methods for the assessment of the
economic, environmental and social aspect of the systems."
Sustainable development encompasses economic, social, and
ecological perspectives of conservation and change in natural
resources. It is generally defined as development that meets the
needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs. This definition is based on
the ethical imperative of equity within and between generations.
Moreover, apart from meeting; "the basic needs of all"; sustainable
development implies sustaining the natural life support systems on
Earth, and extending to all the opportunity to satisfy their
aspirations for a better life. Hence, sustainable development is
more precisely defined as a process of change in which the
exploitation of resources, the direction of investments, the
orientation of technological development, and institutional change
are all in harmony and enhance both current and future potential to
meet human needs and aspiration. To date, various definitions and
stationary-state criteria of sustainability have been proposed.
Many authors have been concerned with only part of the problem,
such as the technological assumptions, the ability to substitute
natural resources in economic transformation processes, and the
resilience and importance of ecological processes. But, the social
dimension did not receive the same attention, and has not been
adequately integrated into formal analysis. The engineering
community has to play an important role in sustainable development
with appropriate evaluation of the engineering systems. In this
respect energy, water and environment systems require
multi-criteria evaluation methods for the assessment of the
economic, environmental and social aspect of the systems.
Resilience is the ability to avoid, minimise, withstand, and
recover from the effects of adversity, whether natural or man-made,
under all circumstances of use. Energy resilience is the ability of
the energy system to provide and maintain an acceptable level of
service in the face of various challenges to normal operation. Loss
of resilience can cause loss of valuable energy system services,
and may even lead to rapid transitions or shifts into qualitatively
different situations and configurations. The resilience of energy
systems is defined as the capacity of an energy system to withstand
perturbations from climatic, economic, technological and social
causes and to rebuild and renew itself afterwards. This book
describes the resilience of energy systems.
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