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Overview

Extra Solved Examples & PYQs

April 10, 2024
2 min read

Conceptual Questions

Q1: Why is the distinction between “Stock” and “Reserve” important in resources?

(Note: While not explicitly defined in this chapter text, this concept aids understanding “Technologically Accessible” and “Economically Feasible”)

  • Stock: All materials in the environment that have the potential to satisfy human needs (e.g., Hydrogen in water is a potential energy source).
  • Reserve: The subset of the stock that can be put into use with existing technology (e.g., Water in dams).
  • Significance: We must turn more stock into reserves through R&D (like making solar cells cheaper).

Q2: Explain the term “Lokasangraha” in the context of resource management.

Answer: “Lokasangraha” is a concept from the Bhagavad Gita mentioned in the chapter. It refers to the idea that individuals must transcend personal desires and act for the wellbeing of all (collective welfare).

  • In resource management, this means not hoarding or over-exploiting resources for personal profit but managing them so that the entire society and future generations benefit. It is the spiritual foundation of Sustainability.

Q3: How does the “Natural Resource Curse” affect a nation’s development?

Answer: The “Natural Resource Curse” or “Paradox of Plenty” occurs when resource-rich countries fail to develop other sectors of their economy.

  1. Over-reliance: They rely only on selling raw materials (oil, coal).
  2. Currency fluctuation: High exports make local currency expensive, hurting other industries like manufacturing.
  3. Neglect: Education and innovation are often neglected.
  • Result: Despite having gold or oil, the general population remains poor (e.g., certain African or Latin American nations). India avoids this by using resources to build domestic industries.

Diagram: The Sustainable Cycle

The goal of stewardship is to keep the resource loop closed.

Waste

Recycle/Regenerate

Extraction

Production

Consumption

Waste or Resource?

Pollution/Depletion