**1. Introduction**

Since the second half of the twentieth century, the big processes of globalization of the economy, coupled with the development of new technologies and the increase of the population, have led to the emergence of major environmental problems whose importance transcends beyond the limits of the countries, in a manner that we could say that they are global impacts. These problems include, among others, the ozone layer depletion, the climate change due to the greenhouse gas emission, or the depletion of natural resources.

Industry, as well as modern societies, must face this challenge, changing their consumption patterns, increasing product life, banishing the concept of "use and throw away," and changing from the traditional productive systems to a more sustainable ones.

Sustainable Development's most recognized definition was stablished at the publication *Our Common Future*, known as *Brundtland Report* [1], as:

"development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It contains within it two key concepts:


Traditionally, Sustainable Development concept has been symbolized as three circles representing the triple bottom line of sustainability: society, economy, and environment. Nevertheless, different authors have proposed alternative representations, to consolidate the concept of society, environment, and economy as pillars of the sustainability, as can be seen in **Figure 1**.

In 2015, the United Nations adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, which went into force on 1 January 2016, after the Paris Agreement was adopted at UN Conference of Climate Change held in Paris in November 2015. This Agenda includes the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which have the aim to end poverty, to fight inequality, and to help countries to promote prosperity while preserving the environment at the same time (**Figure 2**).

#### **Figure 1.**

*Different representations of sustainability concept: as three intersecting circle, literal "pillars" and a concentric circles approach [2].*

#### **Figure 2.** *The 17 sustainable development goals [3].*

The UN SDGs aim ambitions and necessary targets across a wide range of socioeconomic, environmental, and governance issues in order to reduce the significant gaps between high-income countries and emerging economies in terms of population access to critical services (health, education, public utilities, infrastructure) and to limit the extreme poverty among the most vulnerable populations from Asia, Africa, Latin America, or Eastern Europe.

By the twenty-first century, humankind has fallen into a very complex global human-ecological crisis which endangers not only its economic system, general welfare, peace, and development but its long-term survival and mere existence as well. This crisis requires effective international action and coordinated joint

**5**

*Introductory Chapter: The Need to Change the Paradigm - Sustainability and Development…*

work, but the humankind has reached this time torn to 195 independent national states without having an authorized global organization or effective cooperation system which would represent common interests of humankind efficiently. Natural processes are basically global, since climate change, overpopulation, and contami-

Sustainable society is an aimed global way of cooperation which ensures the survival of humanity, the constant preservation of our living conditions, the protection of the regulation capacity of the biosphere and its high biodiversity (as the guarantee of reliable natural operation), the good operation of the global economic system, the reduction of social tensions (e.g., inequality, famine, extreme poverty, crime, riots, terrorism, aggression, wars), the scientific and technological development, as well as the preservation and development of our natural and cultural heritage in the long term. The establishment of a sustainable society depends on macro-level (law, political will, consensus, public support) and micro-level conditions (affecting the everyday operation of individuals, families, companies, and small communities). When scientists make an effort in order to save, for example, an endangered species [4, 5], they might not consider this abovementioned com-

The sustainability of the human society is endangered by the global human-ecological crisis and a lot of global problems, which are in close relationship with each other. In this phenomenon, the global population explosion (overpopulation of our planet) has a central role, because more people have a larger ecological footprint, a larger consumption, and more intensive pollution, occupy more space from natural ecosystems, and emit more carbon dioxide through their activities of course. At the same time, higher population density directly enhances aggression (crime, riots, revolutions, demonstrations, wars, and terrorism) and the risk of public health problems, epidemics, pandemics, and the change of land use [6]. Climate change results in significant transformation of the biosphere and biological diversity pattern of the Earth [7, 8]. Biodiversity crisis (extinction of key species and the reduction of habitats) and climate change induce each other in a positive feedback loop, since through the biosphere, climate-regulating ecosystem services are weakened. Overpopulation and social crisis are in a similar positive feedback loop, since it is proven that poverty and hopelessness increase the number of offspring. People living in extreme poverty have nothing to distribute and nothing to base the future on; that is why many of them change from "K" to "r" reproduction strategy, trusting that some of their offspring will survive. Social crisis and public health crisis as well as social crisis and aggression (violence, crime, terrorism, riots,

Linear economy ("take-make-consume-dispose") has significant limitations in terms of sustainability through exploitation of natural resources, destroying natural ecosystems and promoting excessive consumption patterns while generating huge amounts of solid waste and wastewater (municipal, industrial, and agricultural sources) which pollute environment through illegal waste dumping sites, landfills,

Economic growth must be provided based on sustainability main pillars such as economic, social, and environmental nexus in a multi-scale context from global standards toward regional and local levels. Future predictions show that population growth and rural–urban migration will emerge in these regions and human pressures on environment in terms of energy and water supply demands, agricultural

nation of oceans, rivers, and atmosphere do not know state borders.

plexity of the whole problem, which would make the work necessary.

*DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.90655*

and civil war) are in a similar feedback loop.

**2. The role of circular economy in achieving SDGs**

incinerators, and lack or poor wastewater treatment plants.

### *Introductory Chapter: The Need to Change the Paradigm - Sustainability and Development… DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.90655*

work, but the humankind has reached this time torn to 195 independent national states without having an authorized global organization or effective cooperation system which would represent common interests of humankind efficiently. Natural processes are basically global, since climate change, overpopulation, and contamination of oceans, rivers, and atmosphere do not know state borders.

Sustainable society is an aimed global way of cooperation which ensures the survival of humanity, the constant preservation of our living conditions, the protection of the regulation capacity of the biosphere and its high biodiversity (as the guarantee of reliable natural operation), the good operation of the global economic system, the reduction of social tensions (e.g., inequality, famine, extreme poverty, crime, riots, terrorism, aggression, wars), the scientific and technological development, as well as the preservation and development of our natural and cultural heritage in the long term. The establishment of a sustainable society depends on macro-level (law, political will, consensus, public support) and micro-level conditions (affecting the everyday operation of individuals, families, companies, and small communities). When scientists make an effort in order to save, for example, an endangered species [4, 5], they might not consider this abovementioned complexity of the whole problem, which would make the work necessary.

The sustainability of the human society is endangered by the global human-ecological crisis and a lot of global problems, which are in close relationship with each other. In this phenomenon, the global population explosion (overpopulation of our planet) has a central role, because more people have a larger ecological footprint, a larger consumption, and more intensive pollution, occupy more space from natural ecosystems, and emit more carbon dioxide through their activities of course.

At the same time, higher population density directly enhances aggression (crime, riots, revolutions, demonstrations, wars, and terrorism) and the risk of public health problems, epidemics, pandemics, and the change of land use [6]. Climate change results in significant transformation of the biosphere and biological diversity pattern of the Earth [7, 8]. Biodiversity crisis (extinction of key species and the reduction of habitats) and climate change induce each other in a positive feedback loop, since through the biosphere, climate-regulating ecosystem services are weakened. Overpopulation and social crisis are in a similar positive feedback loop, since it is proven that poverty and hopelessness increase the number of offspring. People living in extreme poverty have nothing to distribute and nothing to base the future on; that is why many of them change from "K" to "r" reproduction strategy, trusting that some of their offspring will survive. Social crisis and public health crisis as well as social crisis and aggression (violence, crime, terrorism, riots, and civil war) are in a similar feedback loop.
