Current active course description (last updated 2025/26)
Sustainability, Climate and Ethics
BIO1008
Current active course description (last updated 2025/26)

Sustainability, Climate and Ethics

BIO1008
The goal of the course is to enhance the understanding of how knowledge about sustainability, climate, environment, and ethics can be applied in different fields of study and profession and to shed light on how some of today's environmental challenges can be addressed.

The course will introduce the concept of sustainability, and you will familiarise yourself with the UN's 17 Sustainable Development Goals. You will learn about how human-induced changes affect biodiversity, food production, ecosystem resilience, and society, both locally and globally. You will also learn how to recognize "green-washing" strategies and how to approach sustainability claims critically and open-mindedly.

The course will focus on what potential consequences the ongoing climate change, land use change and pollution have on food production on land and in the sea, on food security worldwide, on marine and terrestrial ecosystems and food webs, and on the native fauna and flora of Norway. You will also be introduced to ethical dilemmas in biology and sustainability.

We will discuss current events and classical dilemmas through assignments and discussions with fellow students. You will learn how to recognize misleading sustainability claims through critical thinking and how sustainability can be applied in your field of study or future profession.

The subject is reserved for students of the following study programmes:

  • Animal Welfare, One-year Programme
  • Livestock Science, Bachelor's Programme
  • Nature Management, One-year Programme and Bachelor's Programme
  • Forestry, One-year Programme and Bachelor's Programme
  • Biology, One-year Programme and Bachelor's Programme
  • Aquaculture Management, Bachelor's Programme
  • Veterinary Nursing, Bachelor's Programme

Other students can get admitted if there are places available. Contact student advisor.

Students must meet current admission requirements for the associated study program.

After completing the course, the student must have obtained:

Knowledge:

  • can define the concept of sustainability and describe the UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • can account for how anthropogenic-caused climate change affects nature and society locally, regionally, and globally
  • can identify and describe ethical dilemmas in bioscience, particularly in relation to sustainability and climate change
  • can describe and compare various environmental analyses (such as Life Cycle Assessment (LCA))

Skills:

  • can apply and communicate knowledge of sustainability, ethical dilemmas, and challenges due to climate change in the student’s field of study
  • can apply critical thinking to current events and hot topics

General competences:

  • have insight into the UN Sustainable Development Goals and how these goals have relevance in their future professions
  • can approach sustainability claims critically and is able to recognize misleading strategies
  • can debate ethical dilemmas and future consequences of human-induced changes on the planet objectively and based on scientific facts
In addition to the semester fee and curriculum literature, it is assumed that the student has a laptop computer at his/her disposal.
Compulsory
Lectures and exercises.
Evaluation using mid-term and final surveys. Students are also encouraged to participate in the central quality surveys.

Compound assessment: All parts described below must be passed to get final grade in the subject.

  • Seminars - 4 compulsory seminars, comprises 0/100 of the grade, Approved / Not approved.
  • Written assignment - individual, comprises 100/100 of the grade, letter grade.
Generating an answer using ChatGPT or similar artificial intelligence and submitting it wholly or partially as one's own answer is considered cheating.

Overlap refers to a similarity between courses with the same content. Therefore, you will receive the following reduction in credits if you have taken the courses listed below:

HUS1003 - Climate and Sustainability - 5 credits

FIL1001 - Ex. Phil. Ethics, Sustainability and Social Responsibility - 2.5 credits