Program Requirements
Understanding Earth's geologic processes provides us with the knowledge to mitigate many of our society's environmental impacts due to resource extraction and waste disposal. This knowledge is not always enough, as economics often plays a controlling role in how we use and abuse our environment.
This domain educates students in the fundamentals of economics and Earth sciences. The fundamentals of economics are provided, as is their application to the effects of economic choices on Earth's environment. Examples of these applications include the economic effects of public policy toward resource industries and methods of waste disposal, and the potential effects of global warming on the global economy. Students also learn of minerals, rocks, soils, and waters that define much of Earth's environment and how these materials interact with each other and with the atmosphere. Courses in specific subdisciplines of Earth sciences combined with courses presenting a global vision of how the Earth and its environment operate provide the student with the necessary knowledge of geologic processes. Examples of this knowledge include the effects of mineral and energy extraction on the environment and how industrial waste interacts with solids and liquids in the environment. The Earth science and economics studies merge in the final year when the students apply what they have learned in the domain to current environmental issues.
Program Requirements
Note: Students are required to take a maximum of 34 credits at the 200 level and a minimum of 12 credits at the 400 level or higher in this program. This includes core and required courses, but does not include the program prerequisites or co-requisites listed above.
Location Note: When planning your schedule and registering for courses, you should verify where each course is offered because courses for this program are taught at both McGill's Downtown campus and at the Macdonald campus in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue.
Core: Required Courses (18 credits)
Location Note: Core required courses for this program are taught at both McGill's Downtown campus and at the Macdonald campus in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue. You should register in Section 001 of an ENVR course that you plan to take on the Downtown campus, and in Section 051 of an ENVR course that you plan to take on the Macdonald campus.
ENVR 200 The Global Environment (3 credits)
ENVR 201 Society, Environment and Sustainability (3 credits)
ENVR 202 The Evolving Earth (3 credits)
ENVR 203 Knowledge, Ethics and Environment (3 credits)
ENVR 301 Environmental Research Design (3 credits)
ENVR 400 Environmental Thought (3 credits)
Core: Complementary Course – Senior Research Project (3 credits)
Only 3 credits will be applied to the program: extra credits will count as electives.
AEBI 427 Barbados Interdisciplinary Project (6 credits)
AGRI 519 Sustainable Development Plans (6 credits)
ENVR 401 Environmental Research (3 credits)
ENVR 451 Research in Panama (6 credits)
Expected January 2025
Start date
Expected August 2024
Macdonald Campus
21111 Lakeshore Road,
SAINTE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE,
Quebec (QC),
H9X 3V9, Canada
Expected January 2025
Start date
Expected August 2024
McGill University
Downtown Campus,
845 Sherbrooke Street West,
MONTREAL,
Quebec (QC),
H3A 0G4, Canada
Students must have Canadian high school or its equivalent.
English Language Scores:
Application Deadline: January 15.
*There may be different IELTS requirements depending on your chosen course.