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Article from The Economist (November 25, 2010).
Global action is not going to stop climate
change. The world needs to look harder at how to live with it...

Category: Articles & Books | Views: 795 | Date: 26.11.2010


Xing X. 2009. Study on the ban on free
plastic bags in China. Journal of
Sustainable Development 2, 156–158


Category: Articles & Books | Views: 718 | Date: 27.10.2010


Gernot Stoeglehner, Michael Narodoslawsky. 2008. Implementing
ecological footprinting in decision-making processes. Land Use Policy
25, 421-431


Category: Articles & Books | Views: 671 | Date: 22.10.2010


Edgar G. Hertwich, Glen P. Peters. 2009. Carbon Footprint of Nations:
Global, Trade-Linked Analysis.
Environmental Science & Technology 43, 6414–6420


Processes causing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions benefit humans by providing consumer goods and services. This benefit, and hence the responsibility for emissions, varies by purpose or consumption category and is unevenly distributed across and within countries. We quantify greenhouse gas emissions associated with the final consumption of goods and services for 73 nations and 14 aggregate world regions. We analyze the contribution of 8 categories: construction, shelter, food, clothing, mobility, manufactured products, services, and trade. National average per capita footprints vary from 1 tCO2e/y in African countries to 30t/y in Luxembourg and the United States. The expenditure elasticity is 0.57. The cross national expenditure elasticity for just CO2, 0.81, corresponds remarkably well to the cross-sectional elasticities found within nations, suggesting global relationship between expenditure and emissions that holds across several orders of magnitude difference. On the global level, 72% of greenhouse gas emissions are related to household consumption, 10% to government consumption, and 18% to investments. Food accounts for 20% of GHG emissions, operation and maintenance of residences is 19%, and mobility is 17%. Food and services are more important in developing countries, while mobility and manufactured goods rise fast with income and dominate in rich countries. The importance of public services and manufactured goods has not yet been sufficiently appreciated in policy. Policy priorities hence depend on development status and country level characteristics.

Category: Articles & Books | Views: 751 | Date: 22.10.2010


Reinhard Steurer, Gerald Berger, Markus Hametner. 2010. The
vertical integration of Lisbon and sustainable development
strategies across the EU: How different governance architectures shape
the European coherence of policy documents. Natural Resources Forum 34, 71–84


Category: Articles & Books | Views: 574 | Date: 22.10.2010



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