Abstract

Rising incomes (and associated expenditures) have been shown to be a major driver of environmental problems. Lately, several studies have pointed to a break between the income driver and biodiversity loss on a per-capita level. The increase in land-use efficiency is pointed to as a key factor in this decoupling. However, a lot of the previous work on biodiversity footprints has been cross-sectional and there is limited analysis with a temporal perspective. In this work, we couple a database that links land use to potential biodiversity impacts for ecoregions, with a multiregional environmentally-extended input-output database available in a time series, with high regional detail. We perform a panel regression analysis for three regional quantile groups and six consumption categories that links trends in affluence to trends in biodiversity loss. The findings suggest that high-income regions from 2005 to 2015 have an income elasticity of biodiversity footprint higher than one, while the production-based accounts show that high-income countries have a declining impact on biodiversity in the time period, suggesting a strong outsourcing of biodiversity loss to low-income countries. In the early 2000s a peak in biodiversity footprint for the high-income region is not explained by increasing income, but rather consumption of traded goods associated with land use in countries in South East Asia prone to biodiversity loss. On a product level we find that although food consumption is causing the largest share of biodiversity footprints in all regional groups, manufacturing products, shelter, and clothing and footwear have the strongest income elasticity of footprint in high-income countries, suggesting that these are consumption areas to focus on as affluence grows, particularly in developing regions.

Highlights

  • Biodiversity loss is a major concern for the welfare of our ecosystems

  • In the CB results, biodiversity impacts embodied in imports are accounted for, and show highly differing trends compared to the PB results

  • In this work we investigate the changes in drivers of biodiversity loss by coupling biodiversity loss characterization factors of land use from LC-IMPACT with consumption data from the multiregional input-output database EXIOBASE 3rx

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Biodiversity loss is a major concern for the welfare of our ecosystems. Extinction rates are currently about 1000 times higher than the back­ ground rates (Pimm et al, 2014). Land use negatively affects ecosystems globally, the effect of this land use on ecosystems, as well as the ecosystem responses (and biodiversity impacts) are not uniform across the globe (WWF, 2018). Chaudhary et al (2015) developed land use impact factors estimating the PDF (bird, mammal, amphibian, reptile, and plant) per area occupied by specific land use types. Species-area relationships are commonly used to estimate the effects of land use on species richness These species act as a proxy for the entire “biodiversity”. The advantage of the approach is that it provides a comparable model across the world

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call