The material footprint of nations
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation · The University of Sydney · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Metrics on resource productivity currently used by governments suggest that some developed countries have increased the use of natural resources at a slower rate than economic growth (relative decoupling) or have even managed to use fewer resources over time (absolute decoupling). Using the material footprint (MF), a consumption-based indicator of resource use, we find the contrary: Achievements in decoupling in advanced economies are smaller than reported or even nonexistent. We present a time series analysis of the MF of 186 countries and identify material flows associated with global production and consumption networks in unprecedented specificity. By calculating raw material equivalents of international…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 57.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 75
Authors
7- TWThomas WiedmannCorresponding
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, The University of Sydney, UNSW Sydney, Ecosystem Sciences
- HSHeinz Schandl
Australian National University, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Ecosystem Sciences
- MLManfred Lenzen
The University of Sydney
- DMDaniel Moran
The University of Sydney, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- SSSangwon Suh
University of California, Santa Barbara
Topics & keywords
- Decoupling (probability)
- Natural resource
- Gross domestic product
- Consumption (sociology)
- Footprint
- Productivity
- Production (economics)
- Ecological footprint
- Decent work and economic growth