Affluence drives the global displacement of land use
Norwegian University of Science and Technology · University of Oslo · +1 more institution
Abstract
Increasing affluence is often postulated as a main driver for the human footprint on biologically productive areas, identified among the main causes of biodiversity loss, but causal relationships are obscured by international trade. Here, we trace the use of land and ocean area through international supply chains to final consumption, modeling agricultural, food, and forestry products on a high level of resolution while also including the land requirements of manufactured goods and services. In 2004, high-income countries required more biologically productive land per capita than low-income countries, but this connection could only be identified when land used to produce internationally traded products was…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 41.97
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
5- JWJan Weinzettel
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- EGEdgar G. HertwichCorresponding
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- GPGlen P. Peters
University of Oslo, CICERO Center for International Climate Research
- KSKjartan Steen‐Olsen
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- AGAlessandro Galli
Topics & keywords
- Economics
- Per capita
- Agricultural economics
- Per capita income
- Ecological footprint
- Natural resource economics
- Consumption (sociology)
- Population