Quantifying Europe's biodiversity footprints and the role of urbanization and income

Abstract: Non-technical abstract
Biodiversity footprinting links consumers to the biodiversity pressure their consumption induces, thereby informing choices and enabling participation in remediation measures. In order for countries, cities and households to reduce their impacts it is useful to know more precisely what the various drivers of their footprints are. Here we ask: do urban or rural areas in Europe exert higher biodiversity footprints? And how strongly coupled are income and biodiversity losses? Studying urban versus rural households at the country level in Europe, we found both have generally similar footprints, but that higher income households clearly drive higher footprints
Abstract: Technical abstract
We examined the role of selected socio-economic variables regarding biodiversity-related
impacts associated with European household consumption in 2005 and 2010, asking: does
urbanization alone drive higher biodiversity footprints, or what are the relative contributions
of income and urbanity? We applied a multi-regional input-output (MRIO) model, supple-
mented with data from consumer expenditure surveys and extended by life cycle impact
assessment methodologies to account for biodiversity losses. We find that urbanization and
higher income are important sources of higher absolute biodiversity footprints. On a per
capita basis, results are mixed, though a slight trend of higher impacts from city residents
in most countries, as well as a general positive correlation with income, can be observed.
Also, while wealthy European countries are accountable for the largest species losses overall,
it is the ones with a high gross domestic product per capita and those bordering the
Mediterranean Sea that have the highest per capita biodiversity footprints. Additionally,
most European countries and Europe as a whole are net importers of biodiversity losses,
with land use generally being the dominating impact category

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Extent
Online-Ressource
Language
Englisch
Notes
Global sustainability. - 3 (2020) , e1, ISSN: 2059-4798

Classification
Natürliche Ressourcen, Energie und Umwelt

Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Freiburg
(who)
Universität
(when)
2024
Creator
Koslowski, Maximilian
Moran, Daniel D.
Tisserant, Alexandre
Verones, Francesca
Wood, Richard

DOI
10.1017/sus.2019.23
URN
urn:nbn:de:bsz:25-freidok-2595034
Rights
Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
15.08.2025, 7:30 AM CEST

Data provider

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Associated

  • Koslowski, Maximilian
  • Moran, Daniel D.
  • Tisserant, Alexandre
  • Verones, Francesca
  • Wood, Richard
  • Universität

Time of origin

  • 2024

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