Abstract
Ecological Footprint accounting quantifies the supply and demand of Earth’s biocapacity. The National Footprint Accounts (NFA) are the most widely used Ecological Footprint (EF) dataset, and provide results for most countries and the world from 1961 to 2014, based primarily on publicly available UN datasets. Here, we review the evolution of the NFA, describe and quantify the effects of improvements that have been implemented into the accounts since the 2012 edition, and review the latest global trends. Comparing results over six editions of NFAs, we find that time-series trends in world results remain stable, and that the world Ecological Footprint for the latest common year (2008) has increased six percent after four major accounting improvements and more than thirty minor improvements. The latest results from the NFA 2018 Edition for the year 2014 indicate that humanity’s Ecological Footprint is 1.7 Earths, and that global ecological overshoot continues to grow. While improved management practices and increased agricultural yields have assisted in a steady increase of Earth’s biocapacity since 1961, humanity’s Ecological Footprint continues to increase at a faster pace than global biocapacity, particularly in Asia, where the total and per capita Ecological Footprint are increasing faster than all other regions.
Funder
MAVA Fondation Pour La Nature
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation
Reference84 articles.
1. Our Common Future,1987
2. Progress in sustainability science: lessons learnt from current methodologies for sustainability assessment: Part 1
3. New Visions for Addressing Sustainability
4. The Need for an Integrated Assessment Framework to Account for Humanity’s Pressure on the Earth System;Pulselli,2016
5. An Overarching Goal for the UN Sustainable Development Goals;Costanza;Solutions,2014
Cited by
255 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献