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‘Beyond GDP’ accounting and climate change Professor Jacqueline McGlade Executive Director, European Environment Agency Copenhagen side event Climate change,

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Presentation on theme: "‘Beyond GDP’ accounting and climate change Professor Jacqueline McGlade Executive Director, European Environment Agency Copenhagen side event Climate change,"— Presentation transcript:

1 ‘Beyond GDP’ accounting and climate change Professor Jacqueline McGlade Executive Director, European Environment Agency Copenhagen side event Climate change, GDP and measurements of prosperity

2 Stocks of assets that determine our production of goods and services Source: Forum for the Future Manufactured capital Financial capital Social capital Human capital Natural capital

3 ‘Our economic compass is faulty’ Pavan Sukhdev Study Leader, The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity

4 Integration of changes in ecosystem capital stocks into national accounts = “True National Income” Gross National Income – Consumption of fixed capital Net National Income =

5 Integration of changes in ecosystem capital stocks into national accounts Depletion of non-renewable (sub-soil) assets = “True National Income” Gross National Income – Consumption of fixed capital –

6 Integration of changes in ecosystem capital stocks into national accounts – Depletion of non-renewable (sub-soil) assets = “True National Income” Gross National Income – Consumption of fixed capital – Change in ecosystem capital

7 Integration of changes in ecosystem capital stocks into national accounts – Depletion of non-renewable (sub-soil) assets = “True National Income” Gross National Income – Consumption of fixed capital – Change in ecosystem capital = ‘True National Income’

8 Total Ecosystem Potential for terrestrial ecosystems, computed on the basis of indexes

9 Landscape Ecosystem Potential and change degradation improvement

10 Corine land cover map (CLC is derived from satellite images) Green Landscape Index (derived from CLC) Nature Value (Naturilis, derived from Natura2000 designated areas) Fragmentation (Effective Mesh Size (MEFF) derived from TeleAtlas Roads and CLC) Landscape Ecological Potential (LEP) 2000, by 1km² grid cell LEP 2000 by NUTS 2/3 Land Ecosystem Account: Landscape Ecological Potential  and

11 Trends in NPP and cumulated annual change 2000-2008 (2008-2007)+(2007-2006)+(2006-2005) …(2001-2000)

12 Services Sectors Spatial Units Basic physical balances Spatial Units Health counts Water resource, supply & use Land Use (surfaces & commoditie s) Carbon/ biomass resource, supply & use Water functions & ecosystem services Land functions & ecosystem services Carbon/ biomass functions & ecosystem services Water bodies resource & abstraction Land cover stocks & change Carbon/ biomass resource and extraction/ harvesting Water quantity & quality Landscape patterns Carbon/ Biomass, productivity Human morbidity/ environment & food security Dependency from regulating ecosystem services Biodiversity related ecosystem services Distribution of critical areas for health Natural and semi-natural habitats & species distribution Water, C, energy, NPK, subsidies Ecosystem health factors Biodiversity factors Net external balances by socio- ecosystems LCA: impacts of chemical,, on human and wildlife health Fishing, hunting, harvesting of wild species (non cultivated) Sectors Expenditure accounts Water protection & management Land protection & management Carbon/ biomass Protection & management Health protection Biodiversity protection Agriculture & fishery subsidies Virtual land, water, and carbon use (domestic and in imports) Spatial Units Indexes Water Index Landscape Index Bio-carbon Index Health Index Biodiversity Index Dependency Index Priorities for fast-track implementation of ecosystem accounts

13 Ecosystem accounts highlight what is really happening to our stocks of bio-carbon

14 But perhaps even more important, they inform us of ecosystem health – crucial for resilience and adaptation to climate change impacts

15 Only by communicating in the same language as national accounts can environmental and social perspectives earn the same status

16 Integration of changes in ecosystem capital stocks into national accounts – Depletion of non-renewable (sub-soil) assets = “True National Income” Gross National Income – Consumption of fixed capital – Change in ecosystem capital = ‘True National Income’

17 Thanks very much for your attention Professor Jacqueline McGlade Executive Director, European Environment Agency Copenhagen side event Climate change, GDP and measurements of prosperity


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