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© European Communities, 2011 EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS CARRIED OUT WITH THE A DVANCED S USTAINABILITY A NALYSIS (ASA) APPROACH European Union with novel methodological.

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Presentation on theme: "© European Communities, 2011 EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS CARRIED OUT WITH THE A DVANCED S USTAINABILITY A NALYSIS (ASA) APPROACH European Union with novel methodological."— Presentation transcript:

1 © European Communities, 2011 EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS CARRIED OUT WITH THE A DVANCED S USTAINABILITY A NALYSIS (ASA) APPROACH European Union with novel methodological tools of the sustainability analysis. The article provides a considerable contribution to the European sustainability policy evaluation, trend analysis and sustainability foresight analysis. The study is based Advanced Sustainability Analysis (ASA) framework and statistical decomposition analyses. The ASA methodology tool package was developed in Terra2000, DECOIN and SMILE projects of European framework programmes. In order to explore synergies and trade-offs between different trends we provide definitions for the terms. We can say that there is synergy between two factors when their combined effect is greater (or smaller) than the sum of their separate effects. Trade-off can be defined as a balance achieved between two features where the selection of one feature results in the loss of another feature. In addition to synergy and trade-off also delinking can describe the situation between the variables and in this case the increase or decrease of one variable does not have an effect on the other variable.. The trends investigated can represent different dimensions of sustainable development. An example of the synergy trend is given in the Fig. 1 for the CO 2 emissions and GDP in EU-15. In the 1060’ and 1970’s there was considerable synergy between CO 2 emissions and GDP – when GDP increased also CO 2 emissions increased. By the 2000’s the synergy between these variables has almost reached delinking. Comparative analysis for the UK and Greece is provided in Fig. 2, which indicates very different development in these two countries. Contact Jyrki Luukkanen University of Turku, Finland Futures Research Centre Tel. +358 50 3370710 Fax +358 3 2238363 E-mail: jyrki.luukkanen@utu.fi NOTES 1.Poster Title Replace the mock-up text of the poster title (”Joint Research Centre”) with the text of your own title. Keep the original font colour (100c 80m 0y 0k). Keep the flush-right justification. Set it in Helvetica Rounded Bold Condensed, if you own the typeface. Otherwise, in Arial, Helvetica or Verdana – plain or bold. Keep the original font body size (102 pt or, preferably,120 pt) and the title on a single line whenever possible. Reduce the body size and/or set the title on more than one line only if unavoidable. 2.Poster Subtitle Replace the mock-up text of the poster subtitle (”Place Your Poster Subtitle Here”) with the text of your own subtitle. Keep the original font colour (black). Keep the flush-right justification. Set it in MetaPlusBook-Roman, if you own the typeface. Otherwise, in Arial, Helvetica or Verdana. Keep the original font body size (72 pt) and the subtitle on a single line whenever possible. Reduce the body size and/or set the subtitle on more than one line only if unavoidable. If your poster does not have a main subtitle, delete the subtitle mock-up text or its text-box altogether. 3.Poster Main Text and Illustrations Replace the mock-up text of the poster with your own text. Keep it within the boundaries of the two main-text boxes provided. Keep the original font colour (black). Should you need a second colour within your text, use the same one of the poster title (100c 80m 0y 0k). Keep the flush-left justification. Set the main text in MetaPlusBook-Roman and the section headings in MetaPlusBold-Roman, if you own the typefaces. Otherwise, the main text in Arial, Helvetica or Verdana, and the section headings in their respective bold weights. Adjust the font body size and leading to the needs of your own text, depending on its overall length, for optimal display and legibility. Should you need a second level of text, set it in a smaller body size than that of your main text (and, in the case of photo captions, in italics, too). Place your illustrations (pictures, graphs, etc.) within the boundaries of the two main-text boxes. Adjust your text-flow as needed. 4.Contact Box Replace the mock-up contents of the contact box with your own data. Keep the contact box in place if possible. Place it elsewhere only if unavoidable for layout reasons, but in that case try, at least, to align it with some main element of the poster. 5.Additional Logos Should you need to display additional logos (e.g., of partner organizations or universities), reduce or enlarge them to a height within those of the JRC logo and the Directorate or Institute logo. Place any additional logos on the bottom of the poster, evenly spaced between the JRC and (if there is one) the Directorate or Institute logo, and vertically centred with them. 2011 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Synergy trends between GDP and income inequality are studied in Fig. 3. The development seems to be diversified. In a Nordic welfare country the social policy to take care of poorer people can be seen as delinking between these variables, while in Romania the increasing GDP is linked to increasing inequality. In the case of Italy the trade-off indicate that decrease in GDP has resulted increase in inequality. The small positive synergy in the UK and the Netherlands indicates that increase in GDP increases slightly inequality. In this paper, the potential synergies between unsustainable trends in the European Union have been analysed by using the Sustainable Development Indicator (SDI) data. The results of the examples are challenging many basic policy formulations and frameworks of the European Union. The results can help the European Union to plan better and evidence based sustainability strategy in the future. The novel synergies and trade-offs analyses of key sustainability issues is a methodological innovation in the field futures oriented technology and societal analysis. SYNERGIES AND TRADE-OFFS BETWEEN UNSUSTAINABLE TRENDS IDENTIFIED IN THE EUROPEAN UNION JYRKI LUUKKANEN, JARMO VEHMAS, FRANCESCA ALLIEVI, JUHA PANULA-ONTTO & JARI KAIVO- OJA FINLAND FUTURES RESEARCH CENTRE, UNIVERSITY OF TURKU Fig. 1. Development of the synergy trend between CO 2 per capita and GDP per capita in EU-15. Synergy factor 1 indicates total synergy, while 0 represents delinking and -1 complete trade-off. Fig. 2. Development of the synergy trends between CO 2 per capita and GDP per capita in the UK and Greece. Fig. 3. Synergy trends between GDP per capita and Inequality in income distribution in selected EU countries.


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