美通社

2024-11-21 15:30

Research Team of Shandong University Reveals Global Overconsumption Driving Earth Breach Safe Boundaries

JINAN, China, Nov. 21, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Recently, the Weihai Institute for Interdisciplinary Research team of Shandong University, in collaboration with multiple research teams both domestically and internationally, has made advancements in sustainable consumption. The related achievement, titled "Keeping the global consumption within the planetary boundaries," has been published online in Nature as a research paper. Professors Tian Peipei and Zhong Honglin from Shandong University are the co-first authors of the paper, while Professors Feng Kuishuang and Sun Laixiang from the University of Maryland, Professor Zhang Ning from Shandong University, and Professor Klaus Hubacek from the University of Groningen are the co-corresponding authors. Major contributors to the paper include Professor Liu Yu from Peking University, doctoral student Chen Xiangjie from the University of Maryland, and Shao Xuan, a graduate of Shandong University. Shandong University is the first affiliation listed for the paper.

Over the past century, the sharp rise in global demand for goods and services has triggered unsustainable resource extraction and production expansion, leading to many environmental indicators surpassing the safe operating space of the Earth system (planetary boundaries). However, the distribution of responsibility for exceeding planetary boundaries is uneven among different populations. Income and wealth inequality have resulted in significant disparities in global consumption and environmental footprints. Understanding and quantifying the ecological footprints of consumers at different expenditure levels globally, along with their responsibilities for breaching planetary boundaries, and proposing targeted mitigation measures are crucial issues at the forefront of sustainable development research.

Based on a self-constructed database of global consumption encompassing 201 expenditure levels and 168 countries, the research team depicted the inequality in six major environmental footprints (carbon, land, nitrogen, phosphorus, water, and biodiversity) of global consumption. They quantified the responsibility of ecological footprints at different consumption levels for breaching key global planetary boundary indicators and proposed mitigation measures for high consumers' global environmental pressures.

The study revealed that the per capita environmental footprint of the top 10% of global consumers is 4.2 to 77 times that of the bottom 10%. Between 51% and 91% of planetary boundary breach responsibilities can be attributed to the top 20% of global consumers. If the top 20% of global consumers adopt the lowest impact consumption levels and patterns within their groups, global environmental pressures could be reduced by 25% to 53%. In this scenario, focusing solely on actions in the food and services sectors would be adequate to restore land system changes and biosphere integrity within their respective planetary boundary budgets. The research underscores the urgent need for high consumers to sensibly reduce consumption and enhance consumption efficiency to address global planetary boundary transgressions effectively.

 

source: Shandong University

【你點睇】港府本年度已錄逾2千億元赤字,有議員指或難符基本法力求收支平衡之規定。你認為當局應如何解決財政問題?► 立即投票

人氣文章
財經新聞
評論
專題
專業版
HV2
精裝版
SV2
串流版
IQ 登入
強化版
TQ
強化版
MQ

【etnet 30周年】多重慶祝活動一浪接一浪,好禮連環賞!

【etnet30周年連環賞】睇住賞HIZERO F100 仿生潔地機(價值HK$3,980)

etnet榮獲HKEX Awards 2023 「最佳證券數據供應商」大獎

大國博弈

貨幣攻略

傾力救市

說說心理話

Watche Trends 2024

北上食買玩

Art Month 2024

理財秘笈

秋天養生食療

消委會報告

山今養生智慧

輕鬆護老