Title: Footprint
1Footprint
Reducing Risks by Setting Measurable Targets
Dr. Mathis Wackernagel
www.FootprintNetwork.org
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3House
Are we getting to big for our house?
4Global equity
Who is getting what?
5If everyone lived like us we would need
6One hectare
How big is a hectare?
7People vs. nature
What about land for other species?
8Metabolism like a cow
9Bioproductive Segments
67 Low-Productivity Ocean
Bioproductive segments
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4 Biologically Productive Ocean
11 Deserts, Ice Caps and Barren Land
18 Biologically Productive Land
10Personal planetoid
Global average availability of bioproductive Land
Sea 1.9 global hectares/person
11Footprint components
Fossil Fuel Built-up Waste Food
Fibres
absorption
12Global Footprint
Global Footprint Accounts (in global
hectares/person, 1999 data)
Ecological Demand (Ecological Footprint) Ecologica
l Supply (Biocapacity) Footprint Areas
for Biocapacity Areas Growing
Crops 0.53 Crop land 0.53 Grazing
Animals 0.12 Grazing land 0.27 Settlements
infrastructure 0.10 Built-up area 0.10 Producing
timber fuelwood 0.33 Forest 0.86 Absorbing
excess CO2 1.07 Harvesting Fish 0.14 Fishing
Grounds 0.14 Total Global Demand 2.29 Total
Global Supply 1.90
Demand Exceeds Supply By 20 gt
13Footprint data for 8 countries
Footprint data for 8 countries
14Footprint time series
Footprint time series
15Target
16Median Scenario (UN/IPCC/FAO)
17EF Used for Scenario Analysis
18Ecological Debt in 4 Scenarios
19Shrink Share by Region
20Implications for continents?
21What Does this Open up?
- Accounting leads to accountability
- Targets informed by risks associated with
different scenarios - 2 simple choices integrating climate change and
biocapacity - Performance measure
22Cat on Roman foot
Mathis_at_FootprintNetwork.org
www.FootprintNetwork.org
23How big are YOUR feet??An ecological footprint
is the amount of land used to support consumption
and waste production.
University of Toronto at Mississauga
TRANSPORTATION footprint takes up 1347.64
hectares
A one lane highway stretching from TORONTO TO
ORLANDO, FLORIDA AND BACK
- What can YOU do to reduce YOUR footprint?
- Walk or bike when you can try out BIKESHARE!
At the student center - Take public transit, or carpool to school
- Buy a fuel efficient vehicle
Visit http//geog.utm.utoronto.ca/ecofootprint/
for more details
24How big are YOUR feet??An ecological footprint
is the amount of land used to support consumption
and waste production.
- UTMs WASTE AND MATERIALS footprint takes up
352.39 hectares -
- A stack of 8.5 x 11 sheets of paper 4.7
KILOMETERS high - What can YOU do to reduce YOUR footprint?
- Print double sided at the library
- Print two or four pages to a sheet
- Use reusable containers for food and drinks
Visit http//geog.utm.utoronto.ca/ecofootprint/
for more details
25How big are YOUR feet??An ecological footprint
is the amount of land used to support consumption
and waste production.
UTMs FOOD use has a footprint of 798.7 hectares
2198 tonnes of wheat, enough to make 3 MILLION
LOAVES OF BREAD
- What can YOU do to reduce YOUR footprint?
- Dont waste food
- Buy locally grown food
- Eat less meat meat uses more resources than
other foods -
Visit http//geog.utm.utoronto.ca/ecofootprint/
for more details
26How big are YOUR feet??An ecological footprint
is the amount of land used to support consumption
and waste production.
UTMs ENERGY footprint is 6067.5 hectares
- A land area BIGGER THAN MANHATTAN
- What can YOU do to reduce your footprint?
- Turn off your computer or TV when youre not
using it - Turn off all lights when youre not in the room
- Put on a sweater instead of turning up the heat
Visit http//geog.utm.utoronto.ca/ecofootprint/
for more details
27How big are YOUR feet??An ecological footprint
is the amount of land used to support consumption
and waste production.
UTMs WATER use footprint is 19.8 hectares
- 158 OLYMPIC-SIZED SWIMMING POOLS
- What can YOU do to reduce YOUR footprint?
- Dont let the water run when washing your hands
- Take short showers
- Only do laundry or run the dishwasher when you
have a full load
Visit http//geog.utm.utoronto.ca/ecofootprint/
for more details
28http//www.endowmentinstitute.org/
29http//ecofoot.org/
- For example, each resident of a city is
responsible for a portion of the citys
infrastructure, such as roads, schools, and
government offices, regardless of whether the
resident uses those services. - path to reducing your Footprint is to advocate
for more sustainable decisions at all levels of
government - How accurate is the Footprint Quiz?
- We consistently use conservative estimates in
Footprint calculations. As a result they tend to
underestimate human demand on nature. Also, as
discussed under "pollution and toxics," various
aspects for which data is scarce are not yet
included in footprints, making them appear
smaller than they really are. - www.kidsfootprint.org.
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33What Size Shoe Do You Wear?Genuine Progress
Index for Atlantic CanadaIndice de progrès
véritable - AtlantiqueOctober, 2002
34Ecological Footprint
- The amount of productive land and water a given
population requires to produce all the resources
they consume and take in all the waste they make
using prevailing technology (Onisto et al. 1998) - From a school perspective - EF The space
required to support all the inputs and outputs
of the school body.
35Sustainability Model
- We can calculate how much biological productive
area we have. - We can calculate how much we are using.
- Living sustainable means that we are not living
beyond what is available.
36Measurements of Sustainable Development
- Generally look at the supply side of the
equation. Such measurements put the whole onus
for sustainable development on the producer. - The ecological footprint looks at the demand
side of the equation and places responsibility
for sustainable development not only on the
producer but on the consumer.
37Components of the Ecological Footprint(six human
activities that require space)
- Growing Crops
- Grazing Animals
- Harvesting Timber
- Catching Fish
- Accommodating Infrastructure (housing,
transportation systems, industry, built up land) - Absorbing Carbon Dioxide Emissions (burning
fossil fuels)
38- A regions (person, school) ecological footprint
is the total area required to produce the food
and fibers that a region consumes, sustain its
energy consumption, and give space for its
infrastructure. - People consume resources from all over the world,
so their footprint can be thought of as the sum
of these areas, wherever they are on the planet.
39The Bottom Line
- 2.3 hectares of of biologically productive land
and sea per person - set aside 12 as recommended by the Bruntland
Commission to protect biodiversity - 2.0 hectares per person
40Global Context
- United States 9.7 ha/capita
- Canada 8.4 ha/capita
- - NS - 8.1 ha/capita
- - AB - 7.9 ha/capita
- France 5.3 ha/capita
- Japan 4.8 ha/capita
- Zimbabwe 1.3 ha/capita
- Bangladesh 0.5 ha/capita
- Global Average 2.3 hectares/capita
41Ecological Footprint By Region (1996)
- The size of each box is proportional to the
aggregate footprint of each region. - The height of each box is propo rtional to the
region's average ecological footprint per person
and - The width of the box is proportional to the
population of the region. - (The OECD and non-OECD columns refer only to
average ecological footprint per person).
42Ecological FootprintNova Scotia and Canada,
1961-1999
43EF Applications
- Region (country, province, town, university
campus) - Personal Ecological Footprint (redefining
progress, mountain equipment co-op) - Competing technologies (fuel cells)
- Growing Techniques (field tomato vs. hydroponic
tomato) - Policy decisions (rail vs. road, urban planning
decisions) - Purchase decisions (cradle to grave)
- Other (big mac, aquaculture, newspaper)
44Ecological Footprint in Use
- Teach concepts of sustainability, environmental
issues, responsibility. - Benchmark of School Sustainability (define
current state, assess progress -- footprint
increase? Footprint decrease?) - Means of Comparison (between schools, between
grades, students vs. teachers) - Promote holistic decision making
45Messages Behind the EF
- Not all Footprints are equal
- Recap
- Average ecological space available per global
citizen 2.0 ha/cap - Average N.S ecological footprint 8.1 ha/cap
46- Countries such as the United States, Australia,
Canada, Singapore, New Zealand, Hong Kong, and
Sweden occupy footprints over 200 greater than
the 2.0 ha available per global citizen. This is
dramatically contrasted to Bangladesh, Ethiopia,
Pakistan, India, and Nigeria with footprints of 1
ha or less per capita.
47- The richest fifth
- account for 86 of total private consumption
expenditures, the poorest fifth 1.3. - consume 45 of all meat and fish, the poorest
fifth 5 - consume 58 of total energy, the poorest fifth
less than 4 - consume 84 of all paper, the poorest fifth 1.1
- own 87 of the worlds vehicle fleet, the poorest
fifth less than 1 (UNDP, 1998).
48- In a world of limited resources and limited
waste assimilation capacity, excess consumption
by the rich literally requires that others live
in poverty if we are not to exceed the Earths
physical carrying capacity. - Ecological footprint analysis cuts through
the illusion that we can improve the living
standards of the poor without curbing the excess
consumption of the rich.
49Websites GPI Atlantic www.gpiatlantic.org
(Nova Scotia Ecological Footprint) Pembina
Institute www.pembina.org (Alberta Ecological
Footprint) Redefining Progress -
www.rprogress.org (Foundation site of ecological
footprint work) WWF International -
www.panda.org (Living Planet Report)
Litterature Lewan, Lillemor., Wackernagel,
Mathis., and Carina Borgstrom Hansson, 1999.
Evaluating The Use of Natural Capital With
Ecological Footprint Applications In Sweden and
Subregions. Ph.D. work. Wackernagel, Mathis,
and William E. Rees, 1996. Our Ecological
Footprint Reducing Human Impact on the Earth.
New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, BC. For
details on the book, see www.newsociety.com/oef.ht
ml. Wackernagel, Mathis, Larry Onisto,
Alejandro Callejas Linares, Ina Susana López
Falfán, Jesus Méndez García, Ana Isabel Suárez
Guerrero, Ma. Guadalupe Suárez Guerrero, 1997.
Ecological Footprints of Nations How Much
Nature Do They Use? How Much Nature Do They Have?
Commissioned by the Earth Council for the Rio5
Forum. International Council for Local
Environmental Initiatives, Toronto. Wackernagel,
Mathis, 1998). "The Ecological Footprint of
Santiago de Chile," Local Environment, Vol 3,,
No. 2. Wackernagel, Mathis., Onisto, Larry.,
Patricia Bello, Callejas Linares, A.,Ina, López
Falfán, I.S., Méndez García, J., Suárez Guerrero,
A.I., and Suárez Guerrero, M.G., 1999. "National
natural capital accounting with the ecological
footprint concept," Ecological Economics, Vol.
29, pp. 375-390.