Footprint Network Blog - 2008

Protecting the True Fundamentals

12/19/2008 12:26 AM

A Sustainable Investment Firm’s Response to the Financial Crisis

Environmental concerns tend to take a back seat in tough economic times. But at least one asset management firm is taking exactly the opposite tack – stressing that now, more than ever, sound investing means adequately valuing the underlying natural assets upon which all our economic systems depend.

“So far, the economic crisis we are facing has been explained by financial leverage,” said Carsten Henningsen, co-founder of the global sustainability fund Portfolio 21. “However, there is a direct link between the financial crisis and the ecological crisis. To the extent that ecological limits place limits on the growth rates of earnings, stock prices will fall.”

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Categories: Our Partners’ Work


Footprint Endorsed as Complement to GDP

12/15/2008 07:00 PM

The Ecological Footprint as a sustainability indicator adds an important dimension to GDP, and should have equal weight in guiding policy. Such is the conclusion of a committee convened by the European Commission to research policy instruments that could support more balanced decision-making than GDP alone.

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Categories: Footprint for Government


LPR Adds Key Water Index

12/15/2008 06:44 PM

There is no resource more critical to life on the planet than water – yet as a result of human activity, we find it as so many other vital reserves to be in increasingly short supply.  With drought and water pollution deepening concerns, the Living Planet Report 2008 (released recently by Global Footprint Network, WWF and Zoological Society of London) adopted a new index to measure human demand on water: the water footprint, developed by University of Twente, Netherlands, Professor Arjen Hoekstra.

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Categories: Ecological Limits, Our Partners’ Work


Research and Standards Update: Our Latest Data, and Powerful Tools For Using It

12/15/2008 06:24 PM

After completing a thorough, two-year review and update to the methodology for calculating national Footprints, Global Footprint Network has published three resources supporting the 2008 Edition of the National Footprint Accounts. They present comprehensive results, provide a step-by-step guide to the equations and calculations, and offer complete transparency of the source data.

The three documents are downloadable from our Web site. They are:
The Ecological Footprint Atlas 2008,
Calculation Methodology for the National Footprint Accounts, 2008 Edition and
Guidebook to the National Footprint Accounts 2008.

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Web Site Gets New Look

12/15/2008 06:00 PM

Global Footprint Network has completed an extensive Web site redesign, with improved navigation, more interactive features, updated visuals and clearer, more concise language. The site is organized into five key sections. About Us, Footprint Basics (general Footprint explanations, data and the work we do in various sectors), Footprint Science (detailed information on accounts, research and methodology), Partnerships, and Resources (our newsroom, personal calculator and downloadable copies of all of our reports.)

We have also launched a version of the site in German, and will be adding additional languages in the early part of next year.

Click here to explore our new site!

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Report Examines Hong Kong: Small Island, Big Resource Demands

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12/15/2008 05:35 PM

An engine of economic activity in China, Hong Kong is also a major center of resource consumption in the country, according to a study released this month by Global Footprint Network and WWF.

At 4.4 global hectares per person, Hong Kong residents have an Ecological Footprint twice that typical for China as a whole. Hong Kong also has one of the greatest ecological deficits in the world, according to Hong Kong Ecological Footprint Report: Living Beyond Our Means. The report details Hong Kong’s resource use and its role in the overall ecological picture of China – a country that now ties the U.S. as the largest user of the world’s biocapacity.

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Categories: Ecological Limits, Footprint for Government, Human Development


New Data Shows Humanity’s Ecological Debt Compounding

10/29/2008 04:43 AM

At the current rate humanity is using natural resources and producing waste, by the mid-2030s we will require the resources of two planets to meet our demands, according to figures released today by Global Footprint Network. The data comes at a critical time, as the economic crisis felt around the globe has made it painstakingly clear: Debt and overspending can continue for a while but ultimately have dire consequences.

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Categories: Ecological Limits, Footprint for Government, Footprint Standards, Human Development


India’s Demand on Nature Approaching Critical Limits, Report Finds

10/13/2008 08:55 PM

As the world grapples with the escalating effects of the financial crisis, Global Footprint Network reported on another mounting – and unsecured – debt: a growing gap in India between the amount of natural resources the country uses and how much it has.

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Today is Earth Overshoot Day: the day our demand surpasses nature’s budget

09/22/2008 08:34 PM

On September 23rd this year we mark an unfortunate milestone: As of today, humanity will have consumed all the new resources the planet will produce this year, according to Global Footprint Network calculations. For the rest of 2008, we will be in the ecological equivalent of deficit depending, drawing down our resource stocks –  in essence, borrowing from the future.

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Categories: Ecological Limits


New Report Examines China’s Fast-growing Footprint

07/16/2008 05:35 PM

China’s Ecological Footprint has quadrupled in the last four decades, with the country now demanding more from the planet than any nation except the United States, according to a report released last month by Global Footprint Network, WWF China, and CCICED (China Council for International Cooperation on Environment and Development), a Chinese government advisory group.

In the last 50 years, China has soared from being one of the more moderate consumers of the planet’s resources to one of the largest, according to the Report on Ecological Footprint in China, presented on June 10, 2008 in Beijing. The report’s findings underscore the crucial role China will play in addressing the major resource challenges humanity faces in the 21st century.

 

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Categories: Ecological Limits, Footprint for Government, Human Development


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