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A review of the Ecological Footprint indicator: Perceptions and methods

This article presents a comprehensive review of perceptions and methods around the Ecological Footprint (EF), based on a survey of more than 50 international EF stakeholders and a review of more than 150 original papers on EF methods and applications over the last decade.

John Barrett, Tommy Wiedmann / Published on 6 August 2010

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Citation

Wiedmann, T. and Barrett, J. (2010). A review of the Ecological Footprint indicator: Perceptions and methods. Sustainability, 2(6). 1645–93. https://doi.org/10.3390/su2061645

The key points identified in the survey are that the EF (a) is seen as a strong communication tool, (b) has a limited role within a policy context, (c) is limited in scope, (d) should be closer aligned to the UN System of Environmental and Economic Accounting and (e) is most useful as part of a basket of indicators.

Key issues from the review of methods are: (a) none of the major methods identified can address all relevant issues and questions at once, (b) basing bioproductivity calculations on Net Primary Production (NPP) is a promising approach, (c) advances in linking bioproductivity with ecosystem services and biodiversity have been made by the Dynamic EF concept and the HANPP indicator, (d) environmentally extended input-output analysis (IOA) provides a number of advantages for improving EF calculations and (e) further variations such as the emergy-based concept or the inclusion of further pollutants are not regarded as providing a fundamental shift to the usefulness of EF for policy making.

The article also discusses the implications of the findings for the use of the EF as a headline indicator for sustainability decision-making.

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Topics and subtopics
Economy : Sustainable lifestyles
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