Global environmental and social spillover effects of EU's food trade

IF 4.6 Q2 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Global Sustainability Pub Date : 2023-03-13 DOI:10.1017/sus.2023.4
Arunima Malik, Guillaume Lafortune, Salma Dahir, Zachary A. Wendling, C. Kroll, S. Carter, Mengyu Li, M. Lenzen
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Non-technical summary Globalisation has narrowed the gap between producers and consumers. Nations are increasingly relying on commodities produced outside of their borders for satisfying their consumption. This is particularly the case for the European Union (EU). This study assesses spillover effects, i.e. impacts taking place outside of the EU borders, resulting from the EU's demand for food products, in terms of environmental and social indicators. Technical summary Human demand for agri-food products contributes to environmental degradation in the form of land-use impacts and emissions into the atmosphere. Development and implementation of suitable policy instruments to mitigate these impacts requires robust and timely statistics at sectoral, regional and global levels. In this study, we aim to assess the environmental and social impacts embodied in European Union's (EU's) demand for agri-food products. To this end, we select a range of indicators: emissions (carbon dioxide, particulate matter, sulphur dioxide, nitrous oxide), land use, employment and income. We trace these environmental and social impacts across EU's trading partners to identify specific sectors and regions as hotspots of international spillovers embodied in EU's food supply chains and find that these hotspots are wide-ranging in all continents. EU's food demand is responsible for 5% of the EU's total CO2 consumption-based footprint, 9% of the total NOX footprint, 16% of the total PM footprint, 6% of the total SO2 footprint, 46% of the total land-use footprint, 13% of the total employment footprint and 5% of the total income footprint. Our results serve to inform future reforms in the EU for aligning policies and strategies with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the objectives of the Paris Climate Agreement. Social media summary Significant environmental and social spillover effects embodied in the EU's food supply chains.
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欧盟食品贸易的全球环境和社会溢出效应
非技术性摘要全球化缩小了生产者和消费者之间的差距。各国越来越依赖境外生产的商品来满足其消费。欧洲联盟(欧盟)的情况尤其如此。这项研究从环境和社会指标方面评估了溢出效应,即欧盟对食品的需求导致的在欧盟边界以外发生的影响。技术摘要人类对农产品的需求以土地利用影响和排放到大气中的形式助长了环境退化。制定和实施适当的政策工具以减轻这些影响,需要在部门、区域和全球各级进行有力和及时的统计。在这项研究中,我们旨在评估欧盟(EU)对农产品需求所体现的环境和社会影响。为此,我们选择了一系列指标:排放量(二氧化碳、颗粒物、二氧化硫、一氧化二氮)、土地使用、就业和收入。我们追踪了欧盟贸易伙伴的这些环境和社会影响,以确定特定部门和地区是欧盟食品供应链中体现的国际溢出效应的热点,并发现这些热点在各大洲都很广泛。欧盟的粮食需求占欧盟基于二氧化碳消耗的总足迹的5%,占NOX总足迹的9%,占PM总足迹的16%,占SO2总足迹的6%,占土地利用总足迹的46%,占就业总足迹的13%,占收入总足迹的5%。我们的研究结果有助于为欧盟未来的改革提供信息,使政策和战略与可持续发展目标和《巴黎气候协定》的目标保持一致。社交媒体摘要欧盟食品供应链中体现的重大环境和社会溢出效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global Sustainability
Global Sustainability Environmental Science-Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
19
审稿时长
17 weeks
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