Study reveals population size matters more than wealth for environmental efficiency
Researchers developed a new metric showing countries vary wildly in how efficiently they convert natural resources into human well-being. The findings suggest demographic factors—not economic policies alone—are the primary lever for achieving sustainability goals. This reshapes how governments and companies should prioritize climate and development strategies.
Originaltitel: Ecological efficiency: The ability to achieve human well-being while limiting environmental impact
<p>To reach the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, humanity should improve its capacity to achieve well-being and development while reducing its environmental impact. This calls for increased efficiency in the process of transforming natural resources into well-being. We present here a novel indicator called Ecological Efficiency and developed to capture this important aspect of the human-environment relation. We found large differences in efficiency among world countries. We then analyzed the relation between our indicator and several country-level variables encompassing different human dimensions, such as economic, political, and demographic. Results highlighted that demography affects Ecological Efficiency more than other factors.</p>