EXIOPOL – DEVELOPMENT AND ILLUSTRATIVE ANALYSES OF A DETAILED GLOBAL MR EE SUT/IOT

Arnold Tukker(Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research), Arjan de Koning(University of Applied Sciences Leiden), Richard Wood(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Troy R. Hawkins(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Stephan Lutter(Sustainable Europe Research Institute), José de Acosta(Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy), José Manuel Rueda Cantuche(Instituto de Ciencia de Materiales de Sevilla), Maaike C. Bouwmeester(University of Groningen), Jan Oosterhaven(University of Groningen), Thomas Drosdowski(Gesellschaft fuer Wirtschaftliche Strukturforschung), Jeroen Kuenen(Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research)
Economic Systems Research
March 1, 2013
Cited by 346Open Access
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Abstract

EXIOPOL (A New Environmental Accounting Framework Using Externality Data and Input–Output Tools for Policy Analysis) was a European Union (EU)-funded project creating a detailed, global, multiregional environmentally extended Supply and Use table (MR EE SUT) of 43 countries, 129 sectors, 80 resources, and 40 emissions. We sourced primary SUT and input–output tables from Eurostat and non-EU statistical offices. We harmonized and detailed them using auxiliary national accounts data and co-efficient matrices. Imports were allocated to countries of exports using United Nations Commodity Trade Statistics Database trade shares. Optimization procedures removed imbalances in these detailing and trade linking steps. Environmental extensions were added from various sources. We calculated the EU footprint of final consumption with resulting MR EE SUT. EU policies focus mainly on energy and carbon footprints. We show that the EU land, water, and material footprint abroad is much more relevant, and should be prioritized in the EU’s environmental product and\ntrade policies.


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