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      Assessing the decoupling of economic growth from environmental impacts in the European Union: A consumption-based approach

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          Abstract

          Pursuing a responsible and sustainable development, the United Nations urged to decouple economic growth from environmental impacts. Several European Union (EU) policies have been implemented towards such goal. Although multiple authors have evaluated the decoupling of the economic growth from the resource use or environmental concerns, the environmental assessment mostly focused on pressures rather than impacts, and used single indicators assumed to be a proxy of the overall effects on the environment. Furthermore, no studies were found using a process-based life cycle approach to quantify the environmental impacts of consumption. To solve such research gap, this paper assesses the decoupling in the EU focusing on potential environmental impacts, complementing a production-based approach with two options for accounting for the impacts of consumption. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the decoupling of the economic growth (in terms of Gross Domestic Product) from the environmental impacts due to EU-28 consumption, assessed by means of life cycle assessment (LCA). The decoupling is then assessed in impact terms rather than limited to pressures by using the Environmental Footprint (EF2017) indicators, which allows assessing 16 different impacts. The Consumption Footprint indicator quantified the environmental impacts of EU apparent consumption, including the territorial impacts (Domestic Footprint) and the embodied impacts in both imports and exports (Trade Footprint). The inventory of pressures for the trade component is compiled either with a bottom-up approach (process-based LCA of representative traded goods) or a top-down approach (input-output-based LCA). Methodological aspects influencing the decoupling assessment and the resulting outputs are presented and discussed. According to the results, the environmental impacts of EU-28 consumption showed decoupling during the last decades (2005–2014), between relative to absolute decoupling depending on the inventory modeling approach taken. Some countries showed higher decoupling levels than others displaying a heterogeneous map of EU-28 decoupling, which was led by acidification, particulate matter, land use and eutrophication impacts. Notwithstanding current limitations, the assessment of decoupling using consumption-based environmental indicators is very promising for supporting policy-making towards addressing the actual impacts driven by the EU production and consumption system.

          Highlights

          • Comprehensive assessment of the decoupling of environmental impacts of EU-28 consumption from GDP.

          • A life cycle perspective is taken for the environmental impact modeling.

          • Decoupling assessment need further refinements to be used for policy support.

          • Top-down and bottom-up approaches indicated from relative to absolute decoupling.

          • Decoupling of environmental impacts from human development index is also evaluated.

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          Most cited references36

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            USEtox—the UNEP-SETAC toxicity model: recommended characterisation factors for human toxicity and freshwater ecotoxicity in life cycle impact assessment

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Clean Prod
                J Clean Prod
                Journal of Cleaner Production
                Elsevier Science
                0959-6526
                1879-1786
                01 November 2019
                01 November 2019
                : 236
                : 117535
                Affiliations
                [1]European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Via Enrico Fermi 2749, I-21027, Ispra, Italy
                Author notes
                []Corresponding author. serenella.sala@ 123456ec.europa.eu
                Article
                S0959-6526(19)32343-1 117535
                10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.07.010
                6737992
                03afe980-a3c1-4c44-a64f-1640a60952fd
                © 2019 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 7 December 2018
                : 30 June 2019
                : 1 July 2019
                Categories
                Article

                environmental impact assessment,life cycle assessment,environmentally-extended input-output,sustainable development goal 12,decoupling,sustainable development target 8.4

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