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F. Lenglart, C. Lesieur, J-L Pasquier December 2nd, 2010 CO2 emissions from economic circuit in France: up to carbon footprint of final consumption by groups of households
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Page 2 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 Assessing environmental sustainability: building « carbon footprint » accounts › Dual labelling at macro level for every aggregate of SUT –Which productive activities emit CO 2 in France and in what proportion? –What quantities of CO 2 emitted abroad via our imports? –What quantities of CO 2 emissions for final consumption, investment, exports? –Is carbon footprint of final consumption evenly distributed among the French population? wealthy/poor, young/old…
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Page 3 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 CO 2 emissions, GDP and population in the world GDP ppp CO 2 population France Population : 1% GDP : 3 % CO 2 : 1.3 %, that is 410Mt Data for 2005 North America Europe + Russia Asia Other
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Page 4 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 From CO 2 emissions by industry in France… 1/3 2/3 4% 64% 32% 410 Mt CO 2
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Page 5 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 … to CO 2 emissions in France embodied in final demand by product 410 Mt CO 2 Back from symetric SUT to standard SUT : CO2 footprint of trade and transport margins are reassigned to goods purchased
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Page 6 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 Taking into account imported CO 2 emissions 550 Mt CO 2 generated by final domestic demand of which 40% emitted abroad 60% emitted in France of which 75% HH consumption 10% GG consumption 15% investment 410 Mt CO 2 emitted in France
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Page 7 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 Zoom on consumption HH final consumption expenditures CO 2 emissions food other hotels restaurants leisure culture housing
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Page 8 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 › HH account : An indispensable account, built up directly at a macro level by way of « mirroring », thanks to the central NA framework… …that says however nothing about the heterogeneity of individual situations › Bridging micro and macro approaches, on the basis of HH surveys First results (for France) › HH account by category - standard of living, household composition, employment status, age of the head of household - in 2003 : income, final consumption expenditure, actual final consumption › Bridging HH consumption expenditures by groups and carbon footprint calculations Breaking down the households’ account by groups
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Page 9 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 Standard of living, consumption and CO 2 emissions By standard of living quintile X 3.4 X 2.7 consumption CO2 emissions
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Page 10 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 Standard of living, employment status, age and CO 2 emissions
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Page 11 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 – consumption induces 6,4 tCO2 per year per person – up to 8,6 tCO2 per year per person living alone – only 4,1 tCO2 per year per person living in a large family (couple with 3 children or more) - HH composition and CO 2 emissions: economies of scale
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Page 12 F. L., C.L., J.-L.P. OECD WPNA December 2nd, 2010 For more information: http://www.insee.fr/en/themes/document.asp?reg_id=0&ref_id=ecofra10e Thank you for your attention http://www.insee.fr/en/themes/document.asp?reg_id=0&ref_id=ecofra10e
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