Exploring Future Impacts of Environmental Constraints on Human Development
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The International Futures (IFs) Model
- represents 22 age-sex cohorts to age 100+ in a standard cohort-component structure (but computationally spreads the 5-year cohorts initially to 1-year cohorts and calculates change in 1-year time steps)
- calculates change in cohort-specific fertility of households in response to income, income distribution, infant mortality (from the health model), education levels, and contraception use
- uses mortality calculations from the health model
- separately represents the evolution of HIV infection rates and deaths from AIDS
- computes average life expectancy at birth, literacy rate, and overall measures of human development (HDI)
- represents migration, which connects to flows of remittances.
- represents the economy in six sectors: agriculture, materials, energy, industry, services, and information/communications technology (ICT)
- computes and uses input-output matrices that change dynamically with development level
- is an equilibrium-seeking model that does not assume exact equilibrium will exist in any given year; rather it uses inventories as buffer stocks and to provide price signals so that the model chases equilibrium over time
- contains a Cobb-Douglas production function that (following insights of Solow and Romer) endogenously represents contributions to growth in multifactor productivity from human capital (education and health), social capital and governance, physical and natural capital (infrastructure and energy prices), and knowledge development and diffusion (research and development (R&D) and economic integration with the outside world)
- uses a Linear Expenditure System to represent changing consumption patterns
- utilizes a “pooled” rather than bilateral trade approach for international trade, aid and foreign direct investment
- has been imbedded in a social accounting matrix (SAM) that ties economic production and consumption to representation of intra-actor financial flows.
- represents production, consumption and trade of crops and meat; it also carries ocean fish catch and aquaculture in less detail
- maintains land use in crop, grazing, forest, urban, and “other” categories
- represents demand for food, for livestock feed, and for industrial use of agricultural products
- is a partial equilibrium model in which food stocks buffer imbalances between production and consumption and determine price changes
- overrides the agricultural sector in the economic module unless the user chooses otherwise
- portrays production of six energy types: oil, gas, coal, nuclear, hydroelectric, and other renewable energy forms
- represents consumption and trade of energy in the aggregate
- represents known reserves and ultimate resources of fossil fuels
- portrays changing capital costs of each energy type with technological change as well as with draw-downs of resources
- is a partial equilibrium model in which energy stocks buffer imbalances between production and consumption and determine price changes
- overrides the energy sector in the economic module unless the user chooses otherwise.
- tracks annual emissions of carbon from fossil fuel use
- represents carbon sinks in oceans and forest land and models build-up of carbon in the atmosphere
- calculates global warming and links it to country-level changes in temperature and precipitation over time which, with the addition of carbon fertilization, impact agricultural yields
- represents indoor solid fuel use and its contribution to health related variables
- forecasts outdoor urban air pollution and links with respiratory disease
- models fresh water usage as a percentage of total water availability
- is distributed throughout the overall model
- allows changes in assumptions about rates of technological advance in agriculture, energy, and the broader economy
- is tied to the governmental spending model with respect to R&D spending
- education: forecasts rates of intake and completion across formal education levels for both sexes
- health: accounts for major causes of disability and death across major World Health Organization groups
- socio-political: represents government finance, social conditions, and attitudes of individuals, and qualitative and quantitative indicators of governance
- international political: traces changes in power balances and threat across states
- infrastructure: forecasts extent of and access to physical infrastructure categories
3. The Scenarios
3.1. The Base Case Scenario
Economy | Global GDP growth ranges from 3–3.5% annually | Economic production continues to diversify towards services and ICT | International trade as a percentage of GDP ticks up about 0.5 percentage points annually | Foreign Direct Investment as a percentage of GDP increases at nearly 0.04 percentage points annually | Foreign Aid more than doubles in 40 years from 6 trillion USD to over 12 trillion |
Population | Fertility rates decline in all regions | Life Expectancy improves in all regions | Migration trends are extrapolated from historical patterns | ||
Education | Primary education gross enrolment is over 100% by 2025 | Secondary gross enrolment levels reach 80% by 2025 | Tertiary gross enrolment is over 35% by 2040 | World literacy levels are over 90% by 2030 | |
Health | AIDS deaths fall to less than 1 million people annually by 2045 | Communicable disease deaths decrease by half by 2040 | Non-communicable disease deaths increase 1.5 times over 35 years | Global smoking rates decline to the level in 1980 in 25 years | |
Government | Political freedom increases at the global level | Economic freedom increases at the global level | Democracy improves | Corruption is reduced | Efficacy and Rule of Law are improved |
Technology | Energy efficiency improves at 0.8% annually for first 15 years, then more quickly | Energy production costs decrease exogenously differently for each type covered (coal, oil, gas, hydro, nuclear and other-renewable) | Global convergence of productivity to system leader in technology | ||
Agriculture | Cereal yields improve globally at about 0.03 tonnes per hectare per year | Overall crop land increases by about 1 million hectares per year | Overall grazing land increases by about 2 million hectares per year | Overall fish harvest remains constant | |
Energy | Energy from oil, gas and coal dominate global production for the next two decades | Renewable energy production surpasses any single fossil fuel by 2045 | Hydro and nuclear energy production stagnate | ||
Environment | Annual carbon emissions grow for the next 2–3 decades then decline | Carbon build-up in the atmosphere grows throughout the first half of the 21st century going beyond 500 PPM by 2050 | Percent of population with no access to safe water below 10% by 2050 | Global fresh water use reaches 10% of renewable by 2050, over 100% in North Africa by 2025 | Indoor solid fuel use decreases below 20% of global population in 2050 |
3.2. The Character of Global Environmental Challenges and Potential Disasters
3.3. Environmental Challenge Scenario
Box 1. The Environmental Challenge Scenario.
3.4. Environmental Disaster Scenario
4. Scenario Impacts on Human Development
4.1. Environmental Impacts on Human Development: The HDI
4.2. Drilling Down by HDI Component
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflict of Interest
References and Notes
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Appendix
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Hughes, B.B.; Irfan, M.T.; Moyer, J.D.; Rothman, D.S.; Solórzano, J.R. Exploring Future Impacts of Environmental Constraints on Human Development. Sustainability 2012, 4, 958-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/su4050958
Hughes BB, Irfan MT, Moyer JD, Rothman DS, Solórzano JR. Exploring Future Impacts of Environmental Constraints on Human Development. Sustainability. 2012; 4(5):958-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/su4050958
Chicago/Turabian StyleHughes, Barry B., Mohammod T. Irfan, Jonathan D. Moyer, Dale S. Rothman, and José R. Solórzano. 2012. "Exploring Future Impacts of Environmental Constraints on Human Development" Sustainability 4, no. 5: 958-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/su4050958
APA StyleHughes, B. B., Irfan, M. T., Moyer, J. D., Rothman, D. S., & Solórzano, J. R. (2012). Exploring Future Impacts of Environmental Constraints on Human Development. Sustainability, 4(5), 958-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/su4050958