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GTAP Resources: Resource Display

GTAP Resource #7506

"Triple Planetary Crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution: Baseline analysis toward 2050"
by Bellora, Cecilia, Ruben Bibas, Rob Dellink, Jean Foure, Toon Vandyck and Hidemichi Yonezawa


Abstract
“Triple planetary crisis”, which collectively refers to climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution, poses a growing and significant threat to human health, well-being and the environment. These three planetary challenges are closely interlinked. Beyond their direct biophysical connections (e.g., the negative impact of a warmer climate and pollution on biodiversity), they share many common socioeconomic drivers and trends, including land use change, increased fossil fuel demand, and population and economic growth. Additionally, they are interconnected through policy responses. Environmental policies targeting one planetary challenge can have positive and/or negative spillovers on the other two challenges.

While each planetary crisis has been discussed and studied in recent years, few studies examine these three planetary challenges simultaneously. With this background, the contribution of this paper is to analyse the triple planetary crisis by (i) providing projections of its evolution toward mid-century under current policies (i.e., baseline analysis) and (ii) unpacking the main drivers behind the three planetary crises.


Resource Details (Export Citation) GTAP Keywords
Category: 2025 Conference Paper
Status: Not published
By/In: Presented during the 28th Annual Conference on Global Economic Analysis (Kigali, Rwanda)
Date: 2025
Version:
Created: Yonezawa, H. (4/14/2025)
Updated: Batta, G. (5/1/2025)
Visits: 40
- Climate change policy
- Climate impacts
- Ecosystem services and biodiversity
- Environmental policies
- Baseline development


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