EU's roadmap to measure wellbeing beyond GDP

The European Commission has published a roadmap for developing new environmental and social indicators to measure the real prosperity and wellbeing of nations beyond traditional GDP. The reflections could affect the strategic goals of the post-2010 Lisbon Strategy for growth and jobs.

GDP growth is the main indicator for measuring the effectiveness of recovery plans launched last year to restore economic growth. However, "there is a clear case for complementing GDP with statistics covering the other economic, social and environmental issues on which people's well-being critically depends," according to a Commission communication GDP and beyond - Measuring progress in a changing world, adopted on August 20.

The proposal follows a 2007 Commission conference, which revealed strong support from policymakers, economic, social and environmental experts and civil society for developing such indicators to complement GDP.

The document identifies action to be taken to develop such more 'inclusive' indicators. It will officially be presented on September 8.

According to the EU executive, the reflection could also "contribute to setting new strategic goals for the post-2010 Lisbon Strategy".

"The special importance of this system is that it would include stock-taking of natural resources and human and social capital, rather than just the use of these resources. The system would also focus on the role of eco-systems in providing welfare," declared the Commission upon announcing the initiative in 2007.

Among the five primary initiatives planned by the EU executive are developing a comprehensive environmental index and improving quality-of-life indicators to complement GDP.

Environmental pressure index ready by 2010

Ecological and carbon footprints are "close candidates" for developing indicators for a comprehensive environmental index to complement GDP, according to the Commission. But it stresses that "both are limited in scope," as the carbon footprint only takes into account greenhouse gas emissions and the ecological footprint excludes any impact on water, for example.

A pilot version of an index to measure pollution and other environmental harm within EU territory is due to be published in 2010. It will help assess the results of environmental protection efforts in the following fields:

*Climate change and energy use;

*nature and biodiversity;

*air pollution and health impacts;

*water use and pollution, and;

*waste generation and use of resources.

Other initiatives proposed include developing a European Sustainable Development
Scoreboard, a pilot version of which should be ready this year, to allow better monitoring of progress made regarding the EU's sustainable development strategy.

Another related measure is developing threshold values for environmental sustainability, which should allow policymakers to identify 'danger zones' or alert levels before nature's physical limits are reached. The values will be identified for key pollutants and all renewable resources.

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