Moana Simas
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
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Featured researches published by Moana Simas.
Journal of Industrial Ecology | 2015
Moana Simas; Richard Wood; Edgar G. Hertwich
Global production chains carry environmental and socioeconomic impacts embodied in each traded good and service. Even though labor and energy productivities tend to be higher for domestic production in high‐income countries than those in emerging economies, this difference is significantly reduced for consumption, when including imported products to satisfy national demand. The analysis of socioeconomic and environmental aspects embodied in consumption can shed a light on the real level of productivity of an economy, as well as the effects of rising imports and offshoring. This research introduces a consumption‐based metric for productivity, in which we evaluate the loss of productivity of developed nations resulting from imports from less‐developed economies and offshoring of labor‐intensive production. We measure the labor, energy, and greenhouse gas emissions footprints in the European Unions trade with the rest of the world through a multiregional input‐output model. We confirm that the labor footprint of European imports is significantly higher than the one of exports, mainly from low‐skilled, labor‐intensive primary sectors. A high share of labor embodied in exports is commonly associated with low energy productivities in domestic industries. Hence, this reconfirms that the offshoring of production to cheaper and low‐skilled, labor‐abundant countries offsets, or even reverts, energy efficiency gains and climate‐change mitigation actions in developed countries.
Journal of Industrial Ecology | 2018
Konstantin Stadler; Richard Wood; Tatyana Bulavskaya; Carl-Johan Södersten; Moana Simas; Sarah Schmidt; Arkaitz Usubiaga; José Acosta-Fernández; Jeroen Kuenen; Martin Bruckner; Stefan Giljum; Stephan Lutter; Stefano Merciai; Jannick Højrup Schmidt; Michaela Clarissa Theurl; Christoph Plutzar; Thomas Kastner; Nina Eisenmenger; Karl-Heinz Erb; Arjan de Koning; Arnold Tukker
Environmentally extended multiregional input-output (EE MRIO) tables have emerged as a key framework to provide a comprehensive description of the global economy and analyze its effects on the environment. Of the available EE MRIO databases, EXIOBASE stands out as a database compatible with the System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA) with a high sectorial detail matched with multiple social and environmental satellite accounts. In this paper, we present the latest developments realized with EXIOBASE 3-a time series of EE MRIO tables ranging from 1995 to 2011 for 44 countries (28 EU member plus 16 major economies) and five rest of the world regions. EXIOBASE 3 builds upon the previous versions of EXIOBASE by using rectangular supply-use tables (SUTs) in a 163 industry by 200 products classification as the main building locks. In order to capture structural changes, economic developments, as reported by national statistical agencies, were imposed on the available, disaggregated SUTs from EXIOBASE 2. These initial estimates were further refined by incorporating detailed data on energy, agricultural production, resource extraction, and bilateral trade. EXIOBASE 3 inherits the high level of environmental stressor detail from its precursor, with further improvement in the level of detail for resource xtraction. To account for the expansion of the European Union (EU), EXIOBASE 3 was developed with the full EU28 country set (including the new member state Croatia). EXIOBASE 3 provides a unique tool for analyzing the dynamics of environmental pressures of economic activities over time.
Journal of Industrial Ecology | 2018
Richard Wood; Konstantin Stadler; Moana Simas; Tatyana Bulavskaya; Stefan Giljum; Franz Stephan Lutter; Arnold Tukker
Most countries show a relative decoupling of economic growth from domestic resource use, implying increased resource efficiency. However, international trade facilitates the exchange of products between regions with disparate resource productivity. Hence, for an understanding of resource efficiency from a consumption perspective that takes into account the impacts in the upstream supply chains, there is a need to assess the environmental pressures embodied in trade. We use EXIOBASE3, a new multiregional input-output database, to examine the rate of increase in resource efficiency, and investigate the ways in which international trade contributes to the displacement of pressures on the environment from the consumption of a population. We look at the environmental pressures of energy use, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, material use, water use, and land use. Material use stands out as the only indicator growing in both absolute and relative terms to population and gross domestic product (GDP), while land use is the only indicator showing absolute decoupling from both references. Energy, GHG, and water use show relative decoupling. As a percentage of total global environmental pressure, we calculate the net impact displaced through trade rising from 23% to 32% for material use (1995?2011), 23% to 26% for water use, 20% to 29% for energy use, 20% to 26% for land use, and 19% to 24% for GHG emissions. The results show a substantial disparity between trade-related impacts for Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and non-OECD countries. At the product group level, we observe the most rapid growth in environmental footprints in clothing and footwear. The analysis points to implications for future policies aiming to achieve environmental targets, while fully considering potential displacement effects through international trade.
Estudos Avançados | 2013
Moana Simas; Sergio Pacca
Wind power development in Brazil has experienced a long period of slow growth; however, projects contracted over the last three years might increase the current installed capacity by fivefold. This was the fastest growing clean energy technology over the last decade, bringing environmental and social benefits to several countries. Our work has determined direct and indirect job creation potential due to indigenous wind power deployment. About 195,000 jobs will be created up to 2020, out of which 70% direct, and most of them in construction, which has great local job creation potential. Therefore, wind power plays a major role in the sustainable development of the country.
Sustainability | 2014
Richard Wood; Konstantin Stadler; Tatyana Bulavskaya; Stephan Lutter; Stefan Giljum; Arjan de Koning; Jeroen Kuenen; Helmut Schütz; José Acosta-Fernández; Arkaitz Usubiaga; Moana Simas; Olga Ivanova; Jan Weinzettel; Jannick Højrup Schmidt; Stefano Merciai; Arnold Tukker
Sustainability | 2014
Moana Simas; Laura Golsteijn; Mark A. J. Huijbregts; Richard Wood; Edgar G. Hertwich
Global Environmental Change-human and Policy Dimensions | 2016
Arnold Tukker; Tanya Bulavskaya; Stefan Giljum; Arjan de Koning; Stephan Lutter; Moana Simas; Konstantin Stadler; Richard Wood
Renewable & Sustainable Energy Reviews | 2014
Moana Simas; Sergio Pacca
Archive | 2014
A. Tukker; Tatyana Bulavskaya; Stefan Giljum; A. de Koning; Stephan Lutter; Moana Simas; Konstantin Stadler; Richard Wood
Ecological Indicators | 2017
Moana Simas; Stefan Pauliuk; Richard Wood; Edgar G. Hertwich; Konstantin Stadler