1 / 7

Environmental-Economic Accounting Activities in Countries

Environmental-Economic Accounting Activities in Countries. Sokol Vako United Nations Statistics Division 19 TH Meeting of the London Group 12-14 November 2013 London, UK. Summary of responses. Thank you to those who responded In this presentation, quick summary of responses

dpelt
Download Presentation

Environmental-Economic Accounting Activities in Countries

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental-Economic Accounting Activities in Countries Sokol Vako United Nations Statistics Division 19TH Meeting of the London Group 12-14 November 2013 London, UK

  2. Summary of responses • Thank you to those who responded • In this presentation, quick summary of responses • Compilation of responses to be forwarded to all (eventually)

  3. Current/completed activities in countries • Much work is going on in multiple areas • air emissions (Canada, China, EU, Korea) • Energy flows/assets (Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, UK) • environmental taxes (EU) • environmental protection expenditure (Eurostat, Korea,Mexico) • EGSS (Eurostat, Korea) • Forests (China, France, Estonia, Italy, Mexico, Norway, UK) • Fishery (Estonia) • Land use (Germany, Norway, UK) • material flows (EU) • Water (Canada, China, France, Germany, Mexico, Netherlands, Norway, UK) • Waste (France, Mexico, Norway)

  4. Planned activities in countries • Accounts • environmental protection expenditure, energy accounts and EGSS—mandatory within EU • Development strategy and long term plans being developed in Korea • Embodied energy—Germany (continuation of past work) • Water (Ireland ) • UK—a number of accounts including carbon, farmland and land cover • Ecosystem accounting (Netherlands) • Naural resource stock accounts, Emission accounts and ecosystem accounting (Canada) • Methodology • environmental subsidies, resource management expenditure, forest and water accounts (Eurostat) • National wealth (Norway) • Ecosystem accounting (Norway) • Valuation (USA)

  5. Current/recent collaborations • Eurostat grants • Estonia-Italy (air emissions), Estonia-Norway (environmental taxes) , Estonia-Norway (env. taxes and air emissions) • Destatis and Turkstats—training of staff • Stat Canada and NBS of China on environment statistics • Collaboration between Mexico and ECLAC, Honduras, Dominican Republic • Norway and various countries working on data supporting the environmental accounts • WAVES • Sweden—over a dozen projects over the last decade in developing countries • Denmark and Bhutan • CREEA Project—details to come during the session on forest accounts • Netherlands and China (environmental accounting), Baltic States (water); Netherlands and UK (study visits); Netherlands and Vietnam (water)

  6. Planned collaborations • Eurostat grants • Mexico working with Peru and Chile • Nordic initiative on promotion and use of EEA • Close collaboration through already existing mechanisms such as UNCEEA, LG, OECD etc

  7. Other observations • Strong desire to learn from what other have done • Collaboration with other agencies in a country is key • Need for training and sharing experiences, especially in developing countries • Numerous publications in the context of green growth

More Related