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Environmental Satellite Accounts

Satellite accounts constitute both a supplement and an extension to the national accounts and are aimed at providing analyses to support the political decision-making process.  Currently, the FPB is working on two kinds of satellite accounts: the transport satellite accounts and the environmental accounts. In order to produce environmental accounts, the so-called ‘green accounts’, environmental data such as the amounts of emissions of air pollutants are distributed among the various economic actors identified in the national (regional) accounts, i.e. households and the different  industries.

News

Short Term Update 01-12 : Special Topic - Decomposition analysis of changes in CO2 emissions by the Belgian industries [30/03/2012]

Short Term Update (STU) is the quarterly newsletter of the Belgian Federal Planning Bureau. It contains, in English, the main conclusions from the publications of the FPB, as well as information on new publications,  together with an analysis of the most recent economic indicators.

Quantifying environmental leakage for Belgium [06/11/2008]

This paper illustrates the deficiency of the production approach as a tool to measure a country’s responsibility for international environmental impacts. A use approach is presented as a more suitable tool. The difference between the two approaches is determined by a better grasp of international trade, which can lead to environmental leakage when a country specialises in the production of environmentally friendly products and has the environmentally unfriendly products which it consumes produced abroad. We show that in the period 1995-2002 Belgium was on average a provider of air emission intensive products for the rest of the world. Environmental leakage was mostly negative. However, the evolution of the Belgian environmental terms of trade shows that by 2002 its imports had become considerably more air emission intensive with respect to its exports than in 1995. There are indications that this evolution is due to a considerable increase of extra-EU imports of air emission intensive products. This in turn could point to environmentally inspired offshoring. However, the currently available data do not allow us to test this hypothesis.

Documents presented at the Workshop "Economic analyses of the environment in Belgium, the Regions and Europe" - 13/09/2012

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Air Emissions Accounts - 13/09/2012

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