Institute of Social Ecology Vienna, Alpen-Adria University, A-1070 Vienna, Austria.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Jun 18;110(25):10324-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1211349110. Epub 2013 Jun 3.
Global increases in population, consumption, and gross domestic product raise concerns about the sustainability of the current and future use of natural resources. The human appropriation of net primary production (HANPP) provides a useful measure of human intervention into the biosphere. The productive capacity of land is appropriated by harvesting or burning biomass and by converting natural ecosystems to managed lands with lower productivity. This work analyzes trends in HANPP from 1910 to 2005 and finds that although human population has grown fourfold and economic output 17-fold, global HANPP has only doubled. Despite this increase in efficiency, HANPP has still risen from 6.9 Gt of carbon per y in 1910 to 14.8 GtC/y in 2005, i.e., from 13% to 25% of the net primary production of potential vegetation. Biomass harvested per capita and year has slightly declined despite growth in consumption because of a decline in reliance on bioenergy and higher conversion efficiencies of primary biomass to products. The rise in efficiency is overwhelmingly due to increased crop yields, albeit frequently associated with substantial ecological costs, such as fossil energy inputs, soil degradation, and biodiversity loss. If humans can maintain the past trend lines in efficiency gains, we estimate that HANPP might only grow to 27-29% by 2050, but providing large amounts of bioenergy could increase global HANPP to 44%. This result calls for caution in refocusing the energy economy on land-based resources and for strategies that foster the continuation of increases in land-use efficiency without excessively increasing ecological costs of intensification.
全球人口、消费和国内生产总值的增长引发了人们对于当前和未来自然资源使用可持续性的担忧。净初级生产力的人类占用量(HANPP)为人类对生物圈的干预提供了一种有用的衡量标准。土地的生产能力通过收获或燃烧生物质以及将自然生态系统转化为生产力较低的管理土地而被占用。这项研究分析了 1910 年至 2005 年期间 HANPP 的趋势,发现尽管人口增长了四倍,经济产出增长了 17 倍,但全球 HANPP 仅增长了一倍。尽管效率有所提高,但 HANPP 仍从 1910 年的 6.9 克碳/年增加到 2005 年的 14.8 克碳/年,即从潜在植被净初级生产力的 13%增加到 25%。尽管消费增长,但由于生物能源的依赖程度下降和初级生物质向产品的转化效率提高,人均和年生物量收获量略有下降。效率的提高主要归因于作物产量的增加,尽管这常常伴随着大量的生态成本,如化石能源投入、土壤退化和生物多样性丧失。如果人类能够保持过去在提高效率方面的趋势,我们估计到 2050 年 HANPP 可能仅增长到 27-29%,但提供大量生物能源可能会使全球 HANPP 增加到 44%。这一结果呼吁在重新将能源经济聚焦于土地资源时保持谨慎,并采取策略,在不过度增加集约化生态成本的情况下促进土地利用效率的持续提高。