Simulating the spatial distribution of population and emissions to 2100

Joint Program Reprint • Journal Article
Simulating the spatial distribution of population and emissions to 2100
Asadoorian, M.O. (2008)
Environmental and Resource Economics, 39(3): 199-211

Reprint 2008-10 [Read Full Article]

Abstract/Summary:

Urbanization and economic development have important implications for many environmental processes including global climate change. Although there is evidence that urbanization depends endogenously on economic variables, long-term forecasts of the spatial distribution of population are often made exogenously and independent of economic conditions. It is common for research concerning long-run projections of global environmental change to use population density as the primary means to spatially distribute emissions projections. However, researchers typically utilize year 1990 cross-sectional population data to distribute their emissions projections for both the short- and long-term, without projecting any changes in population density. Thus, a beta distribution for individual countries/regions is estimated to describe the geographical distribution of population using a one-degree-by-one-degree latitude–longitude global population data set. Cross-sectional country/regional data are then used to estimate an empirical relationship between parameters of the beta distribution and macroeconomic variables as they vary among countries/regions. This conditional beta distribution allows the simulation of a changing distribution of population, including the growth of urban areas, driven by economic forecasts until the year 2100.

© Springer Netherlands 2007

Citation:

Asadoorian, M.O. (2008): Simulating the spatial distribution of population and emissions to 2100. Environmental and Resource Economics, 39(3): 199-211 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10640-007-9105-8)
  • Joint Program Reprint
  • Journal Article
Simulating the spatial distribution of population and emissions to 2100

Asadoorian, M.O.

Abstract/Summary: 

Urbanization and economic development have important implications for many environmental processes including global climate change. Although there is evidence that urbanization depends endogenously on economic variables, long-term forecasts of the spatial distribution of population are often made exogenously and independent of economic conditions. It is common for research concerning long-run projections of global environmental change to use population density as the primary means to spatially distribute emissions projections. However, researchers typically utilize year 1990 cross-sectional population data to distribute their emissions projections for both the short- and long-term, without projecting any changes in population density. Thus, a beta distribution for individual countries/regions is estimated to describe the geographical distribution of population using a one-degree-by-one-degree latitude–longitude global population data set. Cross-sectional country/regional data are then used to estimate an empirical relationship between parameters of the beta distribution and macroeconomic variables as they vary among countries/regions. This conditional beta distribution allows the simulation of a changing distribution of population, including the growth of urban areas, driven by economic forecasts until the year 2100.

© Springer Netherlands 2007

Supersedes: 

Simulating the Spatial Distribution of Population and Emissions to 2100