Global Footprint Network and York University, Toronto, have established the Footprint Data Foundation (FoDaFo) to make national Ecological Footprint and biocapacity results trusted and relevant, by ensuring their neutrality, transparency, and scientific robustness.
We live on a massively overused planet. We are guided by economic accounts, such as GDP, that are insensitive to ecological imbalances. This makes Ecological Footprint accounting, which gives us the ability to track how much nature we have against how much we demand, fundamental.
Similar to country-level statistics, such as longevity, unemployment, debt, etc., country Footprint assessments are critical because they provide a macro-economic context for policy and financial decisions. All too often, a country is missing statistics that track its resource security. That’s where the National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts come in. They offer the ecological context for policy needs and investment decisions of countries, cities, and companies.
Having reliable data or “accounts” for our biological resource situation is empowering because they help identify inconsistencies between goals and performance. The world needs a credible, neutral entity that analyzes the National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts data and makes them widely available. To maximize use and effectiveness, the accounts need to be clear, robust, transparent, and unbiased. As they are ever evolving, the newest data and improved science must be continually incorporated. And as in the scientific process, lessons will be learned from constructive criticisms and adequately addressed in the underlying methodology.
This is the purpose of FoDaFo, supported by the Footprint Initiative of York University.
To amplify the impact of FoDaFo, Global Footprint Network and York University, Toronto, are seeking the engagement with international agencies and countries to stand behind this rigorous global academic effort to provide neutral and robust National Footprint and Biocapacity Accounts.
It is undeniable that economic policies, urban plans, and investments informed by emerging resource and climate realities are more likely to succeed.
Global Footprint Network and York University, Toronto are motivated by a vision of a world in which all can thrive within the limits of our one planet. York University is looking for Masters Students for this initiative. More information at footprint.info.yorku.ca.