30 Nov 2022 08:00 AM - 02 Dec 2022 04:00 PM
VIENNA, AUSTRIA
CONFERENCE VENUE & GENERAL INFORMATION
The conference will take place in the main building of the
Austrian Academy of Sciences
Dr. Ignaz Seipel-Platz 2, 1010 Vienna, Austria,
as well as via zoom.
The conference venue is centrally located and close to subway lines U1 („Schwedenplatz“ and „Stephansplatz“), U3 („Stephansplatz“ and „Stubentor“) and U4 („Schwedenplatz" and "Wien Mitte“).
For your individual hotel booking we would like to make you aware of hotels with The Austrian Ecolabel.
AGENDA
Session Chairs: Sonja Spitzer, Anne Goujon
POSTER FLASH ONLINE:
Session Chairs: Risto Conte Keivabu, Andrea Tamburini
Chairs: Shonali Pachauri, Jonas Peisker, Andrea Tamburini
Festive Event on the occasion of the publication of the latest report of the Wittgenstein Centre for Demography and Global Human Capital (WIC), a Collaboration among IIASA, OEAW and the University of Vienna, and the upcoming farewell of Wolfgang Lutz as director of the Vienna Institute of Demography (VID) after twenty years at the ÖAW.
Chairs: Erich Striessnig, Jonas Peisker, Andrea Tamburini
Session Chairs: Liliana Andriano, Raya Muttarak
POSTER FLASH ONLINE:
Mehdi Azam
Macquarie University, Sydney
Gregor C. Falk
University of Education Freiburg
Abstract:
Bangladesh’s coastal region is extremely susceptible to climate change induced natural disasters and man-made interventions that alter the local ecosystem. This study explores and analyses various internal and external factors that have an impact environmental and socio-economic change and thereby people's displacement and migration. Based on field surveys and focus group discussions with local people, the study identifies that the shift of traditional land use patterns from rice farming to shrimp culture has generated substantial environmental and socioeconomic transformation and challenges to local resilience. Reduction of household resilience has shifted away vulnerable people to move outside their origin territory ranging from one week to a maximum of twenty-eight weeks. Data from empirical research with local people from 2011, a follow-up focus group discussions and interviews in 2022 and work experiences from climate change projects implemented in this region were used. Seasonal or temporary migration is a common practice to boost household cash and savings; considered as an alternative adaptive technique or coping method for vulnerable people when regular employment isn’t accessible. The study also finds that people have little understanding of whether such changes are linked to climate change. However, they believed that man-made interventions and traditional land use changes are the main causes of the displacement and migration; climate change exacerbates the already existing problems. The situation has further worsened because of the Covid-19-induced lockdown and restrictions since seasonal migrants had to return home from the city and other locations. The growing food insecurity and natural disasters have considerably worsened the socioeconomic conditions of the local population as a result of the lack of employment options. This has now significantly and continuously boosted migration. So far governance of migration has not been effectively mainstreamed in the current policy regimes and this presents a concern. The study recommends a new transformation of an integrated land use governance mechanism that can bring people back to the self-sustaining agriculture systems, create sustainable shrimp farming, and diversify their sources of income.
Amanda Carrico
Department of Environmental Studies, University of Colorado-Boulder
CU Population Center, Population Program, Institute of Behavioral Science
Katharine Donato
Walsh School of foreign Service, Georgetown University
Abstract:
Early marriage (before age 18) is associated with lower educational attainment, more frequent and high-risk pregnancies, higher rates of poverty, and psychological distress for females around the world. Although early marriage is declining in some regions, economic stress resulting from climate change has the potential slow or reverse these trends. We examine this possibility using recent data collected from households in southwestern Bangladesh, a nation with one of the highest rates of early marriage in the world. Data collected from 1,412 households revealed that 14.8% of daughters married before age 15, and 46.7% between 15 and 17. The risk of marriage before age 15 increased by over 70% in years with cyclone impacts. Heat waves also corresponded with the timing of marriage, but effects were conditional upon the characteristics of the daughter’s natal household. When households were engaged in agriculture or the father had no education, the risk of early marriage decreased somewhat in years with moderate heat waves but rose sharply in years with severe heat waves. The marriages of girls between the ages of 15 and 17 were relatively unresponsive to environmental stress.
Cǒme Cheritel
Paris School of Economics, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Abstract:
There is no broad scientific consensus on the impact of population dynamics such as population ageing on greenhouse gas emissions and consequently on global warming, due, in particular, to the lack of studies considering the decomposition of the carbon footprint on the long term. This projects thus drafts a methodology for constructing age-specific carbon accounts, i.e. a decomposition of the carbon footprint by age. First, by estimating a household consumption model, I decompose a household's consumption by types of goods and by household members. Successively with an Input-Output analysis, I estimate the carbon footprint of each category of goods and services by age group and subsequently derive a decomposition of the carbon footprint of a given country by type of goods. The method proposed is highly flexible and can therefore be applied widely. Preliminary results are provided for France, Japan, South Korea and Mexico. Moreover, this project provide early estimates of pseudo-panels of French Carbon footprint from household consumption spanning from 1979 to 2011.
Ingrid Setz
Vienna Institute of Demography (OeAW), Wittgenstein Centre (IIASA, OeAW, University of Vienna)
Andreas Chmielowski
University of Gothenburg
Lu Meng
University of Bayreuth
Viktor Maus
Vienna University of Economics and Business
Lorenz Wimmer
Institute for Advanced Studies (IHS)
Abstract:
Air pollution has a strong impact on the health and well-being of societies. According to the European Environment Agency, it represents the largest environmental health risk in Europe. Yet, empirical evidence shows that air pollution is neither homogeneously spread across space nor among population groups. In our analysis, we investigate the spatial relationship between NO2 exposure and the foreign minority share at a high spatial resolution in Vienna, Austria. We overcome data limitations of previous studies by combining a novel model-based data set on NO2 concentration and sociodemographic data on a 250-square meter grid in a spatial autoregressive model, controlling for contributing factors. Our results confirm a significant positive correlation between air pollution and the proportion of minorities for different spatial aggregation levels and model specifications. The findings provide evidence on the presence of environmental inequality in intra-urban spaces and emphasize the need to reduce such inequalities.
Lukas Vashold
Vienna University of Economics and Business
Abstract:
Effectively tackling climate change requires sound knowledge about greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and their sources. Currently however, there is a lack of comprehensive, sectorally disaggregated projections for GHG emissions. Here, we project sectoral emissions for a global sample of countries and five main sectors in the horizon ranging until 2050 in a unified framework using Bayesian methods. We show that without concerted policy efforts global GHG emissions increase strongly but also highlight a number of important differences across countries and sectors. Emission increases in emerging economies are driven by strong output and population growth, with energy-related emissions accounting for most of the growth. Advanced economies are expected to reduce GHG emissions over the coming decades in the majority of sectors; transport emissions, however, are often still increasing. Our predictions align with projections from Integrated Assessment Models on a global level, but show some deviations on the regional level.
Hanne Dallenes
Robbe Geerts
Frédéric Vandermoere
Gerlinde Verbist
University of Antwerp
Abstract:
In this study, we aim to enhance the understanding of the interconnectedness between energy transitions and social equality by examining how social characteristics determine the composition of individual’s preferred energy mix. Previous studies about energy preferences have been mainly limited to the exploration of preferences for one energy system in isolation. Hence, little is known about how various energy sources are combined into various energy mixes. Against this background, we use Belgian data from the European Social Survey (N=1766) to examine the diversity in preferred energy mixes among individuals. Specifically, a latent class analysis is conducted to cluster the Belgian respondents into meaningful groups related to their preferred energy mix. The results suggest that there are four groups regarding preferred energy mixes. The findings emphasize that a focus on energy mixes provides a more nuanced understanding of individuals’ energy preferences as it reveals several inconsistencies and trade-offs. More specifically, the results imply that while most of the Belgian respondents prefer a carbon free energy mix, many face structural barriers that prevent them from denouncing unsustainable energy sources such as fossil fuels. The findings highlight the importance of focusing on energy mixes from a conflict-based stance as it provides an excellent tool to uncover the injustices underlying an energy transition. The article concludes that energy policies cannot be successful without addressing the justice dimension of energy transitions.
Augusto F. J. Schmidt, Roberto L. do Carmo
University of Campinas
Albert Esteve
Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona
Abstract:
Solutions presented to combat climate change often call on individual changes on consumption. Environmental problems are associated with population growth, but such focus on the macro perspective has overshadowed other aspects of societal changes that also influence consumption. Demography, like no other social science, is equipped with exploring the tendencies to those complex problems. We look at energy consumption using data from the US (Residential Energy Consumption Survey - RECS) and Brazil (Brazilian Household Budget Survey - POF in Portuguese) to understand energy consumption and changes in household composition. Due to the effects of scale, those households with fewer members have higher per capita consumption. The process associated with the second demographic transition (SDT) in the two countries are at distinct stages. To investigate the effect of household size, age, gender and race, we apply decomposition techniques proposed by Kitagawa (1995) to discuss the effect of the composition of households.
Setu Pelz
Shonali Pachauri
Caroline Zimm
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Highlights:
Abstract:
Literature linking residential energy consumption, human development and climate change risk is growing but is largely concentrated at the aggregate level. We combine consumer expenditure microdata for two time periods from Brazil (2002/2017), Ghana (2005/2017) and India (2004/2011) with a spatial climate exposure dataset (SSP2, 1.5dC, 2030) to identify intersecting inequities across the income distribution and across space. We first describe the dual challenge of energy access and affordability among poorer households and extend this analysis to include private mobility, identifying dramatic and consistent shifts towards private mobility fossil fuel consumption among the upper deciles. Second, we operationalize the decent living standards, a multi-dimensional measure of human wellbeing, across the income deciles. This highlights the strength of this framework in identifying deprivations among poorer households using standard publicly available microdata. Thirdly, we link achievement of decent living standards with climate risk, identifying both spatially and by income level an acutely vulnerable population requiring climate adaptation policy support.
Klaus Prettner
Vienna Institute of Demography
Vienna University of Economics and Business
Alexia Fürnkranz-Prskawetz
Vienna Institute of Demography
TU Wien
Michael Kuhn
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
Martina Siskova
Vienna Institute of Demography
Vadim Kufenko
Universität Hohenheim, Stuttgart
Abstract:
In this paper we study the effect of decreasing fertility on carbon emissions in depopulation countries. The depopulation countries are currently experiencing both strong out-migration trends accompanied by significant losses in fertility. Hence, we expect emissions to be affected differently in countries experiencing depopulation compared to non-depopulation countries. There are various channels through which fertility impacts emissions, namely: the population size, the age structure of said population, as well as economic output. To analyze this issue empirically, we constructed a database from 1950 to 2015, in order to estimate the elasticities of emissions with respect to population as well as with respect to income per capita. Studies to date found that the elasticity with respect to population is much larger than the elasticity with respect to income per capita. However, we expect to find that the disparity between the two elasticities expands when restricting the database to the subsample consisting of depopulation countries only. Our contribution to the current literature lies not only in extending the available dataset and inclusion of more variables; but predominantly, in focusing on depopulation countries. For, these countries are of particular interest as they face a situation that is quite unique as it pertains to their economic and demographic structures.
Hannes Mangelsdorf, Luca Rebeggiani
FOM University
Jana Stöver
Kiel University
Christina Wilke
FOM University
Abstract:
Population ageing and keeping the impact economic activity within planetary boundaries are two of the main future challenges of today’s societies. To measure the pressure that we as human beings exert on nature, so-called material footprints can be used. These differ depending on individual consumption which again varies with age, reflecting an individual’s situation across the life cycle. Against this background, we combine data from three different sources, namely population projections, age-specific consumption profiles and footprint data, to derive material footprints by age group and consumption category for different population scenarios for Germany. The results from our paper will add empirical evidence on how population ageing is likely to affect pressure on the environment in Germany.
Andrea E. Schmidt
Felix Durstmüller
Katharina Brugger
Competence Centre for Climate and Health, Austrian National Public Health Institute
Abstract:
Background: Due to climate change, average temperatures are rising across Europe, which also has severe effects on the whole population. While men have higher incidence of heat strokes in Austrian hospitals, women tend to report higher perceived heat exposure and more concerns about climate change, also related to their family and relatives. Yet, research on the gender patterns underlying climate change adaptation is scarce. This study aims to address this gap.
Objective: We aim to identify gender-related differences in perceived heat exposure in Austria. We hypothesise that family situation and housing conditions are gendered determinants of subjective heat exposure.
Data and methods: We estimate an binomial logistic regression model from the Austrian microcensus data 2019 on environmental behaviour and environmental conditions. Our dependent variable is perceived heat exposure (low/medium vs. high).
Results: Our results show heterogeneous findings for men and women, with women overall displaying family situation to be a determinant of perceived heat exposure, while for men housing conditions significantly determine perceived heat exposure. Further influencing factors are the highest educational attainment (for men) and the degree of urbanisation of one’s place of living.
Conclusions: More research is needed to understand gendered patterns of climate change adaptation and draw conclusions on gender-specific measures (e.g. targeted heat action plans) for men, women, and families in the context of climate change.
Karolina Sobczak-Szelc, Dominik Wach, Magdalena Chułek
Centre of Migration Research University of Warsaw
Jörg Haarpaintner, Astrid Espegren
NORCE - Climate and Environment and Health & Social Sciences , Norwegian Research Centre AS
Ewa Gromny, Małgorzata Jenerowicz-Sanikowska, Sebastian Aleksandrowicz
Space Research Centre of the Polish Academy of Sciences
Abstract:
The construction and operation of the forced migrants’ settlements have a significant impact on the surrounding natural environment. Issues such as the construction and organisation of such mass refugee settlements, the relations between people living in these camps, and the natural environment seem to be crucial and can impact changes in the local and regional environment. In many countries of the Global South, like Bangladesh or Tanzania, forced migrants living in refugee settlements have limited access to basic resources and rely on humanitarian support. Lack of drinking water, food, or firewood forces them to seek these assets in the surrounding area, which can lead to the degradation of the natural environment and conflicts with the local communities.
The aim of this article is to present the most essential forms of refugee activities that can stimulate changes in the natural environment. The research was conducted within the ARICA A multi-directional analysis of refugee/IDP camp areas based on HR/VHR satellite data project in the Kutupalong-Balukhali camp in Bangladesh and the Mtendeli camp in Tanzania. The results are based on a combination of remote sensing data and social qualitative data. More specifically we have carried out a literature review, conducted focus groups and in-depth interviews with experts and local actors as well as in-depth interviews with camp inhabitants and, combined this with satellite data analysis.
The results show the strong influence of the establishment and development of the camp on the changes in the environment. Through investigation of camp inhabitants' and members of the host society’s perception and use of the environment within the camp area and in the surroundings of the camp, and how this has changed over time, we will develop recommendations for future camp management.
Lisa Thalheimer
School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, UK
Princeton School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University, USA
Moritz P. Schwarz
School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, UK
Felix Pretis
Department of Economics, University of Victoria, Canada
Abstract:
Extreme weather and conflict may drive displacement. However, their individual contribution to displacement is not fully understood due to challenges around isolating channels of causality. We use disaggregated data on internal displacement in subregions of Somalia from 2016-2018 broken down by reported displacement reason and combine it with weather and conflict data. This allows us to isolate the effects of extreme weather and conflict on displacement, as well as the effects of displacement on conflict itself. We find large non-linear effects of weather on displacement where an increase in temperature anomalies from 1°C to 2 °C leads to a ten-fold increase in displaced people, and a reduction in precipitation from 50mm to 0mm leads to around a four-fold increase in displacement. We find significant effects of conflict events on displacement (which are masked when the data is aggregated). Displacement itself has little detectable effect on the occurrence of conflict events.
Andrea Tamburini
Vienna Institute of Demography (OeAW), Wittgenstein Centre (IIASA, OeAW, University of Vienna)
Abstract:
Improving our understanding of future risk from climate change requires realistic projections of future populations, both in their size and distribution. Distribution can refer to the geographic breakdown, as well as the breakdown by important characteristics, such as age, sex or educational attainment. While where people will live determines exposure to hazards, population characteristics co-determine the degree of vulnerability and capability to adapt to changing environmental conditions. Despite the importance of these factors, there remains a paucity of population projections (or disaggregations thereof) at the sub-national level. We develop a machine learning-based model to produce age-, sex- and education-specific population projections at the sub-national NUTS-2 level for 34 European countries based on the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs). Our focus on Europe is indicated by the high degree of spatial variability, both in terms of climatic conditions and population structure, as well as the rapid pace of climate change there.
Karim Zantout
Jacob Schewe
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)
Member of the Leibniz Association, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract:
International migration is a complex human phenomenon with multifaceted determinants that make it difficult to identify precise mechanisms. In addition, the lack of consistent highresolution data poses another dimension of uncertainty. Nevertheless, there is a need for self-consistent, dynamic models of international migration, since climate change is considered to have an impact on migration [1, 2] and well-founded projections are essential for developing adaptation and mitigation strategies.
Here, we present a new model for international migration forecasts that is based on discrete time stochastic evolution. This approach combines the strengths of proper population flow accounting in terms of evolution equations while incorporating determinants of migration in stochastic parameters. More precisely, we combine the deterministic element of evolution equations with non-deterministic effects for those variables that are typically difficult to assess or to measure. Apart from direct migration flows between origin and destination countries we discuss the effect of assimilation, transit migration and return migration. Consequently, the model contains not only dynamics at different time scales but also geographical, economic, demographic, social, and political dependencies. As a proof of concept, we study model systems and compare to the commonly used Gravity Model [3, 4] pointing at crucial differences between the two formalisms. The importance of time dynamics for future projections is highlighted and possible pathways for including Climate Change effects are presented.
Session Chairs: Roman Hoffmann, Patrick Sakdapolrak