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Fridolin Krausmann

Researcher at University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna

Publications -  185
Citations -  16690

Fridolin Krausmann is an academic researcher from University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Material flow accounting & Population. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 172 publications receiving 14059 citations. Previous affiliations of Fridolin Krausmann include Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology & Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt.

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Quantifying and mapping the human appropriation of net primary production in earth's terrestrial ecosystems

TL;DR: A comprehensive assessment of global HANPP based on vegetation modeling, agricultural and forestry statistics, and geographical information systems data on land use, land cover, and soil degradation that localizes human impact on ecosystems suggests large-scale schemes to substitute biomass for fossil fuels should be viewed cautiously.
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Growth in global materials use, GDP and population during the 20th century

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an assessment of the global use of materials since the beginning of the 20th century based on the conceptual and methodological principles of material flow accounting (MFA).
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How Circular is the Global Economy?: An Assessment of Material Flows, Waste Production, and Recycling in the European Union and the World in 2005

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors applied a sociometabolic approach to assess the circularity of global material flows and found that only 4 gigatonnes per year (Gt/yr) of waste materials are recycled in the EU and only 1.5% of processed materials are used to provide energy and are thus not available for recycling.
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Global human appropriation of net primary production doubled in the 20th century

TL;DR: It is found that although human population has grown fourfold and economic output 17-fold, global HANPP has only doubled, and 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.
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Socioeconomic legacy yields an invasion debt

TL;DR: It is shown that across 10 taxonomic groups in 28 European countries, current numbers of alien species established in the wild are indeed more closely related to indicators of socioeconomic activity from the year 1900 than to those from 2000, although the majority of species introductions occurred during the second half of the 20th century.