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Environmental Performance Index

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Global map of countries by Environmental Performance Index, 2024[1]

The Environmental Performance Index (EPI) is a method of quantifying and numerically marking the environmental performance of a state's policies, highlighting the degradation of the planet's life-supporting systems on which humanity depends. A world economy that continues to rely heavily on fossil fuels translates into ongoing air and water pollution, acidification of the oceans, and rising concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. These changes threaten the survival of species already suffering from widespread habitat loss, pushing them closer to extinction. Recent analyses show that humanity has already transgressed six out of nine critical planetary boundaries that define Earth's safe operating space — and is close to crossing a seventh.

The Environmental Performance Index (EPI) was started in 2002 by World Economic Forum in association with the Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy (Yale University) and Center for International Earth Science Information Network Earth Institute (Columbia University). The biennial EPI report harnesses the latest data sets, science, and technology to provide the most comprehensive assessment of the state of sustainability around the world. In total, the 2024 EPI report incorporates 58 indicators to rank 180 countries on their progress at mitigating climate change, safeguarding ecosystem vitality, and promoting environmental health. This broad set of metrics is a powerful tool to track progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the climate mitigation targets in the 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement, and the biodiversity protection goals in the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.[2]

In 2023, the first global assessment of progress toward the goals of the Paris Agreement revealed a grim picture: the world is far off track. Despite record deployment of renewable energy, greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions keep rising. As the world enters uncharted climatic territory, there is a heightened risk of crossing irreversible tipping points in the planet's climate system.[2]

Methodology

Environmental Performance Index Framework, 2024[2]

Over time, the methodology for the EPI has been criticized for its arbitrary choice of metrics which could introduce bias, and its poor performance as an indicator for environmental sustainability.[3] Additional criticisms center on the EPI's lack of specific policy suggestions, and the index's weighting biases against data deficient countries that has led to the overlooking of ecological progress in developing countries.[3]

In 2024, India was ranked at 176 in the list and rejected the low ranking. As per a statement issued by the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEF&CC), it claimed that several indicators used in the calculation were based on unfounded assumptions and unscientific methods.[4][5][6]

The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe found 3 Pros: EPI provides an easily comparable index; EPI's ecosystem vitality scores are based on six constituent policy categories: water resources, agriculture, forests, fisheries, biodiversity and habitat, and climate and energy; the referenced database yields maps for each of EPI's partial indices (normalised to 0 … 100) and 3 Cons: CIESIN's EPI rather is an attempt to quantitatively represent the ecological performance of countries and companies; actual reasons for dysfunctionalities might need further research; EPI would be a more policy-relevant index.[7]

As a result of these criticisms, the number of EPI indicators has increased, and their weight has changed, to provide a better data-driven summary of the state of sustainability around the world. The 2024 index is based on 58 performance indicators grouped into 30 issue categories with an objective of environmental health, ecosystem vitality and climate change, ranking 180 countries.[8]

List of countries by 2024 EPI scores

The 2024 Environmental Performance Index report ranks 180 countries and territories, based on 58 performance indicators grouped into 30 issue categories. The top five countries are Estonia, Luxembourg, Germany, Finland and the United Kingdom, while the last ones are India, Myanmar, Laos, Pakistan and Vietnam.[9] Sorting is alphabetical by country code, according to ISO 3166-1 alpha-3.

CountryRegionValueTrendRank 2024
 AfghanistanSouth Asia 31.0Increase 12.8144
 AngolaSub-Saharan Africa 40.1Increase 8.2106
 AlbaniaEurope & Central Asia 52.2Increase 6.147
 United Arab EmiratesMiddle East & North Africa 51.6Increase 9.148
 ArgentinaLatin America & Caribbean 47.0Increase 1.170
 ArmeniaEurope & Central Asia 44.9Increase 2.080
 Antigua and BarbudaLatin America & Caribbean 55.6Increase 1.237
 AustraliaEast Asia & Pacific 63.1Increase 4.222
 AustriaEurope & Central Asia 68.9Increase 0.18
 AzerbaijanEurope & Central Asia 40.5Decrease −0.3103
 BurundiSub-Saharan Africa 33.5Decrease −1.3138
 BelgiumEurope & Central Asia 66.8Increase 4.914
 BeninSub-Saharan Africa 37.8Decrease −0.3119
 Burkina FasoSub-Saharan Africa 42.2Increase 0.195
 BangladeshSouth Asia 28.1Increase 2.3148
 BulgariaEurope & Central Asia 56.2Decrease −1.235
 BahrainMiddle East & North Africa 35.3Decrease −1.4131
 BahamasLatin America & Caribbean 55.9Increase 1.636
 Bosnia and HerzegovinaEurope & Central Asia 46.0Increase 3.375
 BelarusEurope & Central Asia 58.2Increase 8.731
 BelizeLatin America & Caribbean 47.4Increase 0.967
 BoliviaLatin America & Caribbean 45.3Increase 3.478
 BrazilLatin America & Caribbean 53.0Increase 6.744
 BarbadosLatin America & Caribbean 53.1Increase 2.643
 BruneiEast Asia & Pacific 48.3Decrease −3.162
 BhutanSouth Asia 43.3Increase 6.889
 BotswanaSub-Saharan Africa 49.2Decrease −1.859
 Central African RepublicSub-Saharan Africa 39.0Decrease −5.1111
 CanadaNorth America 61.1Increase 3.527
 SwitzerlandEurope & Central Asia 67.8Increase 2.39
 ChileLatin America & Caribbean 49.6Increase 3.057
 ChinaEast Asia & Pacific 35.4Increase 5.6130
 Ivory CoastSub-Saharan Africa 42.9Increase 7.890
 CameroonSub-Saharan Africa 38.6Increase 2.2114
 Democratic Republic of the CongoSub-Saharan Africa 39.5Increase 6.0109
 Republic of the CongoSub-Saharan Africa 41.6Increase 0.999
 ColombiaLatin America & Caribbean 49.7Increase 4.456
 ComorosSub-Saharan Africa 38.2Decrease −5.9115
 Cape VerdeSub-Saharan Africa 38.0Decrease −1.8117
 Costa RicaLatin America & Caribbean 55.5Increase 0.238
 CubaLatin America & Caribbean 52.5Increase 2.546
 CyprusEurope & Central Asia 53.9Decrease −0.241
 Czech RepublicEurope & Central Asia 65.5Increase 0.416
 GermanyEurope & Central Asia 74.5Increase 4.33
 DjiboutiMiddle East & North Africa 32.3Increase 0.2141
 DominicaLatin America & Caribbean 49.3Decrease −0.258
 DenmarkEurope & Central Asia 67.7Decrease −0.310
 Dominican RepublicLatin America & Caribbean 47.7Decrease −1.166
 AlgeriaMiddle East & North Africa 41.7Increase 3.298
 EcuadorLatin America & Caribbean 51.3Increase 7.049
 EgyptMiddle East & North Africa 43.7Increase 3.587
 EritreaSub-Saharan Africa 29.0Decrease −0.3147
 SpainEurope & Central Asia 64.0Increase 2.221
 EstoniaEurope & Central Asia 75.7Increase 14.91
 EthiopiaSub-Saharan Africa 36.3Increase 3.8125
 FinlandEurope & Central Asia 73.8Increase 3.14
 FijiEast Asia & Pacific 46.0Decrease −2.475
 FranceEurope & Central Asia 67.0Increase 1.612
 Federated States of MicronesiaEast Asia & Pacific 40.8Increase 0.3101
 GabonSub-Saharan Africa 53.3Increase 7.342
 United KingdomEurope & Central Asia 72.6Increase 1.35
 GeorgiaEurope & Central Asia 47.3Increase 6.268
 GhanaSub-Saharan Africa 36.9Increase 1.8122
 GuineaSub-Saharan Africa 36.5Decrease −2.9123
 GambiaSub-Saharan Africa 37.6Increase 0.6120
 Guinea-BissauSub-Saharan Africa 42.0Decrease −0.596
 Equatorial GuineaSub-Saharan Africa 41.7Decrease −3.398
 GreeceEurope & Central Asia 67.3Increase 8.911
 GrenadaLatin America & Caribbean 45.8Increase 0.476
 GuatemalaLatin America & Caribbean 32.5Decrease −2.8140
 GuyanaLatin America & Caribbean 49.0Increase 2.360
 HondurasLatin America & Caribbean 40.2Increase 2.9105
 CroatiaEurope & Central Asia 62.3Increase 4.924
 HaitiLatin America & Caribbean 36.4Increase 7.7124
 HungaryEurope & Central Asia 59.8Decrease −1.330
 IndonesiaEast Asia & Pacific 33.6Increase 5.8137
 IndiaSouth Asia 27.6Increase 4.2149
 IrelandEurope & Central Asia 65.8Increase 2.815
 IranMiddle East & North Africa 41.8Increase 0.097
 IraqMiddle East & North Africa 30.3Increase 6.4145
 IcelandEurope & Central Asia 64.3Increase 2.518
 IsraelMiddle East & North Africa 48.0Increase 0.663
 ItalyEurope & Central Asia 60.3Increase 4.828
 JamaicaLatin America & Caribbean 48.5Increase 1.061
 JordanMiddle East & North Africa 47.3Increase 10.168
 JapanEast Asia & Pacific 61.4Increase 4.226
 KazakhstanEurope & Central Asia 47.8Increase 4.065
 KenyaSub-Saharan Africa 36.9Decrease −0.2122
 KyrgyzstanEurope & Central Asia 42.8Increase 13.091
 CambodiaEast Asia & Pacific 31.2Increase 0.0143
 KiribatiEast Asia & Pacific 44.3Decrease −1.182
 South KoreaEast Asia & Pacific 50.6Increase 4.951
 KuwaitMiddle East & North Africa 44.4Decrease −1.881
 LaosEast Asia & Pacific 26.3Increase 2.0151
 LebanonMiddle East & North Africa 39.9Increase 7.9108
 LiberiaSub-Saharan Africa 34.3Increase 1.3135
 Saint LuciaLatin America & Caribbean 51.1Increase 2.150
 Sri LankaSouth Asia 38.8Increase 1.8112
 LesothoSub-Saharan Africa 36.9Increase 0.1122
 LithuaniaEurope & Central Asia 64.1Increase 4.620
 LuxembourgEurope & Central Asia 75.1Increase 3.42
 LatviaEurope & Central Asia 60.2Increase 1.229
 MoroccoMiddle East & North Africa 39.5Increase 2.6109
 MoldovaEurope & Central Asia 46.1Increase 2.874
 MadagascarSub-Saharan Africa 30.1Increase 0.8146
 MaldivesSouth Asia 38.1Increase 2.8116
 MexicoLatin America & Caribbean 44.2Increase 2.283
 Marshall IslandsEast Asia & Pacific 42.5Increase 0.894
 North MacedoniaEurope & Central Asia 50.3Increase 1.252
 MaliSub-Saharan Africa 34.5Decrease −3.3134
 MaltaMiddle East & North Africa 66.9Increase 4.713
 MyanmarEast Asia & Pacific 27.1Decrease −1.4150
 MontenegroEurope & Central Asia 47.7Decrease −0.566
 MongoliaEast Asia & Pacific 37.2Increase 5.4121
 MozambiqueSub-Saharan Africa 39.0Increase 5.2111
 MauritaniaSub-Saharan Africa 34.6Decrease −3.5133
 MauritiusSub-Saharan Africa 47.3Increase 2.968
 MalawiSub-Saharan Africa 35.1Decrease −6.7132
 MalaysiaEast Asia & Pacific 41.0Increase 7.3100
 NamibiaSub-Saharan Africa 44.0Decrease −0.185
 NigerSub-Saharan Africa 40.0Increase 7.3107
 NigeriaSub-Saharan Africa 37.9Increase 4.7118
 NicaraguaLatin America & Caribbean 47.4Increase 1.267
 NetherlandsEurope & Central Asia 66.9Increase 4.413
 NorwayEurope & Central Asia 69.9Increase 3.37
 NepalSouth Asia 33.1Increase 0.7139
 New ZealandEast Asia & Pacific 57.3Increase 1.132
 OmanMiddle East & North Africa 51.3Increase 12.949
 PakistanSouth Asia 25.5Decrease −4.0152
 PanamaLatin America & Caribbean 52.9Increase 5.245
 PeruLatin America & Caribbean 46.5Increase 3.973
 PhilippinesEast Asia & Pacific 32.1Increase 0.4142
 Papua New GuineaEast Asia & Pacific 36.9Decrease −3.6122
 PolandEurope & Central Asia 64.2Increase 1.819
 PortugalEurope & Central Asia 61.9Increase 4.125
 ParaguayLatin America & Caribbean 39.5Increase 0.7109
 QatarMiddle East & North Africa 46.8Increase 5.671
 RomaniaEurope & Central Asia 57.3Decrease −3.132
 RussiaEurope & Central Asia 46.7Decrease −0.172
 RwandaSub-Saharan Africa 33.9Decrease −0.3136
 Saudi ArabiaMiddle East & North Africa 42.5Increase 9.594
 SudanSub-Saharan Africa 39.1Increase 3.9110
 SenegalSub-Saharan Africa 43.8Increase 4.886
 SingaporeEast Asia & Pacific 53.0Increase 6.544
 Solomon IslandsEast Asia & Pacific 42.2Increase 1.695
 Sierra LeoneSub-Saharan Africa 39.9Increase 5.3108
 El SalvadorLatin America & Caribbean 41.6Decrease −4.499
 SerbiaEurope & Central Asia 49.8Decrease −5.655
 São Tomé and PríncipeSub-Saharan Africa 36.2Increase 1.8126
 SurinameLatin America & Caribbean 56.9Increase 8.634
 SlovakiaEurope & Central Asia 65.1Decrease −1.617
 SloveniaEurope & Central Asia 62.4Increase 0.023
 SwedenEurope & Central Asia 70.3Increase 0.26
 EswatiniSub-Saharan Africa 38.7Decrease −2.4113
 SeychellesSub-Saharan Africa 47.9Decrease −3.964
 ChadSub-Saharan Africa 35.9Increase 2.0127
 TogoSub-Saharan Africa 35.7Decrease −1.1129
 ThailandEast Asia & Pacific 45.7Increase 4.577
 TajikistanEurope & Central Asia 32.3Decrease −4.2141
 TurkmenistanEurope & Central Asia 40.6Increase 4.9102
 Timor-LesteEast Asia & Pacific 49.9Increase 9.654
 TongaEast Asia & Pacific 40.4Decrease −7.3104
 Trinidad and TobagoLatin America & Caribbean 52.5Increase 1.046
 TunisiaMiddle East & North Africa 45.3Increase 0.578
 TaiwanEast Asia & Pacific 50.1Decrease −0.153
 TanzaniaSub-Saharan Africa 43.6Increase 5.688
 UgandaSub-Saharan Africa 35.8Increase 4.2128
 UkraineEurope & Central Asia 54.6Increase 7.339
 UruguayLatin America & Caribbean 44.1Increase 0.584
 United StatesNorth America 57.2Increase 0.233
 UzbekistanEurope & Central Asia 42.6Decrease −1.393
 Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesLatin America & Caribbean 54.2Increase 0.840
 VenezuelaLatin America & Caribbean 53.3Increase 1.142
 VietnamEast Asia & Pacific 24.6Decrease −3.7153
 VanuatuEast Asia & Pacific 45.0Increase 9.379
 SamoaEast Asia & Pacific 47.1Increase 6.069
 South AfricaSub-Saharan Africa 42.7Increase 4.492
 ZambiaSub-Saharan Africa 46.7Increase 3.972
 ZimbabweSub-Saharan Africa 51.6Increase 9.548

EPI scores vs. GDP per capita, 2024

EPI scores vs GDP per capita, 2024[2]
Countries’ wealth is a strong predictor of their overall environmental performance, but some countries vastly outperform their economic peers, while others lag.

EPI scores are positively correlated with a country's wealth, although after a point, increasing wealth yields diminishing returns. At every level of economic development, though, some countries outperform their peers while others lag. Some of the poorest countries in the world outperform some of the richest. In this regard, factors other than wealth, such as investments in human development, rule of law, and regulatory quality, are stronger predictors of environmental performance.[10]

Wealth allows countries to make investments in the infrastructure required to provide clean drinking water, safely manage waste, and rapidly expand renewable energy. But wealth also leads to higher material consumption and its associated environmental impacts, such as higher rates of waste generation, GHG emissions, and ecosystem degradation. Many countries with high scores in some Ecosystem Vitality metrics — such as those measuring the pollution from pesticides and fertilizers in agriculture, the integrity of forest landscapes, and the use of destructive fishing methods — do so because their economies are stagnant and underdeveloped.[9]

Developing countries must be careful not to repeat the mistakes of nations that followed a dirty and unsustainable path to industrialization. On the other hand, rich countries need to decouple their consumption from environmental degradation and use their wealth to help developing countries leapfrog to a path of truly sustainable development, preserving their biodiversity and other global commons for the benefit of all humankind.[1][9][10]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Block, S.; Emerson, J.W.; Esty, D.C.; de Sherbinin, A.; Wendling, Z.A.; et al. (2024-10-03). "2024 Environmental Performance Index. Technical Appendix" (PDF). epi.yale.edu. New Haven, CT: Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2024-11-02. Retrieved 2024-10-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. 1 2 3 4 "2024 Environmental Performance Index". epi.yale.edu. New Haven, CT: Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy & Center for International Earth Science Information Network Earth Institute, Columbia University. 2024-10-03. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  3. 1 2 Kanmani, Aiyshwariya; Obringer, Renee; Rachunok, Benjamin; Nateghi, Roshanak (2020-01-11). "Assessing Global Environmental Sustainability Via an Unsupervised Clustering Framework". Sustainability. 12 (2): 563. Bibcode:2020Sust...12..563P. doi:10.3390/su12020563. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  4. Banerjee, Ankush. "What Happened to Green India? Ranked Lowest as per Environmental Performance Index, India Disputes Methodology". Business Insider. Archived from the original on 2024-11-06. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  5. "India's lagging sustainability performance". Hindustan Times. 2022-06-27. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  6. Roy, Esha (2022-06-11). "Explained: What is the environment index, and why has India questioned it?". The Indian Express. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  7. "Environmental performance index EPI. Pros & Cons". unece.org. United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  8. 1 2 "2024 Weights" (CSV). epi.yale.edu. New Haven, CT: Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  9. 1 2 3 Block, S.; Emerson, J.W.; Esty, D.C.; de Sherbinin, A.; Wendling, Z.A.; et al. (2024-10-03). "2024 Environmental Performance Index" (PDF). epi.yale.edu. New Haven, CT: Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy. Retrieved 2024-10-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. 1 2 "2024 Environmental Performance Index. Policymakers' Summary". epi.yale.edu. New Haven, CT: Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy & Center for International Earth Science Information Network Earth Institute, Columbia University. 2024-10-03. Retrieved 2024-10-24.