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Emerging megaregions: A new spatial scale to explore urban sustainability

Authors:

  • Joan Marull (Institut d’Estudis Regionals i Metropolitans de Barcelona)
  • Vittorio Galletto (Institut d’Estudis Regionals i Metropolitans de Barcelona)
  • Elena Domene Gómez (Institut d’Estudis Regionals i Metropolitans de Barcelona)
  • Joan Trullén (Institut d'Estudis Regionals i Metropolitans de Barcelona)

 

Year: 2013

This paper aims to better understand the environmental implications of a new economic unit of analysis consisting of networks of cities called megaregions. We have tested the working hypothesis according to which those regions (European NUTS3) belonging to a megaregion present benefits of economic productivity (growth of GDP per capita) compared to regions that have not been incorporated into a megaregion or have done so recently. A multiple linear regression analysis has established significant relationships between economic, urban and ecological variables: the formation of networks of cities enables economies to concentrate knowledge, achieve greater efficiency in resource consumption (energy), higher productivity (GDP) and lower entropy (less CO2 emissions, better functional structure of the landscape). This pattern of relationships appears both statistically robust and sensitive at the time of incorporation of the European regions (NUTS3) into megaregions. This work contributes to the debate on the essential properties of a regional economy optimizing environmental performance at the level of the megaregion.

Marull, J., Galletto, V., Domene Gómez, E., & Trullén, J. (2013). Emerging megaregions: A new spatial scale to explore urban sustainability. Land Use Policy, 34, 353-366. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2013.04.008