Andrew Fanning
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andrewlfanning.bsky.social
Andrew Fanning
@andrewlfanning.bsky.social
Ecological economist. Research and Data Analysis
at https://doughnuteconomics.org. Exploring a good life for all within planetary boundaries at http://goodlife.leeds.ac.uk
Congratulations Warwick, couldn't agree more -- great piece!
October 14, 2025 at 3:26 PM
Thx for sharing Giulio, hope all is as well as can be.
October 9, 2025 at 5:57 AM
that's great to hear Erik, thx for sharing and for your important work 🙏
October 3, 2025 at 7:05 AM
PS We are delighted that many people use the Doughnut diagrams in their work - so pls do help us spread awareness of this new version by reposting this thread, many thanks!
October 2, 2025 at 7:35 AM
For me, our latest Doughnut findings underscore the urgency and importance of the collective work to move beyond GDP as the measure of economic success, reorienting economies to create a future that provides a good life for all within planetary boundaries. Dive in! /FIN
Doughnut of social and planetary boundaries monitors a world out of balance - Nature
A revised ‘Doughnut’ providing a visual assessment of trends in social deprivation and planetary degradation over the past two decades shows more than doubling of global GDP accompanied by accelerating ecological overshoot but only a modest reduction in human deprivation.
www.nature.com
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM
Last but not least, Kate and I will be co-hosting an online launch event on *October 14 at 12 noon (UK time)*.

Please do join us for a presentation and discussion of the latest update to the Doughnut -- bring your questions, comments, and suggestions! More info and registration👇 7/
Launching: A renewed global Doughnut to monitor a world out of balance | DEAL
Launching an updated Doughnut that monitors trends in social shortfall and ecological overshoot over the 21st century
doughnuteconomics.org
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM
(2) We also have a new dedicated webpage @doughnuteconomics.bsky.social that gives an overview of the Doughnut and hosts interactive visualisations of the latest quantitative Doughnut assessment, which will now be updated annually. 6/
doughnuteconomics.org/doughnut
What is the Doughnut? | DEAL
An overview of the core concept at the heart of Doughnut Economics, including how it has evolved since 2012 and interactive visualisations
doughnuteconomics.org
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM
(1) Kate has written a short paper, 'The Evolving Doughnut', which concisely sets out the ideas that inspired the framework she created in 2012, and describes how and why it has changed over its three iterations. Plus download the latest Doughnut diagrams (CC-BY) 5/
The Evolving Doughnut | DEAL
A report by Kate Raworth on the Doughnut's evolution since 2012, with the latest Doughnut diagrams available to download
doughnuteconomics.org
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM
There’s much more to say about this open-access study (please do have a read!). But for now, we are *also* launching a couple new resources that we are excited to share, aiming to make the latest Doughnut results as widely accessible as possible... 4/
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM
We disaggregate the global results into country clusters by income. Median results show the richest 20% of countries (home to 15% of people) are responsible for over 40% of ecological overshoot in 2017, while the poorest 40% (home to 42% of people) experience more than 60% of global deprivation. 3/
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM
We analyse 35 global indicators from 2000-2022. Median results show slow progress in ending human deprivation, which must *speed up fivefold* to meet global goals by 2030, while rapid ecological damage must *reverse at nearly twice the current pace* to safeguard a stable planet by mid-century. 2/
October 1, 2025 at 3:26 PM