The paper presents the evidence and analyses of macroeconomic factors expla
ining the reduction of wilderness land in Norway. The analysis is at the co
unty level (18 counties) for the years 1988 and 1994, and the regressions a
re carried out as cross-section models as well as pooled, fixed effects mod
els. Using a new, and probably unique, database that categorizes the total
area in Norway into four zones of distance from larger technical installati
ons, wilderness land has been defined in three ways, reflecting different q
ualities of the same type of natural resource; land as more than 5, 3 and 1
km from closest man-made encroachment, respectively. The explanatory varia
bles comprise GDP per capita, GDP per capita squared, and population densit
y. The main finding from the cross-sections analysis is that the relative a
mount of wilderness land (wilderness land as a fraction of the total area w
ithin each county) is negatively related to the level of economic activity,
as measured by GDP per capita. Secondly, the fixed effects model reveals a
negative relationship between economic growth and the reduction of wildern
ess land. These effects are tighter for wilderness land defined within a sh
ort distance from existing encroachments. A high level of economic activity
and high economic growth per capita is therefore associated with less wild
erness land and, hence, the study gives no support for any Environmental Ku
znets Curve (EKC) relationships. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights
reserved.