Replies to “Can Consumption-Based Emissions Accounting Solve the Problem of Historical Emissions? Some Skeptical Remarks”

IF 1.5 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
O. Torpman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In ‘Consumption-Based Emissions Accounting and Historical Emissions’ (Torpman 2022), I argued that a move from production-based emissions accounting (PBEA) to consumption-based emissions accounting (CBEA) would contribute to solving the problem of historical emissions. More precisely, the argument is that CBEA can assign currently living people remedial responsibility for historical emissions to the extent that they consume goods and services that embody historical emissions, which PBEA cannot. This argument has recently received some criticism, to which I aim to respond here. In particular, I will respond to the following two objections raised by Laura GarcíaPortela (2022): (1) the common causation-based justificatory rationale for CBEA cannot ground the application of CBEA to historical emissions if ‘consumption’ is interpreted as ‘use’ because users (qua users) are not causal inputs for emissions; and (2) it is unclear whether CBEA can cover more overall emissions than PBEA, since the former cannot account for recent past and contemporary emissions, which is covered by the latter. I will spell out these arguments and reply to them in turn. Starting with (1), García-Portela argues that the common justificatory rationale for CBEA is that consumers’ demand is an essential causal input for emissions. In my original paper, however, I argued that ‘consumption’ should be interpreted as ‘use’ rather than as ‘purchase’. This interpretation, García-Portela claims, cannot ground the application of CBEA to historical emissions, since users (qua users) do not provide any causal input to those emissions. García-Portela asks: ‘If they have not caused those emissions, why should they be allocated those emissions and the remedial responsibility that comes with them?’ Moreover, the argument goes, if ‘consumption’ would hence be interpreted as ‘purchase’ in order to avoid this, then CBEA cannot cover historical emissions because initial purchasers of historically produced goods and services are typically dead. My answer to this objection goes as follows. The point that consumer demand is often a causal input for emissions is certainly one potential reason for adopting CBEA. In my article, however, I mentioned it merely as a quick response to the claim that PBEA should be adopted for its capacity to assign responsibility to those who contribute causally to emissions. In addition, I brought up reasons related to CBEA’s capacity to deal with carbon leakage, as well as issues of fairness. For instance, unlike PBEA, CBEA does not assign
以消费为基础的排放核算能解决历史排放问题吗?一些怀疑的言论”
在“以消费为基础的排放核算和历史排放”(Torpman 2022)中,我认为从以生产为基础的排放核算(PBEA)转向以消费为基础的排放核算(CBEA)将有助于解决历史排放问题。更准确地说,他们的论点是,CBEA可以让现在活着的人对历史排放承担补救责任,只要他们消费的商品和服务体现了历史排放,而PBEA做不到。这种观点最近受到了一些批评,我打算在这里对此作出回应。特别是,我将回应Laura GarcíaPortela(2022)提出的以下两个反对意见:(1)如果“消费”被解释为“使用”,因为用户(作为用户)不是排放的因果输入,那么基于因果关系的CBEA的常见辩护理由不能将CBEA应用于历史排放;(2) CBEA是否能比PBEA涵盖更多的总排放量尚不清楚,因为前者不能计算最近的过去和当代的排放量,而后者涵盖了这些排放量。我将详细说明这些论点,并依次予以答复。从(1)开始,García-Portela认为CBEA的常见理由是消费者需求是排放的重要因果输入。然而,在我最初的论文中,我认为“消费”应该被解释为“使用”而不是“购买”。García-Portela声称,这种解释不能将CBEA的应用建立在历史排放的基础上,因为用户(作为用户)没有为这些排放提供任何因果输入。García-Portela问道:“如果这些排放不是他们造成的,为什么要把这些排放和随之而来的补救责任分配给他们?”此外,该论点还认为,如果为了避免这种情况,“消费”因此被解释为“购买”,那么CBEA就不能涵盖历史排放,因为历史上生产的商品和服务的初始购买者通常已经死亡。我对这一反对意见的回答如下。消费者需求往往是排放的因果输入,这一点当然是采用CBEA的一个潜在原因。然而,在我的文章中,我提到它仅仅是为了快速回应一种主张,即应该采用PBEA,因为它有能力将责任分配给那些造成排放的人。此外,我还提出了原因,涉及到CBEA处理碳泄漏的能力,以及公平问题。例如,与PBEA不同,CBEA不赋值
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来源期刊
Ethics Policy & Environment
Ethics Policy & Environment ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
32
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