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引用次数: 0
摘要
在本文中,我们重新审视了全球国内生产总值(GDP)、一次能源使用量(PEU)和经济能源效率(EEE)之间的关系,以探讨能效投资如何在全球范围内导致能源使用量的反弹。假定 GDP 是衡量最终有用功的指标,我们构建了一个受生物物理学启发的非线性动态模型,并将其与 1900-2018 年的全球 GDP、PEU 和 EEE 数据进行拟合,从而估算出能效投资与产出增长的关系,进而估算出整个经济的反弹效应。我们使用两种情景来说明未来至 2100 年加强能效投资部署的效果。第一种方案使 GDP 增长最大化,要求能效投资增长 ~ 两倍。由于整个经济的反弹效应占主导地位,因此 PEU 的增长不会下降。第二种方案通过将能效投资增加约 3.5 倍,将 PEU 增长降至最低。在这种情况下,PEU 和 GDP 增长接近完全脱钩,反弹效应最小,尽管这会导致长期的零产出增长。我们认为,后一种机制与提高能效以实现气候目标的部署是相容的。然而,在产出增长最大化机制盛行的同时,以效率为主导的能源使用和减排承诺在全球范围内似乎面临失败的风险。
Economy-wide rebound and the returns on investment in energy efficiency
In this paper we re-examine the relationship between global Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Primary Energy Use (PEU) and Economic Energy Efficiency (EEE) to explore how investment in energy efficiency causes rebound in energy use at the global scale. Assuming GDP is a measure of final useful work, we construct and fit a biophysics-inspired nonlinear dynamic model to global GDP, PEU and EEE data from 1900—2018 and use it to estimate how energy efficiency investments relate to output growth and hence economy-wide rebound effects. We illustrate the effects of future deployment of enhanced energy efficiency investments using two scenarios through to 2100. The first maximizes GDP growth, requiring energy efficiency investment to rise ~ twofold. Here there is no decrease in PEU growth because economy-wide rebound effects dominate. The second scenario minimizes PEU growth by increasing energy efficiency investment ~ 3.5 fold. Here PEU and GDP growth are near fully decoupled and rebound effects are minimal, although this results in a long run, zero output growth regime. We argue it is this latter regime that is compatible with the deployment of enhanced energy efficiency to meet climate objectives. However, while output growth maximising regimes prevail, efficiency-led pledges on energy use and emissions reduction appear at risk of failure at the global scale.
期刊介绍:
The journal Energy Efficiency covers wide-ranging aspects of energy efficiency in the residential, tertiary, industrial and transport sectors. Coverage includes a number of different topics and disciplines including energy efficiency policies at local, regional, national and international levels; long term impact of energy efficiency; technologies to improve energy efficiency; consumer behavior and the dynamics of consumption; socio-economic impacts of energy efficiency measures; energy efficiency as a virtual utility; transportation issues; building issues; energy management systems and energy services; energy planning and risk assessment; energy efficiency in developing countries and economies in transition; non-energy benefits of energy efficiency and opportunities for policy integration; energy education and training, and emerging technologies. See Aims and Scope for more details.