洛特卡的轮子和历史的长臂:遥远的过去是如何决定今天的全球能源消耗速度的?

T. Garrett, M. Grasselli, S. Keen
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要全球经济生产- -世界国内生产总值(GDP) - -相对于全球初级能源需求一直在稳步上升,这给人们带来了希望,即技术进步可以推动社会与其资源需求和相关环境污染逐步脱钩。在这里,我们提出了一个对比的论点:在1970年之后的50年里,有可靠数据的每一年,需要1埃焦耳的世界能源来维持每5.50±0.21万亿美元的2019年全球财富量,这一财富量被定义为所有历史上经通胀调整后的累计经济产出之和。没有发现类似的比例适用于能源消耗和更熟悉的年经济产量、资本形成或实物资本之间。考虑到这种规模扩大持续了半个多世纪,涵盖了世界能源需求历史增长的三分之二,这意味着惯性在指导社会轨迹方面发挥的主导作用远远超过宏观经济模型或规定快速气候减缓战略的政策通常所允许的作用。如果是这样的话,环境影响将继续与甚至相当遥远的过去的经济生产紧密联系在一起——一个不可改变的数量。就目前的经济而言,它实际上不会与其资源需求脱钩。相反,仅仅维持经通胀调整后的全球经济生产的现有水平,就需要以目前的速度维持能源消费的增长。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lotka's wheel and the long arm of history: how does the distant past determine today's global rate of energy consumption?
Abstract. Global economic production – the world gross domestic product (GDP) – has been rising steadily relative to global primary energy demands, lending hope that technological advances can drive a gradual decoupling of society from its resource needs and associated environmental pollution. Here we present a contrasting argument: in each of the 50 years following 1970 for which reliable data are available, 1 exajoule of world energy was required to sustain each 5.50±0.21 trillion year 2019 US dollars of a global wealth quantity defined as the cumulative inflation-adjusted economic production summed over all history. No similar scaling was found to apply between energy consumption and the more familiar quantities of yearly economic production, capital formation, or physical capital. Considering that the scaling has held over half a century, a period that covers two-thirds of the historical growth in world energy demands, the implication is that inertia plays a far more dominant role in guiding societal trajectories than has generally been permitted in macroeconomics models or by policies that prescribe rapid climate mitigation strategies. If so, environmental impacts will remain strongly tethered to even quite distant past economic production – an unchangeable quantity. As for the current economy, it will not in fact decouple from its resource needs. Instead, simply maintaining existing levels of world inflation-adjusted economic production will require sustaining growth of energy consumption at current rates.
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