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Plausible energy demand patterns in a growing global economy with climate policy

Semieniuk, Gregor; Taylor, Lance; Rezai, Armon; Foley, Duncan K.

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Authors

Gregor Semieniuk

Lance Taylor

Armon Rezai

Duncan K. Foley



Abstract

Reducing the energy demand has become a key mechanism for limiting climate change, but there are practical limitations associated with large energy savings in a growing global economy and, importantly, its lower-income parts. Using new data on energy and GDP, we show that adopting the same near-term low-energy growth trajectory in all regions in IPCC scenarios limiting global warming to 1.5 °C presents an unresolved policy challenge. We discuss this challenge of combining energy demand reductions with robust income growth for the 6.4 billion people in middle- and low-income countries in light of the reliance of economic development on industrialization. Our results highlight the importance of addressing limits to energy demand reduction in integrated assessment modelling when regional economic development is powered by industrialization and of instead exploring faster energy supply decarbonization. Insights from development economics and other disciplines could help generate plausible assumptions given the financial, investment and stability issues involved.

Citation

Semieniuk, G., Taylor, L., Rezai, A., & Foley, D. K. (2021). Plausible energy demand patterns in a growing global economy with climate policy. Nature Climate Change, 11, 313-318. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-00975-7

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 3, 2020
Online Publication Date Jan 25, 2021
Publication Date Jan 25, 2021
Deposit Date Jan 6, 2021
Publicly Available Date Jan 6, 2021
Journal Nature Climate Change
Print ISSN 1758-678X
Electronic ISSN 1758-6798
Publisher Nature Research
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Pages 313-318
DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-00975-7

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