Human behavior sabotages CO2-reducing strategies

The “rebound effect” negates benefits of policies aimed at improving efficiency and renewable energy sources in the residential sectorPeer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH

IMAGE: LAZARUS ADUA, ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF SOCIOLOGY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH, STANDS IN FRONT OF SOLAR PANELS ARRAY IN RESEARCH PARK NEAR THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH. view more CREDIT: DAVE TITENSOR/UNIVERSITY OF UTAH

For the past 150 years, humans have pumped extraordinary amounts of greenhouse gasses, such as CO2, into the atmosphere and warmed the planet at an alarming rate. To slow down climate change, societies tend to focus on two solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emissions: improving energy efficiency and developing and using renewable energy sources. United States President Joe Biden’s climate agenda includes a large effort to upgrade buildings to be more efficient and proposes investing billions of dollars for clean energy research. But are these strategies working as we expect?

A new study by University of Utah researchers compared every U.S. state’s CO2 emissions with their investment in the two solutions from 2009 to 2016. The authors found no statistically significant difference between energy efficiency improvement and renewable energy development—both resulted in some reductions in CO2 emissions when considering all societal sectors, although renewable energy investment was slightly more impactful.

The findings revealed two surprises. First, state governments’ policies aimed at helping consumers improve energy efficiency had no effect on CO2 emission. Rather, states with economy-wide lower energy input per each unit of economic output (per capita gross domestic product, GDP) emitted lower levels of the greenhouse gas. Second, investment in renewable energy sources led to increased levels of CO2 emissions in the residential sector. These outcomes are evidence of a well-known phenomenon called the rebound effect that describes when people respond to saving energy by consuming more, negating the benefit of CO2 reduction.

“Lots of energy analysts tend to look at emissions as a technical problem that requires a technical solution; build more efficient vehicles, build homes to use less energy. What they don’t consider is human behavior. If you’ve got a hybrid car, the money you save on gas might allow you to drive more,” said the study’s lead author Lazarus Adua, assistant professor of sociology at the U. “My goal here is to let policymakers know that this rebound effect is a problem, and they need to address it. If you’re only paying attention to improving efficiency and investing in renewables, you’re not going to solve the problem.”

The study was published on Aug. 25, 2021, in the journal Global Environmental Change. Karen Xuan Zhang and Brett Clark of the Department of Sociology at the U were co-authors.

Energy efficiency improvement and renewable energy production

To assess each state’s energy efficiency improvement investment, the authors used two measures. The first is the American Council on an Energy-Efficient Economy’s scoring of U.S. states on policy initiatives aimed at improving energy efficiency in households or other buildings. The second is the state’s economic output per each British Thermal Unit (BTU) of energy consumed. This reveals how efficiently the economy uses energy to produce every dollar of GDP. To assess renewable energy production, Adua and his team calculated the proportion of a state’s total energy consumption from renewable energy sources, such as wind, solar, geothermal or hydropower.

They analyzed each solution’s impact on CO2 emissions across four sectors individually— residential, commercial, industrial, transportation—and the impact across all sectors combined. 

The findings show that a 1% improvement of the economic output per BTU results in reduced CO2 emissions in residential, industrial and transportation sectors, confirming that overall improvement in production efficiency across society is beneficial. There’s no rebound effect because an individual probably won’t notice if they save money due to a more efficient economy. In contrast, a state’s energy efficiency policy scores had no statistical effect on CO2 emissions in any of the sectors. This is probably because they worked too well to save residents money and may have encouraged them to consume more elsewhere, Adua said.

Renewable energy had a more complicated story. The study found that increasing renewable energy by 1%, resulted in a 0.69% reduction in CO2 when all sectors were combined. However, the residential sector on its own had the opposite result—a 1% increase in the amount of renewable energy led to a 0.36% increase in CO2 emissions. On the surface, the result seems counterintuitive. But to sociologist Adua, it makes perfect sense.

“It’s unexpected, but it’s not very surprising given what I know about human attitudes towards consumption and the use of resources. When people think they are already doing right for the environment, they begin to lose sight of other ways in which they harm the environment. They may also feel justified to consume a little bit more. And before you know it, the benefit of the solar panel is basically canceled out by increased consumption in other areas,” said Adua.

The next steps for Adua and the authors is to go deeper into some of the findings, focusing on the residential sector. With more funding, he’d like to conduct survey-type studies with respondents who have renewable energy at home versus those without it, and gauge their attitudes towards general environmental protection. Additionally, Adua is developing a book that breaks down the positives and negatives of proposed methods aimed at mitigating climate change, including tactics to physically remove CO2 from the atmosphere.

“Every climate change solution has consequences. Investment in renewables means that we must expand mining to get the metals needed for batteries. Some mines being proposed are on land sacred to Native Americans and could cause environmental pollution,” said Adua. “My goal is to provide policy makers with as much information as I can to make decisions about how to tackle the climate crisis.”

Adua reiterated that focusing solely on technical solutions will fail to solve the climate crisis. 

“We need to think about these solutions more holistically, you have to think about restructuring the society in ways that will make it more efficient overall,” said Adua. “But when you talk about structural change, people are just thinking, ‘that will destroy our way of life.’ But if we don’t solve that problem today, the environment will change our way of life for us. Maybe not our generation, but our descendants, the environment will change their way of life.”


JOURNAL

Global Environmental Change

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2021.102351

METHOD OF RESEARCH

Data/statistical analysis

SUBJECT OF RESEARCH

People

ARTICLE TITLE

Seeking a handle on climate change: Examining the comparative effectiveness of energy efficiency improvement and renewable energy production in the United States

ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE

25-Aug-2021

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Clyde Spencer
September 30, 2021 11:38 am

When the idea of sealing homes to prevent air leaking out became popular, there was immediate concern about people getting sick from stale air. Little was said about radon accumulation. There are almost always tradeoffs in actions, usually referred to as unintended consequences. Moderation is probably a good path to follow.

Walter Sobchak
September 30, 2021 11:58 am

The rebound effect is also called Jevons Paradox, after the English economist William Stanley Jevons who observed that technological improvements that increased the efficiency of coal-use led to the increased consumption of coal in a wide range of industries. He explained it in a book “The Coal Question” published 155 years ago.

It takes a long time for the warmunists to catch up to standard economics.

September 30, 2021 12:20 pm

“For the past 150 years, humans have pumped extraordinary amounts of greenhouse gasses, such as CO2, into the atmosphere and warmed the planet at an alarming rate.”

Code words for “read no further if you value objective truth over religious zeal”.

Peter W
Reply to  Andy Pattullo
September 30, 2021 3:33 pm

And keep in mind that with all that increase in CO2, the earth is still not as warm as it was about 6,000 years ago.

Jeffery P
September 30, 2021 1:05 pm

File this under “Well, Duh.”

Mike Lowe
September 30, 2021 1:36 pm

So many of these academics presume that a reduction of CO2 is desirable, and start their deliberations from that point. Such a shame that not one of them has ever successfully questioned that starting position and proved what actually causes the minor heating and cooling which has been occurring for eons.

James H
September 30, 2021 7:47 pm

“ The findings revealed two surprises. First, state governments’ policies aimed at helping consumers improve energy efficiency had no effect on CO2 emission.”

The whole thing starts off with the faulty assumption that the government’s goal is to help consumers. It’s just another graft-filled boondoggle, funneling taxpayer money to special-interests that will return back as campaign donations.

gbaikie
October 1, 2021 5:55 pm

The reason human emit as much CO2 as do, to due to the stupid and evil politicians.
No politician has ever lowered CO2 emission.
No huge mass of Bureaucrats have likewise ever lower CO2 emission.
Politicians and bureaucrats have never done anything unless is helps them.
Their poetry and their pea brains are no better than the Vogons.
And the Vogons appear to be less willfully destructive and are better with their paper work
and their poetry more interesting.