323 research outputs found

    Consumption-based accounting of U.S. CO2 emissions from 1990 to 2010

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    To tackle global climate change, it is desirable to reduce CO2 emissions associated with household consumption in particular in developed countries, which tend to have much higher per capita household carbon footprints than less developed countries. Our results show that carbon intensity of different consumption categories in the U.S. varies significantly. The carbon footprint tends to increase with increasing income but at a decreasing rate due to additional income being spent on less carbon intensive consumption items. This general tendency is frequently compensated by higher frequency of international trips and higher housing related carbon emissions (larger houses and more space for consumption items). Our results also show that more than 30% of CO2 emissions associated with household consumption in the U.S. occur outside of the U.S. Given these facts, the design of carbon mitigation policies should take changing household consumption patterns and international trade into account

    What to expect from a greater geographic dispersion of wind farms? - A risk portfolio approach

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    The UK, like many other industrialised countries, is committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions under the Kyoto Protocol. To achieve this goal the UK is increasingly turning towards wind power as a source of emissions free energy. However, the variable nature of wind power generation makes it an unreliable energy source, especially at higher rates of penetration. Likewise the aim of this paper is to measure the potential reduction in wind power variability that could be realised as a result of geographically dispersing the location of wind farm sites. To achieve this aim wind speed data will be used to simulate two scenarios. The first scenario involves locating a total of 2.7 gigawatts (GW) of wind power capacity in a single location within the UK while the second scenario consists of sharing the same amount of capacity amongst four different locations. A risk portfolio approach as used in financial appraisals is then applied in the second scenario to decide upon the allocation of wind power capacity, amongst the four wind farm sites, that succeeds in minimising overall variability for a given level of wind power generation. The findings of this paper indicate that reductions in the order of 36% in wind power variability are possible as a result of distributing wind power capacity

    Corrigendum to “In the fight against climate change, did the financial sector cut secular ties with the oil industry or merely camouflage them?”

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    The authors regret &lt; To have inserted a wrong citation at page 5 for the report: Five Years Lost – How the Finance Industry is Blowing the Paris Carbonbudget. The correct source is Urgewald (2020). This mistake was signaled by the NGO Urgewald&gt;. The authors would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused. Correct reference: Urgewald, 2020. Five Years Lost Report: How Finance is Blowing the Pari Carbon Budget. Available at: https://www.urgewald.org/five-years-lost. Accessed on October 19, 2023.</p

    In the fight against climate change, did the financial sector cut secular ties with the oil industry or merely camouflage them?

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    At a time when the links that bind the oil industry – both corporate and state-owned - to finance and governments seemed inextricable and unquestionable, some major changes have occurred that have prompted major financial players and governments to seek a separation strategy. From the Paris Agreement to the change of administration in the United States, the wind suddenly seems to be blowing in the opposite direction, and many banks change course. The UN-convened Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) is one prominent example of this new trend. However, banks are only one part of this complex and varied landscape of global finance, which, among institutional investors, includes investment funds, hedge funds, mutual funds, insurance funds, pension plans and ETFs (exchange-traded funds). Despite the promise to divest or reduce investments, global finance still holds profound ties with the fossil fuel sector. The high energy prices due to the war in the Ukraine and concerns over energy security are seemingly strengthening these ties. We provide an insight of the complexity of these interlinkages and explain to what extent the domain of public governance is trying to exert (still insufficient) control over the financial sector under the scope of climate mitigation policies.</p

    The Unintended Side Effects of Bioplastics:Carbon, Land, and Water Footprints

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    The environmental impacts of plastics have become an important political and academic topic. One of the main applications of plastics is packaging, a product with a very short service life, leading to a wide range of environmental problems. In this Perspective, we look at the potential environmental consequences (in terms of greenhouse gas emissions and land and water footprints) of substitution of petrochemical plastics used for packaging in Europe with bioplastics. The research is based on a review of life cycle impact assessment studies and additional calculations to assess the footprints of this substitution. The results demonstrate that currently it does not seem feasible to replace all the petrochemical plastic packaging with bioplastic because this will inevitably result in a considerable increase of land and water use. Unless we find ways to decrease plastic demand, most of the efforts to stop plastic pollution are likely to prove temporary and inadequate

    Corrigendum to “In the fight against climate change, did the financial sector cut secular ties with the oil industry or merely camouflage them?”

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    The authors regret &lt; To have inserted a wrong citation at page 5 for the report: Five Years Lost – How the Finance Industry is Blowing the Paris Carbonbudget. The correct source is Urgewald (2020). This mistake was signaled by the NGO Urgewald&gt;. The authors would like to apologise for any inconvenience caused. Correct reference: Urgewald, 2020. Five Years Lost Report: How Finance is Blowing the Pari Carbon Budget. Available at: https://www.urgewald.org/five-years-lost. Accessed on October 19, 2023.</p

    Household carbon inequality in the U.S

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    Household carbon emissions are mainly affected by income and other key demographic factors. Understanding the contribution of these factors can inform climate responsibilities and potential demand side climate mitigation strategies. By linking US consumer expenditure survey data with a nested national within a global multi-regional input-output model, this study estimates consumption-based GHG emissions for 9 income groups and assesses the carbon inequality in the US for 2015. Our results show that the per capita carbon footprint (CF) of the highest income group (200 thousand USD per year) with 32.3 tons is about 2.6 times the per capita CF of the lowest income group

    Erratum:The Unintended Side Effects of Bioplastics: Carbon, Land, and Water Footprints (One Earth (2020) 3(1) (45–53), (S2590332220303055), (10.1016/j.oneear.2020.06.016))

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    (One Earth 3, 45–53, July 24, 2020) In the originally published version of this article, the authors inadvertently used global volumes of bioplastics in plastic packaging instead of European volumes for Figure 1C. After noticing this, the authors recalculated European bioplastic packaging consumption, and as such, Figure 1 and its legend have been corrected in the online article (as shown below) to reflect all data sources used for estimating European bioplastic volumes in Figure 1C. In the Experimental Procedures, the Data and Code Availability section has been updated, and the section “Estimation of European Bioplastic Volumes” has been added. Additionally, reference 69 is new, and two incorrect citations of a Table 3 (which is not present in the article) have been changed to Figure 2 and Table 2 on pages 49 and 51, respectively. These changes do not affect the conclusions of the article because Figure 1 is not used in later calculations; it is rather an illustrative description of the role of bioplastics in the current European packaging market. The authors sincerely apologize to readers for any confusion that may have resulted from this oversight. [Figure presented] [Figure presented
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