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Social outcomes of energy use in the United Kingdom: Household energy footprints and their links to well-being

Marta Baltruszewicz, J. Steinberger, Jouni Paavola, Diana Ivanova, Lina Brand-Correa, Anne Owen

2022Ecological Economics66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

How energy relates to human need satisfaction, for whom, and with what wellbeing outcomes has remained under-researched. We address this gap by investigating the relationship between household energy footprint and well-being in the UK. Our results indicate that car and air transportation contributed the most to the total energy footprint of high-income and high-energy users. We find significant inequalities in the distribution of energy use and that the top energy users with high well-being are driving excess energy use. A more detailed analysis reveals that individuals with protected characteristics are particularly vulnerable to energy poverty and that their contribution to overall energy demand is negligible. We find that focusing on well-being steers the attention towards questions of sufficiency, overconsumption as well as the context within which we satisfy needs. Tackling the issues of energy poverty and inequalities are important for lowering energy demand and need to be addressed as a matter of climate justice.

Topics & Concepts

OverconsumptionEnergy povertyEnergy (signal processing)Context (archaeology)FootprintEconomicsPovertyEcological footprintPublic economicsInequalityNatural resource economicsEnergy consumptionDistribution (mathematics)Environmental economicsDemographic economicsEconomic growthSustainabilityGeographyMicroeconomicsEcologyProduction (economics)Panacea (medicine)Mathematical analysisMedicineBiologyStatisticsPathologyArchaeologyAlternative medicineMathematicsEnergy and Environment ImpactsEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesEnvironmental Education and Sustainability