Litcius/Paper detail

Energy Efficiency: What Has Research Delivered in the Last 40 Years?

Harry D. Saunders, Joyashree Roy, Inês M.L. Azevedo, Debalina Chakravarty, Shyamasree Dasgupta, Stéphane de la Rue du Can, Angela Druckman, Roger Fouquet, Michael Grubb, Boqiang Lin, Robert Lowe, Reinhard Madlener, Daire McCoy, Luis Mundaca, Tadj Oreszczyn, Steven Sorrell, David I. Stern, Kanako Tanaka, Taoyuan Wei

2021Annual Review of Environment and Resources92 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article presents a critical assessment of 40 years of research that may be brought under the umbrella of energy efficiency, spanning different aggregations and domains—from individual producing and consuming agents to economy-wide effects to the role of innovation to the influence of policy. After 40 years of research, energy efficiency initiatives are generally perceived as highly effective. Innovation has contributed to lowering energy technology costs and increasing energy productivity. Energy efficiency programs in many cases have reduced energy use per unit of economic output and have been associated with net improvements in welfare, emission reductions, or both. Rebound effects at the macro level still warrant careful policy attention, as they may be nontrivial. Complexity of energy efficiency dynamics calls for further methodological and empirical advances, multidisciplinary approaches, and granular data at the service level for research in this field to be of greatest societal benefit.

Topics & Concepts

Efficient energy useWarrantMultidisciplinary approachRebound effect (conservation)ProductivityEnvironmental economicsEconomicsPublic economicsWelfareEnergy (signal processing)Natural resource economicsBusinessMacroeconomicsEngineeringPolitical scienceStatisticsMarket economyMathematicsFinancial economicsElectrical engineeringLawEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesEnergy Efficiency and ManagementEnvironmental Impact and Sustainability