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Much broader than health: Surveying the diverse co-benefits of energy demand reduction in Europe

Owen Finn, Paul E. Brockway

2022Energy Research & Social Science27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Demand-side energy reduction measures that aim to reduce energy usage are an effective tool in reducing greenhouse gas emissions as part of a net zero emissions push in Europe. However, often barriers within policymaking hinder deployment. Co-benefits - the secondary benefits of climate change mitigation action - offer an opportunity to reframe energy reduction as financially advantageous and also address a wide range of other policy goals. In support, we survey the type, frequency, and scale of energy demand reduction (EDR) co-benefits in Europe, and assess how these co-benefits can be accounted for in future EDR policymaking. We conduct a review of co-benefits associated with EDR literature. From 53 selected papers, 86 unique co-benefits are identified across five different categories: Health, Energy Security, Economy, Social, and Environment. Economic co-benefits represent the highest proportion. Health/environmental impacts of air quality are the most cited individual co-benefit. While quantification methodology is discussed frequently, only a fifth of the papers attempt primary quantification of energy reduction co-benefits, with most of those concerned only with air quality. Lastly, a matrix framework is developed that conveys quantifiability and required timescales for key individual co-benefits. We propose a four-step plan for improving the use of co-benefits, deepening the evidence base to improve climate change mitigation policy: (1) Work on standardisation of co-benefit terms to aid understanding and quantification, (2) Greater focus on cross-disciplinary co-benefit research to avoid research siloes, (3) Greater research on primary quantification of EDR co-benefits to establish functional methodologies and raise awareness of policymakers, and (4) Given high barriers to entry on co-benefits, greater efforts are needed to take co-benefits to policy-makers.

Topics & Concepts

Cognitive reframingGreenhouse gasEnvironmental economicsWork (physics)Climate change mitigationHealth benefitsSoftware deploymentClimate changeAction planEfficient energy useBaseline (sea)BusinessEnvironmental resource managementEconomicsEngineeringPolitical scienceTraditional medicineBiologySocial psychologyElectrical engineeringManagementEcologySoftware engineeringPsychologyLawMechanical engineeringMedicineEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityGlobal Energy and Sustainability Research
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