Litcius/Paper detail

Banning fossil fuel cars and boilers in Switzerland: Mitigation potential, justice, and the social structure of the vulnerable

Alexandre Torné, Evelina Trutnevyte

2023Energy Research & Social Science13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite many policy instruments to mitigate climate change, literature on distributional justice has mainly focused on carbon taxes. We focus on two regulatory instruments that could speed up climate change mitigation in Switzerland: banning the use of fossil fuel cars and boilers in the residential sector. By merging data from Swiss Household Budget Survey, Mobility and Transport Microcensus, and Swiss Household Energy Demand Survey, we quantify the mitigation potential and distributional justice of various ban designs. We find that, in general, the bans that target more emissions are more egalitarian (i.e. achieve a more equal distribution of vulnerabilities), but less just under the utilitarian, Rawlsian difference, and sufficientarian principles. Under these three principles, the best compromise between mitigation potential and justice is to include exemptions for the lowest income households. An alternative could be more ambitious bans to maximize mitigation potential while compensating for the most vulnerable households. For selected ban designs, we identify which household groups would be most vulnerable and retrieve specific cases of hardship.

Topics & Concepts

Economic JusticeClimate change mitigationEnvironmental justiceDistribution (mathematics)Climate justicePublic economicsCompromiseClimate changeBusinessNatural resource economicsFossil fuelEconomicsEnvironmental economicsPolitical scienceLawEngineeringEcologyWaste managementMathematical analysisBiologyMathematicsEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesClimate Change Policy and EconomicsEconomic and Environmental Valuation