温室气体
化石燃料
可再生能源
自然资源经济学
减缓气候变化
气候变化
可再生燃料
环境科学
低碳经济
碳纤维
发射强度
无组织排放
废物管理
经济
工程类
复合数
电气工程
生物
复合材料
激发
材料科学
生态学
作者
Jason Hill,Liaila Tajibaeva,Stephen Polasky
出处
期刊:Energy Policy
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2016-08-03
卷期号:97: 351-353
被引量:44
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.enpol.2016.07.035
摘要
A common strategy for reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from energy use is to increase the supply of low-carbon alternatives. However, increasing supply tends to lower energy prices, which encourages additional fuel consumption. This "fuel market rebound effect" can undermine climate change mitigation strategies, even to the point where efforts to reduce GHG emissions by increasing the supply of low-carbon fuels may actually result in increased GHG emissions. Here, we explore how policies that encourage the production of low-carbon fuels may result in increased GHG emissions because the resulting increase in energy use overwhelms the benefits of reduced carbon intensity. We describe how climate change mitigation strategies should follow a simple rule: a low-carbon fuel with a carbon intensity of X% that of a fossil fuel must displace at least X% of that fossil fuel to reduce overall GHG emissions. We apply this rule to the United States Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS2). We show that absent consideration of the fuel market rebound effect, RFS2 appears to reduce GHG emissions, but once the fuel market rebound effect is factored in, RFS2 actually increases GHG emissions when all fuel GHG intensity targets are met.
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