4.7 Article

Decent living gaps and energy needs around the world

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac1c27

Keywords

decent living; energy; poverty; human needs; climate; equity

Funding

  1. AXIS
  2. FORMAS
  3. FFG/BMWFW [871994]
  4. DLR/BMBF [01LS1907A-BC]
  5. NWO
  6. RCN
  7. European Union [776608]
  8. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/S007415/1]

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This study evaluates the gaps in providing decent living standards (DLS) globally and estimates the energy requirements to support DLS for all by 2040. The results suggest that the rate of increase in energy needed to provide decent living for all in the coming two decades would be unprecedented for many countries. Different countries have varying per capita energy requirements for achieving the same DLS levels, with transport energy dominating energy expenditure for decent living worldwide.
In recent years, there has been growing interest in defining what exactly constitutes decent living standards (DLS)-the material underpinnings of human well-being. We assess the gaps in providing decent health, shelter, nutrition, socialization, and mobility within countries, across the world. Our results show that more people are deprived of DLS than are income-poor, even when numbers are measured against medium income poverty thresholds. We estimate the cumulative energy needs for building out new infrastructure to support DLS provision for all by 2040 to be about 290 EJ, which amounts to less than three-quarters of current annual global energy demand, at the final energy level. The annual energy requirements to support decent living for the global population after 2040 is estimated to be 156 EJ yr(-1). Present average energy demand levels in most countries exceed hypothetical DLS energy needs. Nevertheless, the required rate of increase in energy to provide decent living for all in the coming two decades would be unprecedented for many countries. Greater attention to equity would significantly reduce the need for growth. The per capita energy requirement of different countries to meet the same DLS levels varies by up to a factor of four due to differences in climate, urbanization, diets, and transport infrastructure. Transport energy dominates energy for decent living worldwide, while housing requirements dominate upfront energy investment needs. This study supports the claim that the increase in energy provision poverty eradication does not, in itself, pose a threat to mitigating climate change at a global scale. Distinguishing energy for affluence from energy for decent living could provide a basis for defining equitable access to sustainable development in energy terms.

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