4.7 Review

What is the state of the art in energy and transport poverty metrics? A critical and comprehensive review

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 101, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105360

Keywords

Fuel; Energy; Poverty; Metrics; Energy justice; Operationalise; Just transition

Categories

Funding

  1. Northern Ireland Department for the Economy
  2. Collaborative REsearch of Decentralization, ElectrificatioN, Communications and Economics (CREDENCE) project
  3. US-Ireland Department for the Economy (DfE)
  4. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
  5. National Science Foundation (NSF)
  6. Research and Development Partnership Program (Centre to Centre) award [USI 110]
  7. Bryden Centre project
  8. European Union
  9. UK Research and Innovation through the Centre for Research into Energy Demand Solutions [EP/R035288/1]

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This review examines the latest developments in evaluation metrics used in energy and transport poverty, highlighting the challenge of unifying indicators in these areas. The inability to establish travel standards limits the potential to unify indicators in both fields and simultaneously alleviate these two forms of poverty.
This review investigates the state of the art in metrics used in energy (or fuel) and transport poverty with a view to assessing how these overlapping concepts may be unified in their measurement. Our review contributes to ongoing debates over decarbonisation, a politically sensitive and crucial aspect of the energy transition, and one that could exacerbate patterns of inequality or vulnerability. Up to 125 million people across the European Union experience the effects of energy poverty in their daily lives. A more comprehensive understanding of the breadth and depth of these conditions is therefore paramount. This review assessed 1,134 articles and critically analysed a deeper sample of 93. In terms of the use of metrics, we find that multiple indicators are better than any single metric or composite. We find work remains to be conducted in the transport poverty sphere before energy poverty metrics can be fully unified with those of transport poverty, namely the stipulation of travel standards. Without such standards, our ability to unify the metrics of both fields and potentially alleviate both conditions simultaneously is limited. The difficulties in defining necessary travel necessitate the further use of vulnerability lenses and holistic assessments focused on energy and transport services.

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