Topic
Rebound effect (conservation)
About: Rebound effect (conservation) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 773 publications have been published within this topic receiving 25741 citations.
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TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the existence of energy intensity convergence while incorporating foreign direct investment (FDI) and found that the spillover effect of FDI plays an important role in this formation.
82 citations
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TL;DR: A review of eight studies, mainly on current and future US biofuel policies, provides insights in the current state of research into this topic, showing a wide range of values of the rebound effect of biofuel use, depending among others on the biofuel policy, the applied method and the model parameter assumptions as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: An important objective of the mandated blending of biofuel in conventional gasoline and diesel in the EU is reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. An important assumption thereby is that biofuels replace the production and consumption of oil. However, recent literature challenges this assumption, because an increased use of biofuels will lower oil prices and therefore result in increase crude oil consumption. This so-called rebound effect offsets the expected GHG emission saving effects of using biofuels. A review of eight studies, mainly on current and future US biofuel policies, provides insights in the current state of research into this topic, showing a wide range of values of the rebound effect of biofuel use, depending among others on the biofuel policy, the applied method and the model parameter assumptions. Generally, estimated rebound effects are negative in the country where biofuel use is being promoted (i.e. the use of 1 unit of biofuel reduces oil consumption by less than 1 unit; units on energy basis). The rebound effects in other countries are always positive (biofuel use reduces oil consumption by less than 1 unit so the total fuel consumption is increasing). The net global rebound effect is usually positive, which means that GHG emissions savings are not achieved as much as usually is assumed, or emissions may even increase. Own estimations with the global MAGNET computable general equilibrium model indicate a global rebound effect of the 10% biofuel blend mandate in the EU in the year 2020 of 22–30% (i.e. the use of 1 unit of biofuel reduces global oil consumption by 0.78–0.70 units). This means that GHG emissions will not be reduced as much as usually is assumed, or may even increase. These results show that rebound effects can significantly lower the effectiveness of biofuel policies in reducing GHG emissions.
80 citations
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TL;DR: This article analyzed the impact of fuel economy standards and fuel prices on new-car fuel economy with the aid of cross-section time series analysis of data from 18 countries and found that standards have induced considerable fuel savings throughout the world, although their welfare impact is not examined here.
80 citations
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TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors examined whether increases in energy efficiency of major household items cause additional short-run utilization of these end uses and other end uses for households in Beijing, and an integrated model was first developed by combining a Logit model and a resource allocation model, where the former represents the choice of end-use ownership and the latter describes the end use usage.
79 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse the rebound effect from increased efficiency in industrial energy use in Sweden and show that energy efficiency improvements can have significant micro-and macroeconomic impact on Sweden.
78 citations