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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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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the energy efficiency and rebound effects for road freight transport in 15 European countries during the 1992-2012 period and found that the rebound effect is higher in countries with higher fuel efficiency and better quality of logistics.
Abstract: Energy efficiency has become a primary energy policy goal in Europe and many countries and has conditioned the policies towards energy-intensive sectors such as road freight transport. However, energy efficiency improvements can lead to changes in the demand for energy services that offset some of the achieved energy savings in the form of rebound effects. Consequently, forecasts of energy savings can be overstated. This paper analyses the energy efficiency and rebound effects for road freight transport in 15 European countries during the 1992–2012 period. We use a recent methodology to estimate an energy demand function using a stochastic frontier analysis approach and examine the influence of key features of rebound effect in the road freight transport sector. We obtain, on average, a fuel efficiency of 89% and a rebound effect of 4%. Our results indicate that the achieved energy efficiencies are retained to a large extent. We also find, among other results, that the rebound effect is higher in countries with higher fuel efficiency and better quality of logistics. Finally, a simulation analysis shows significant environmental externalities costs even in countries with lower rebound effect.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jan 2016-Energy
TL;DR: In this paper, Allibe, Allibe et al. made data on French houses available for use in this paper, and the authors wish to thank Benoit Allibe and Marie-Helen Laurent and Jean-Narie Cayla of Electricite de France for making data available.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the cause-and-effect logic between energy efficiency and energy consumption in ICT/electronics, and tentatively estimates rebound effects ranging between 115% and 161% in eight diverse empirical examples.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the time use rebound effects of reducing working time and found that time savings due to a reduction in working time trigger relevant rebound effects in terms of resource use.
Abstract: A reduction in working hours is being considered to tackle issues associated with ecological sustainability, social equity and enhanced life satisfaction—a so-called triple dividend. With respect to an environmental dividend, the authors analyse the time use rebound effects of reducing working time. They explore how an increase in leisure time triggers a rearrangement of time and expenditure budgets, and thus the use of resources in private households. Does it hold true that time-intensive activities replace resource-intensive consumption when people have more discretionary time at their disposal? This study on environmental issues is complemented by introducing the parameters of voluntary social engagement and individual life satisfaction as potential co-benefits of rebound effects. In order to analyse the first dividend, a mixed methods approach is adopted, enabling two models of time use rebound effects to be applied. First, semi-standardised interviews reveal that environmentally ambiguous substitutions of activities occur following a reduction in working hours. Second, estimates for Germany from national surveys on time use and expenditure show composition effects of gains in leisure time and income loss. For the latter, we estimate the marginal propensity to consume and the marginal propensity to time use. The results show that time savings due to a reduction in working time trigger relevant rebound effects in terms of resource use. However, both the qualitative and quantitative findings put the rebound effects following a reduction in working time into perspective. Time use rebound effects lead to increased voluntary social engagement and greater life satisfaction, the second and third dividends.

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Based on the translog cost function, the magnitude of rebound effect in China's light industry was estimated for the first time using the dynamic ordinary least squares and seemingly unrelated regression methods as discussed by the authors.

53 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202320
202268
202166
202061
201967
201860