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Quantifying the global and distributional aspects of American household carbon footprint

Authors :
H. Scott Matthews
Christopher L. Weber
Source :
Ecological Economics. 66:379-391
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

Analysis of household consumption and its environmental impact remains one of the most important topics in sustainability research. Nevertheless, much past and recent work has focused on domestic national averages, neglecting both the growing importance of international trade on household carbon footprint and the variation between households of different income levels and demographics. Using consumer expenditure surveys and multi-country life cycle assessment techniques, this paper analyzes the global and distributional aspects of American household carbon footprint. We find that due to recently increased international trade, 30% of total US household CO 2 impact in 2004 occurred outside the US. Further, households vary considerably in their CO 2 responsibilities: at least a factor of ten difference exists between low and high-impact households, with total household income and expenditure being the best predictors of both domestic and international portions of the total CO 2 impact. The global location of emissions, which cannot be calculated using standard input–output analysis, and the variation of household impacts with income, have important ramifications for polices designed to lower consumer impacts on climate change, such as carbon taxes. The effectiveness and fairness of such policies hinges on a proper understanding of how income distributions, rebound effects, and international trade affect them.

Details

ISSN :
09218009
Volume :
66
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecological Economics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........707a47cdd2f29e9c23e24efbf2b35b14