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"Energy Emergence: Rebound and Backfire as Emergent Phenomena" - Report Overview
"Energy Emergence: Rebound and Backfire as Emergent Phenomena" finds extensive evidence and a strong expert consensus that a large amount of the energy savings from below-cost energy efficiency are eroded by demand 'rebound effects,' and that in some cases the rebound exceeds the savings, resulting in increased energy consumption from efficiency, known as backfire. The report contains a comprehensive review of the expert literature.

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Energy_Emergence_Cover.jpgThere is a large expert consensus and strong evidence that below-cost energy efficiency measures drive a rebound in energy consumption that erodes much and in some cases all of the expected energy savings, concludes a new report by the Breakthrough Institute. "Energy Emergence: Rebound and Backfire as Emergent Phenomena" covers over 96 published journal articles and is one of the largest reviews of the peer-reviewed journal literature to date.

Readers in a hurry can download Breakthrough's PowerPoint demonstration here or download the full paper here. An introductory FAQ can be found here, and is a good starting point for readers interested in rebound effects.

In a statement accompanying the report, Breakthrough Institute founders Ted Nordhaus and Michael Shellenberger wrote, "Below-cost energy efficiency is critical for economic growth and should thus be aggressively pursued by governments and firms. However, it should no longer be considered a direct and easy way to reduce energy consumption or greenhouse gas emissions." The lead author of the new report is Jesse Jenkins, Breakthrough's Director of Energy and Climate Policy; Nordhaus and Shellenberger are co-authors.

The findings of the new report are significant because governments have in recent years relied heavily on energy efficiency measures as a means to cut greenhouse gases. "I think we have to have a strong push toward energy efficiency," said President Obama recently. "We know that's the low-hanging fruit, we can save as much as 30 percent of our current energy usage without changing our quality of life." While there is robust evidence for rebound in academic peer-reviewed journals, it has largely been ignored by major analyses, including the widely cited 2009 McKinsey and Co. study on the cost of reducing greenhouse gases.

The idea that increased energy efficiency can increase energy consumption at the macro-economic level strikes many as a new idea, or paradoxical, but it was first observed in 1865 by British economist William Stanley Jevons, who pointed out that Watt's more efficient steam engine and other technical improvements that increased the efficiency of coal consumption actually increased rather than decreased demand for coal. More efficient engines, Jevons argued, would increase future coal consumption by lowering the effective price of energy, thus spurring greater demand and opening up useful and profitable new ways to utilize coal. Jevons was proven right, and the reality of what is today known as "Jevons Paradox" has long been uncontroversial among economists.

Economists have long observed that increasing the productivity of any single factor of production -- whether labor, capital, or energy -- increases demand for all of those factors. This is one of the basic dynamics of economic growth. Luddites who feared there would be fewer jobs with the emergence of weaving looms were proved wrong by lower price for woven clothing and demand that has skyrocketed (and continued to increase) ever since. And today, no economist would posit that an X% improvement in labor productivity would lead directly to an X% reduction in employment. In fact, the opposite is widely expected: labor productivity is a chief driver of economic growth and thus increases in employment overall. There is no evidence, the report points out, that energy is any different, as per capita energy consumption everywhere on earth continues to rise, even as economies become more efficient each year.

But the idea that energy efficiency technologies could reduce macro-economic energy demand re-emerged in the 1970s as a message of anti-nuclear activists, most prominently Amory Lovins, who asserted that greater energy efficiency would obviate the need for new power plants. But the notion was immediately challenged by economists, and over the last 30 years there has emerged a large body of literally dozens of analyses conducted by economists and others documenting significant rebound in a variety of cases.

In a 2007 study commissioned by the British government, the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) conducted a similarly large review of the literature and the evidence for rebound, and came to a similar conclusion as the Breakthrough Institute's "Energy Emergence" report. "Rebound effects have been neglected by both experts and policymakers -- for example, they do not feature in the recent Stern and IPCC reports or in the Government's Energy White Paper," the paper concluded. "This is a mistake. If we do not make sufficient allowance for rebound effects, we will overestimate the contribution that energy efficiency can make to reducing carbon emissions."

The expert consensus and empirical evidence that efficiency causes large rebounds and backfire is mostly unknown in the United States, where scholars of rebound are mostly unknown academics whereas prominent efficiency consultants, such as Amory Lovins, are major media personalities. The idea that efficiency is not only a "free lunch" but also one that "you get paid to eat," in Lovins' words, has long had strong appeal to American politicians, business consultants, and environmental advocates resisting new power plants.

But the belief that energy efficiency could reduce overall energy consumption has been belied by history. In 1984 Lovins told Business Week, "We will never get, we suspect, to a high enough price to justify building centralized thermal power plants again. That era is over." But between 1984 and 2000 the U.S. went from consuming 2,400 billion kilowatt-hours in 1984 to 4,000 billion kilowatt-hours in 2000. The new central station power plants built to meet this surge in demand were overwhelmingly fueled by coal and natural gas, significantly increasing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.

Overall, the review of the literature concludes that rebound effects are significant and combine at an economy-wide level to erode much in and some cases all of the initially expected energy savings.

This means that energy and climate analysts and policymakers can no longer afford to assume that a simple, direct relationship exists between energy efficiency gains and declines in total energy consumption or greenhouse gas emissions.

"For every two steps forward we take with below cost efficiency, rebound effects mean we take one or more steps backwards, sometimes enough to completely erode the initial gains made," said Jesse Jenkins, the report's lead author.

The Breakthrough Institute points out that rebound effects could theoretically be mitigated by raising the price of energy, either through energy taxes or a carbon tax. Indeed, advocates of carbon pricing, such as Charles Komanoff of the Carbon Tax Center, point to energy rebound as reason to put in place carbon taxes.

Nordhaus and Shellenberger noted in their statement, "Rebound and backfire could be mitigated through raising the price of energy. However, given the tight relationship between energy consumption and economic growth, climate mitigation must focus on cutting the relationship between energy consumption and emissions, which means moving to low-cost, zero-carbon energy sources."

Efficiency advocates have been challenged before on this issue and often attempt to distract attention away from how much rebound there is by saying things like, "nobody will vacuum more because their vacuum cleaner is more efficient," or "people won't drive their Prius much more because the cost of gas per mile is low." But this misses the big picture. At a macro- and global level, greater efficiency can signficantly increase overall energy consumption, in some cases by over 100 percent, which is known as "backfire."

While academics and efficiency advocates in the United States have largely ignored rebound effects and shunned a serious academic study of the subject, research into rebound mechanisms has progressed significantly in the last decade, much of it originating in Europe.

This growing body of evidence indicates that the highest "rebound" in energy use from efficiency occurs not at the consumer level but in the productive sectors of the economy (industry and commerce), which consume 2/3 of the energy used by the economy. A homeowner who makes his home more efficient may not increase the temperature that much simply because electricity is cheaper. But improving the efficiency of a steel plant may result in lower cost of steel, greater demand for steel, and also create greater economic growth -- all of which will drive significant rebound in energy use following efficiency improvements.

Notably, there has been a strong effort by the international community to help developing nations like China adopt more energy-efficient technology. While this is good for China's rapid economic growth, there is also strong evidence to suggest that rebound effects may be greatest in the developing world, where demand for energy services are far from saturated even at the consumer level, and where increases in the supply of energy and energy services are key drivers and enablers of economic growth. Efficiency efforts in rapidly developing nations will improve economic welfare, but may ultimately increase rather than decrease how much energy emerging economies like China would have used without the efficiency measures.

The Breakthrough Institute report title refers to the argument in the paper that rebound and backfire should be considered 'emergent phenomena,' meaning higher order effects resulting from the complex interaction of multifold individual components and the combination of multiple non-linear and reinforcing effects. In this way, energy demand rebound is similar to other emergent phenomenon, including anthropogenic climate change, evolution by natural selection, and economic growth.

Rebound effects work through clearly understood economic phenomenon. Efficiency measures reduce the price of the goods and services derived from energy, and economic actors respond in a variety of ways to changing prices:

  • First, they consume more of an energy service as it's price falls in order to increase production (at a business or industry) or improve their welfare (at a consumer level). A direct output/income effect.

  • Second, particularly among producers, economic actors will re-arrange the services and goods they consume to attain a given level of output or welfare by substituting now cheaper energy services for other goods and services (like materials, labor, or capital). A direct substitution effect

  • Third, any remaining savings in energy costs will be re-spent throughout the economy, increasing demand for goods and services that in turn rely on energy to provide. An indirect re-spending effect.

  • Fourth, the energy efficiency upgrades themselves requires energy to produce and install, offsetting some of the energy savings. An indirect embodied energy effect.

  • Fifth, at a macro-economic level, energy efficiency improves the productivity of the economy -- we get more output from a given level of energy inputs -- and productivity is a key driver of economic growth, which in turn drives up energy demand. A macroeconomic growth effect.

  • And a series of ripple effects occur throughout the economy as producers and consumers respond to changes in the relative price of various goods and services following widespread improvements in efficiency. Macroeconomic composition and market price effects.

The new report surveys the academic literature and evidence for the scale of each of these rebound mechanisms and discusses numerous methods of inquiry into the full scale of rebound effects at the global, economy-wide scope most pertinent to climate mitigation concerns.

Download the full report here.

Download a PowerPoint briefing on the report here

Contact Jesse Jenkins, Michael Shellenberger, or Ted Nordhaus with inquiries.

See Also:

Selected news coverage of "Energy Emergence"

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TrackBacks (0) 5 COMMENTS:

"The most obvious rebuttal to �rebound effect� claims is the performance of the US economy since the early 1970�s: Between 1973 and 2009, US economic production more than tripled even as total US energy use increased by less than a third. If �rebound effect� advocates were right, that record would have been flatly impossible, since savings in energy use would be offset by activities that demand energy, keeping energy use trends in lockstep with economic growth (just as they were for the first three decades after World War II)."
- David Goldstein in Climate Progress:

http://climateprogress.org/2011/02/23/energy-efficiency-and-the-rebound-effect/#more-43048

There is a technology documented http;//ap.py.com/ dubbed AP for Anthropogenic Peat designed to control Global Warming (GW) due to the level of carbon dioxide in the air. AP disregards emission rate but removes the gas to control level. In the development we noted that the population of Earth is increasing to 9+ billion (read more emitters) and living standards (read energy consumption) are on the rise all over, especially in traditionally low-standard areas like China and India. These are predictive statements, not historic, but we match your concerns. Where we differ is on the need to have zero emission sources to control GW; we feel that the market should determine if sources flourish and we should control the environment by direct removal. AP can be done quickly, cheaply and effectively (at any CO2 level), giving a lot of cheap renewable methane as a by-product. Take a look - you might find it very attractive.

@JCL, you may be interested in Steve Sorrell's reply to David Goldstein. Mr Sorrell has published numerous papers on the rebound effect and led an extensive survey of the empirical research and modeling analysis into rebound effects for the UK Energy Research Center, commissioned by the UK government. In reply to the post you quote from, Mr Sorrell writes:

David - this blog is confrontational and seriously misleading.

... [T]he claim that the Breakthrough Institute "fails to back up its accusations with facts" is plain wrong. Their report is based upon a large volume of empirical evidence in the academic literature. I reviewed this a few years ago - (http://www.ukerc.ac.uk/support/tiki-index.php?page=ReboundEffect) - and the Breakthrough report brings this up to date. This evidence is patchy and complex, but certainly does NOT show that rebound effects are always "trivially small" .

...[C]iting examples such as California does not 'refute' the argument that in some cases rebound effects have been and will be large. Multiple factors contribute to aggregate trends in energy consumption and as anyone who has tried to do 'serious studies' will know, establishing the causal links (and estimating the size of any rebound effects) is extremely challenging.

Finally, this topic needs intelligent and careful research to help us understand it better, to improve the quantitative estimates, to reduce the uncertainties and to figure out what we can do in
response. Simply dismissing it out of hand will get us nowhere.

In short, there are many contributors to economic growth, including improvements in energy intensity (aka productivity) itself. And the energy intensity trends Goldstein cites are by no means evidence that rebound effects are not operative in the economy. We actually delve into efforts to look at historic energy intensity trends like this to explore rebound in the "Energy Emergence" report (see pages 28-30), and point out that there are several inherent challenges to this methodology.

Great article! Very well researched. It exposes the short sighted misinformation we are fed on a daily basis by either uneducated people or people with alternate, negative agenda.
Keep up the good work in exposing the truth.
Thank you.

I think I found the main reason for the argument, that counting the energy uses required to deliver what money buys runs into a large natural blind spot making it naturally impossible to count them individually. The global average energy footprint of money itself, is about 8000btu/$GDP globally.

Almost no one seems to realize we need to count that, since we have no other source of information. If you try to trace energy uses individually, it's easy to just give up... because we "like" to be precise in counting things, and money generally leaves no energy receipts to count. Even when it does leave some receipts to count, the information is so fragmentary it seems not worth the struggle. That lack of information can be shown to result in our normally missing 80% of our energy uses... i.e. a quite large error.

I solved that problem fairly well I think, realizing that counting only the energy uses you can specifically trace results in effectively counting the others you can't trace as "zero"... Assuming that the energy footprint of money is "about average", rather than "zero" when you have no specific information about it, gives you far more accurate totals.

Systems Energy Assessment (SEA), published in the Cornell physics archive [arXiv:1104.3570v1] as http://arxiv.org/abs/1104.3570v1 pending issue of Charlie Hall's issue for Sustainability


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