articleProceedings of the National Academy of SciencesOct 27, 2009Closed access

Household actions can provide a behavioral wedge to rapidly reduce US carbon emissions

Michigan State University · University of Michigan–Dearborn · +3 more institutions

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Abstract

Most climate change policy attention has been addressed to long-term options, such as inducing new, low-carbon energy technologies and creating cap-and-trade regimes for emissions. We use a behavioral approach to examine the reasonably achievable potential for near-term reductions by altered adoption and use of available technologies in US homes and nonbusiness travel. We estimate the plasticity of 17 household action types in 5 behaviorally distinct categories by use of data on the most effective documented interventions that do not involve new regulatory measures. These interventions vary by type of action and typically combine several policy tools and strong social marketing. National implementation could…

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Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychological intervention
  • Natural resource economics
  • Greenhouse gas
  • Environmental economics
  • Climate change
  • Business
  • Term (time)
  • Metric (unit)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Climate action
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