articleAnnual Review of Environment and ResourcesSep 12, 2016Closed access

Carbon Lock-In: Types, Causes, and Policy Implications

Yale University · University of California, Irvine · +3 more institutions

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Abstract

Existing technologies, institutions, and behavioral norms together act to constrain the rate and magnitude of carbon emissions reductions in the coming decades. The inertia of carbon emissions due to such mutually reinforcing physical, economic, and social constraints is referred to as carbon lock-in. Carbon lock-in is a special case of path dependency, which is common in the evolution of complex systems. However, carbon lock-in is particularly prone to entrenchment given the large capital costs, long infrastructure lifetimes, and interrelationships between the socioeconomic and technical systems involved. Further, the urgency of efforts to avoid dangerous climate change exacerbates the liability of even small…

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Authors

6

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Lock (firearm)
  • Carbon fibers
  • Dependency (UML)
  • Greenhouse gas
  • Set (abstract data type)
  • Climate change
  • Scale (ratio)
  • Environmental economics
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