An Analysis of Three Decades of Increasing Carbon Emissions: The Weight of the P Factor

Author:

Tamburino Lucia1ORCID,Cafaro Philip2ORCID,Bravo Giangiacomo34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Globally Distributed Open Research and Education (IGDORE), 35195 Växjö, Sweden

2. Department of Philosophy, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80525, USA

3. Department of Social Studies, Linnaeus University, 35195 Växjö, Sweden

4. Center for Data Intensive Sciences and Applications, Linnaeus University, 35195 Växjö, Sweden

Abstract

A dominant narrative in the climate change debate is that addressing population is not relevant for mitigation because population is only growing in the poorest countries, whose contribution to global carbon emissions is negligible, while the largest contribution comes from rich countries where the population no longer grows. We conducted an analysis of 30 years of emission data for all world countries showing that this narrative is misleading. Splitting the countries into four income groups according to the World Bank’s standard classification, we found that: (i) population is growing in all four groups; (ii) low-income countries’ contribution to emissions increase is indeed limited; (iii) the largest contribution to global carbon emissions comes from the upper-middle group; (iv) population growth is the main driver of emissions increase in all income groups except the upper-middle one; (v) the successful reduction in per capita emissions that occurred in high-income countries was nullified by the parallel increase in population in the same group. Our analysis suggests that climate change mitigation strategies should address population along with per capita consumption and technological innovation, in a comprehensive approach to the problem.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Geography, Planning and Development,Building and Construction

Reference49 articles.

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