CO2-reduction and economic growth: can they go hand-in-hand?
Fearing a trade-off with economic growth, countries feel discouraged to cut their CO2 emissions. But do the two really not go together? Environmental scientist Ranran Wang and her colleagues investigated the relationship between economic growth and CO2 emissions in 73 countries from 1970 to 2016. Wang: ‘We also identified mechanisms by which countries drove down their CO2 emissions, especially during economic growth.’
Fearing a trade-off with economic growth, countries feel discouraged to cut their CO2 emissions. But do the two really not go together? Environmental scientist Ranran Wang and her colleagues investigated the relationship between economic growth and CO2 emissions in 73 countries from 1970 to 2016. Wang: ‘We also identified mechanisms by which countries drove down their CO2 emissions, especially during economic growth.’
5 CO2-reducing mechanisms
Fearing a trade-off with economic growth, countries feel discouraged to cut their CO2 emissions. But do the two really not go together? Environmental scientist Ranran Wang and her colleagues investigated the relationship between economic growth and CO2 emissions in 73 countries from 1970 to 2016. Wang: ‘We also identified mechanisms by which countries drove down their CO2 emissions, especially during economic growth.’
What and how? The five mechanisms explained
- Energy system decarbonisation: Replacing the fossil fuel energy sources by sources that emit far less carbon dioxide – such as wind, solar and nuclear energy. Also switching from oil and coal to natural gas (fuel switching) results in less carbon emission.
- Electrification: Replacing technologies that use fossil fuels with those that use electricity, for example replacing gas furnaces with heat pumps. Electrification improves energy efficiency, thereby reducing energy use.
- Increase in economic productivity: A measure of how efficiently production inputs are used to produce a given level of output. Fewer inputs of materials and energy often mean less CO2 emissions from making those materials and energy products.
- Deindustrialisation: When a country reduces its industrial capacity, the economic productions become less carbon-intensive, because agriculture and service activities are typically less carbon-intensive than industrial activities. Sidenote: When a country lowers its production, this often leads to the offshoring of production and increased trade. The subsequent emission effect remains controversial.
- Winter warming: Warmer winters due to climate change lead to less heating demand and thus reduced energy use and emissions.
'Increased productivity is crucial for economic growth, but also for CO2-reduction.'
Increased productivity key role in emission reduction
In developing countries, the most important reduction factor was an increase in economic productivity. ‘Increased productivity has been widely recognised as a fundamental driver of economic growth,’ says Valentina Assevona, assistant professor at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. ‘Now our findings reveal that it also plays an important role in reducing CO2 emissions. It explains around 47 per cent of the total emission reduction that developing countries achieved during the 2000s.’
In developed countries, energy decarbonisation was the dominant reduction mechanism. Since the 1970s, they have put more and more effort into sustainable, low carbon energy.
Growth must not be based on carbon
The findings can help underpin robust strategies for mitigating CO2 emissions. Edgar Hertwich, professor at the Norweigan University of Science and Technology: ‘Our research underlines that the effect of public policy on economic structure is indeed relevant for the climate. That’s something that is yet often not recognised.’
'As long as economic growth is based on fossil energy, it will keep increasing our emissions.'
‘As long as economic growth is based on fossil energy, it will keep increasing our emissions,’ Hertwich says. ‘So, that’s where we can make our greatest gains. It is crucial that we first move away from fossil fuels and electrify. Leading European countries have already shown that decarbonisation can go hand-in-hand with economic growth. However, we need to strengthen this effort substantially to reach the Paris climate target. We hope our research can contribute to that.’
Scientific paper
Wang, R.; Assenova, V.A. & Hertwich, E.G. Energy system decarbonization and productivity gains reduced the coupling of CO2 emissions and economic growth in 73 countries between 1970 and 2016. One Earth, 2021.
The research is a collaborative effort of Leiden University researcher Ranran Wang, Valentina Assevona, assistant professor at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, and Edgar Hertwich, International chair and Professor at Norweigan University of Science and Technology.