Past production constrains current energy demands: persistent scaling in global energy consumption and implications for climate change mitigation
Timothy J. Garrett, Matheus R. Grasselli, Stephen Keen

TL;DR
This study reveals a persistent scaling law linking historical economic production to current energy use, highlighting the inertia in energy consumption growth and implications for climate change mitigation strategies.
Contribution
It uncovers a stable empirical relationship between accumulated economic output and energy consumption, emphasizing the role of past innovation over population in driving growth.
Findings
Energy consumption scales with historical economic production.
Population growth is a symptom, not a cause, of energy demand.
Decarbonization or a steady-state economy are necessary for climate goals.
Abstract
Climate change has become intertwined with the global economy. Here, we describe the importance of inertia to continued growth in energy consumption. Drawing from thermodynamic arguments, and using 38 years of available statistics between 1980 to 2017, we find a persistent time-independent scaling between the historical time integral of world inflation-adjusted economic production , or , and current rates of world primary energy consumption , such that Gigawatts per trillion 2010 US dollars. This empirical result implies that population expansion is a symptom rather than a cause of the current exponential rise in and carbon dioxide emissions , and that it is past innovation of economic production efficiency that has been the primary driver of growth,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Energy and Sustainability Research
