Energy use analysis in the presence of quality of life, poverty, health, and carbon dioxide emissions

Access to clean energy has a positive impact on societies, whereas excessive extraction of fossil fuels along with population growth, traps the world into serious problems. Global energy strategy is a manner to find a balance between positive and negative impacts of energy on societies, especially t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy (Oxford) 2018-06, Vol.153, p.671-684
Hauptverfasser: Nadimi, Reza, Tokimatsu, Koji
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description Access to clean energy has a positive impact on societies, whereas excessive extraction of fossil fuels along with population growth, traps the world into serious problems. Global energy strategy is a manner to find a balance between positive and negative impacts of energy on societies, especially their quality of life. This paper proposes a framework to choose a decent global energy strategy in the presence of five factors including final energy consumption, quality of life, poverty, health, and carbon dioxide emissions. The core of the framework is “Trade-off Analysis”, which its outputs are analyzed by three defined scenarios in the presence of total population. According to the results, mitigation of carbon dioxide emissions and preservation of the natural energy sources are two factors with a higher priority to encourage developed countries to reduce energy consumption. In case of developing countries, in addition to the two previous factors, the poverty and quality of life are next priorities. For pre-developing countries, the first priority is poverty reduction, then health and quality of life improvement. Thereby, the paper proposes the eco-sufficiency and eco-efficiency policies for developed and developing countries respectively, while energy poverty policy for pre-developing countries. •Global energy strategy includes eco-sufficiency, eco-efficiency, and energy poverty.•Energy policy attention on energy sources, and CO2 emissions in developed countries.•Attention on poverty, quality of life, and two above in developing nations.•Focus on quality of life, health, and poverty factors in pre-developing countries.
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide emissions
Clean energy
Developed countries
Developing countries
Disease burden
Emissions
Energy
Energy consumption
Energy policy
Energy poverty
Energy sources
Final energy consumption
Fossil fuels
Health
LDCs
Mitigation
Population growth
Poverty
Preservation
Quality of life
title Energy use analysis in the presence of quality of life, poverty, health, and carbon dioxide emissions
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