Knowledge Agora



Scientific Article details

Title Equity, technological innovation and sustainable behaviour in a low-carbon future
ID_Doc 31379
Authors Sovacool, BK; Newell, P; Carley, S; Fanzo, J
Title Equity, technological innovation and sustainable behaviour in a low-carbon future
Year 2022
Published Nature Human Behaviour, 6, 3
DOI 10.1038/s41562-021-01257-8
Abstract The world must ambitiously curtail greenhouse gas emissions to achieve climate stability. The literature often supposes that a low-carbon future will depend on a mix of technological innovation-improving the performance of new technologies and systems-as well as more sustainable behaviours such as travelling less or reducing waste. To what extent are low-carbon technologies, and their associated behaviours, currently equitable, and what are potential policy and research implications moving forward? In this Review, we examine how four innovations in technology and behaviour-improved cookstoves and heating, battery electric vehicles, household solar panels and food-sharing-create complications and force trade-offs on different equity dimensions. We draw from these cases to discuss a typology of inequity cutting across demographic (for example, gender, race and class), spatial (for example, urban and rural divides), interspecies (for example, human and non-human) and temporal (for example, future generations) vulnerabilities. Ultimately, the risk of inequity abounds in decarbonization pathways. Moreover, low-carbon innovations are not automatically just, equitable or even green. We show how such technologies and behaviours can both introduce new inequalities and reaffirm existing ones. We then discuss potential policy insights and leverage points to make future interventions more equitable and propose an integrated research agenda to supplement these policy efforts. Low-carbon innovations in technology and behaviour are increasingly prevalent, but they are not always equitable. This Review examines how such innovations can introduce and perpetrate inequalities, and discusses ways to ensure that a low-carbon future is both sustainable and equitable.
Author Keywords
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
EID WOS:000750337000013
WoS Category Psychology, Biological; Multidisciplinary Sciences; Neurosciences; Psychology, Experimental
Research Area Psychology; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Neurosciences & Neurology
PDF
Similar atricles
Scroll