A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World

The paradox underlying the rebound effect is that, due to secondary effects, improvements in resource efficiency provide smaller reductions in the consumption of energy and/or material resources than are expected—or even an overall net increase in resource use. The rebound effect has played a role i...

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Main Author: Rachel Freeman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Energy Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenrg.2018.00081/full
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spelling doaj-277c93e40a0a432ba4a0a76726f18af52020-11-25T00:23:29ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Energy Research2296-598X2018-08-01610.3389/fenrg.2018.00081369526A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained WorldRachel FreemanThe paradox underlying the rebound effect is that, due to secondary effects, improvements in resource efficiency provide smaller reductions in the consumption of energy and/or material resources than are expected—or even an overall net increase in resource use. The rebound effect has played a role in economic growth and industrialization, yet it remains a problem for the task of reducing negative environmental impacts. This paper proposes that the size of the rebound effect, and the type of impacts it causes, may be affected by future changes in the system within which it arises. Four types of rebound effect are considered: economy-wide effects, transformational effects, frontier effects, and international rebound effects. A conceptual model of the historical role of the rebound effect in socio-technical systems, and the relationship of socio-technical systems with natural capital and human-created capital, provides a “sandbox” for testing ideas about the future. The model theory draws upon the concepts of natural capital, the Global Ecological Footprint, and the Great Acceleration. How the size of four types of the rebound effect might change in future, as supplies of resources from natural capital become more constrained, is discussed within three storylines. In the first storyline, natural capital declines but remains fairly stable; rebound is much decreased as resources are less available and efficiency is used up more in stabilizing supplies of goods and services. In the second storyline, growth continues without constraint amid regional rivalry; eventually there is a strong downturn in availability of resources and negative impacts on both society and natural capital. In the third storyline, impact caps are implemented for different types of resources; for some time, industry and society adapt by investing in low resource-use innovation and global cooperation on management of natural capital; once natural capital recovers and stabilizes, growth and consumption may increase along with the rebound effect, but staying within a Global Ecological Footprint of 1 Earth. The theory and model in this paper are intended to contribute to new thinking on the subject of the rebound effect.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenrg.2018.00081/fullthe rebound effectsocio-technical systemssystem dynamicsnatural capitalGlobal Ecological Footprint
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language English
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author Rachel Freeman
spellingShingle Rachel Freeman
A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World
Frontiers in Energy Research
the rebound effect
socio-technical systems
system dynamics
natural capital
Global Ecological Footprint
author_facet Rachel Freeman
author_sort Rachel Freeman
title A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World
title_short A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World
title_full A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World
title_fullStr A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World
title_full_unstemmed A Theory on the Future of the Rebound Effect in a Resource-Constrained World
title_sort theory on the future of the rebound effect in a resource-constrained world
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Energy Research
issn 2296-598X
publishDate 2018-08-01
description The paradox underlying the rebound effect is that, due to secondary effects, improvements in resource efficiency provide smaller reductions in the consumption of energy and/or material resources than are expected—or even an overall net increase in resource use. The rebound effect has played a role in economic growth and industrialization, yet it remains a problem for the task of reducing negative environmental impacts. This paper proposes that the size of the rebound effect, and the type of impacts it causes, may be affected by future changes in the system within which it arises. Four types of rebound effect are considered: economy-wide effects, transformational effects, frontier effects, and international rebound effects. A conceptual model of the historical role of the rebound effect in socio-technical systems, and the relationship of socio-technical systems with natural capital and human-created capital, provides a “sandbox” for testing ideas about the future. The model theory draws upon the concepts of natural capital, the Global Ecological Footprint, and the Great Acceleration. How the size of four types of the rebound effect might change in future, as supplies of resources from natural capital become more constrained, is discussed within three storylines. In the first storyline, natural capital declines but remains fairly stable; rebound is much decreased as resources are less available and efficiency is used up more in stabilizing supplies of goods and services. In the second storyline, growth continues without constraint amid regional rivalry; eventually there is a strong downturn in availability of resources and negative impacts on both society and natural capital. In the third storyline, impact caps are implemented for different types of resources; for some time, industry and society adapt by investing in low resource-use innovation and global cooperation on management of natural capital; once natural capital recovers and stabilizes, growth and consumption may increase along with the rebound effect, but staying within a Global Ecological Footprint of 1 Earth. The theory and model in this paper are intended to contribute to new thinking on the subject of the rebound effect.
topic the rebound effect
socio-technical systems
system dynamics
natural capital
Global Ecological Footprint
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenrg.2018.00081/full
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