Title of article :
Metropolitan density, energy efficiency and carbon emissions: Multi-attribute tradeoffs and their policy implications
Author/Authors :
Metropolitan density، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
16
From page :
413
To page :
428
Abstract :
Of all the potential benefits of urban containment, compaction, and densification, just two are the central focus here: attainment of greater energy efficiency and reduction in carbon emissions. In cities these are largely associated with the transport and building sectors. This paper probes the form-efficiency relation in the transport sector across 57 census-defined urbanized areas in the United States in 2000. Thirty-six of the forty largest are included. Increase in core area population density is correlated with modest gain in energy efficiency in the urban transport sector and modest decrease in its carbon emissions. Densificationʹs lagged effects related to travel rationalization and growth in transit receptivity may increase overall metro transport energy efficiency beyond the degree revealed here. These impacts are associated with two off-setting negative externalities: (1) diminished housing affordability, and (2) increased roadway congestion. Each may moderate over time. Such effects are non-additive, owing to a difference of metrics. Elevated CAFE standards provoking new transport technologies may reduce total energy consumption and associated emissions ceteris paribus, lessening densificationʹs marginal efficiency payoff while magnifying the significance of densificationʹs opportunity costs. Categories of policy interventions to promote metro-scale energy efficiencies and emissions reductions, with and without urban densification, conclude the paper.
Keywords :
Metropolitan spatial form , Urban energy efficiency , Carbon emissions
Journal title :
Energy Policy
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Energy Policy
Record number :
975157
Link To Document :
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