In the UK, the cost of low-carbon policies, such as renewable energy subsidies, household retrofit and installation of smart meters, adds an additional 13% to household energy bills. Given that the lowest income households spend 10% of their income on heating and powering their homes, whereas the highest spend less than 1.5%., any increase in prices hits the poor disproportionately. Using an energy-extended multiregional input-output model combined with household expenditure survey data, we calculate the full supply-chain energy embodied in goods and services consumed by different households. First, we demonstrate that low-carbon policy costs are placed on a small percentage of household energy demand – perversely on items representing a hi...
Residential energy efficiency is a core element of the decarbonisation policy in many nations. In th...
AbstractTargets for reductions in carbon emissions and energy use are often framed solely in terms o...
Financial compensations are often proposed to address regressive distributional impacts of carbon ta...
In the UK, the cost of low-carbon policies, such as renewable energy subsidies, household retrofit a...
The UK government’s net-zero commitment assumes the use of bio-energy with carbon capture and storag...
Current UK energy use policies, which primarily aim to reduce carbon emissions, provide abatement in...
The paper examines the financial costs of energy-efficiency and environmental policies that directly...
Would it be possible to increase carbon taxes on household energy use and transport, while protectin...
Targets for reductions in carbon emissions and energy use are often framed solely in terms of percen...
What drives inequalities in the uptake of low-carbon energy technologies? Research has shown that pe...
Extending carbon pricing across the UK economy could deliver substantial reductions in carbon emissi...
Climate change is caused predominantly by high-income countries, and by upper economic classes wit...
Distributional impacts of environmental policies have become an increasingly important consideration...
A social tariff that reduces the cost of fuel for low-income households could, in principle, more th...
Residential energy efficiency is a core element of the decarbonisation policy in many nations. In th...
AbstractTargets for reductions in carbon emissions and energy use are often framed solely in terms o...
Financial compensations are often proposed to address regressive distributional impacts of carbon ta...
In the UK, the cost of low-carbon policies, such as renewable energy subsidies, household retrofit a...
The UK government’s net-zero commitment assumes the use of bio-energy with carbon capture and storag...
Current UK energy use policies, which primarily aim to reduce carbon emissions, provide abatement in...
The paper examines the financial costs of energy-efficiency and environmental policies that directly...
Would it be possible to increase carbon taxes on household energy use and transport, while protectin...
Targets for reductions in carbon emissions and energy use are often framed solely in terms of percen...
What drives inequalities in the uptake of low-carbon energy technologies? Research has shown that pe...
Extending carbon pricing across the UK economy could deliver substantial reductions in carbon emissi...
Climate change is caused predominantly by high-income countries, and by upper economic classes wit...
Distributional impacts of environmental policies have become an increasingly important consideration...
A social tariff that reduces the cost of fuel for low-income households could, in principle, more th...
Residential energy efficiency is a core element of the decarbonisation policy in many nations. In th...
AbstractTargets for reductions in carbon emissions and energy use are often framed solely in terms o...
Financial compensations are often proposed to address regressive distributional impacts of carbon ta...