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Fundamental economic changes needed to secure decent living standards for all
By 2050, global energy use needs to be as low as 27 GJ per person
Published in Daily News Egypt on 29 - 06 - 2021

Billions of people in lower-income countries lack affordable, reliable access to electricity, modern fuels, highlighting important infrastructure needs
Fundamental changes in our economies are required to secure decent living standards for all in the struggle against climate breakdown, new research has said.
Governments need to dramatically improve public services, reduce income disparities, scale back resource extraction, and abandon economic growth in affluent countries. This will ensure that people around the world will be able to thrive, whilst cutting global average energy use in half.
Without such fundamental changes, the study warns, we face an existential dilemma. In our current economic system, the energy savings required to avert catastrophic climate changes might undermine living standards.
Meanwhile, the improvements in living standards required to end material poverty would need large increases in energy use, further exacerbating climate breakdown.
The study, led by the University of Leeds and published on Tuesday in Global Environmental Change, examined what policies could enable countries to use less energy whilst providing the whole population with 'decent living standards'.
These standards denote conditions that satisfy fundamental human needs for food, water, sanitation, health, education, and livelihoods.
Lead author Jefim Vogel, PhD researcher at the University of Leeds Sustainability Research Institute, said, "Decent living standards are crucial for human well-being, and reducing global energy use is crucial for averting catastrophic climate changes."
"Truly sustainable development would mean providing decent living standards for everyone at much lower, sustainable levels of energy and resource use," Vogel added, "But in the current economic system, no country in the world accomplishes that, not even close."
He also said that it appears the current economic system is fundamentally misaligned with the aspirations of sustainable development, and is unfit for the challenges of the 21st Century.
Co-author Professor Julia Steinberger, from the University of Leeds and the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, added, "The problem is that in our current economic system, all countries that achieve decent living standards use much more energy than what can be sustained if we are to avert dangerous climate breakdown."
By 2050, global energy use needs to be as low as 27 gigajoules (GJ) of final energy per person to reach the aspirations of the Paris Agreement of limiting global warming to 1.5°C without relying on speculative future technologies, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
That means current global average energy use of 55 GJ per person needs to be cut in half, while affluent countries like the UK, which consumes 81 GJ per person, or Spain, which consumes 77 GJ per person, need to reduce their average energy use by as much as 65%.

France (95 GJ per person) needs to reduce average energy use by more than 70%, and the most energy-hungry countries like the USA (204 GJ per person) or Canada (232 GJ per person) need to cut by as much as 90%.
A major concern, however, is that such profound reductions in energy use might undermine living standards, as currently only countries with high energy use accomplish decent living standards.
Even the energy-lightest of the countries that achieve decent living standards, spearheaded by Argentina (53 GJ per person), Cyprus (55 GJ per person), and Greece (63 GJ per person), use at least double the 'sustainable' level of 27 GJ per person. Many countries use even much more.
On the other hand, in all countries with energy use levels below 27 GJ per person, large parts of the population currently suffer from precarious living standards. This can be seen, for example, in India (19 GJ per person) and Zambia (23 GJ per person), where at least half the population is deprived of fundamental needs.
It appears that in the current economic system, reducing energy use in affluent countries could undermine living standards. Meanwhile, improving living standards in less affluent countries would require large increases in energy use, and thus further exacerbate climate breakdown.
But this is not inevitable, the research team shows, as fundamental changes in economic and social priorities could resolve this dilemma of sustainable development.
Co-author Dr Daniel O'Neill, from the University of Leeds' School of Earth and Environment, said, "Our findings suggest that improving public services could enable countries to provide decent living standards at lower levels of energy use."
"Governments should offer free and high-quality public services in areas such as health, education, and public transport," he added, "We also found that a fairer income distribution is crucial for achieving decent living standards at low energy use."
O'Neill said that, to reduce existing income disparities, governments could raise minimum wages, provide a Universal Basic Income, and introduce a maximum income level. At the same time, there is also a need for much higher taxes on high incomes, and lower taxes on low incomes.
Another essential factor, the research team found, is affordable and reliable access to electricity and modern fuels. While this is already near-universal in affluent countries, it is still lacking for billions of people in lower-income countries, highlighting important infrastructure needs.
Perhaps the most crucial and perhaps the most surprising finding is that economic growth beyond moderate levels of affluence is detrimental for aspirations of sustainable development.
"In contrast with wide-spread assumptions, the evidence suggests that decent living standards require neither perpetual economic growth nor high levels of affluence," Steinberger said, "In fact, economic growth in affluent or even moderately affluent countries is detrimental for living standards."
She noted that it is also fundamentally unsustainable, as economic growth is tied to increases in energy use, and thus makes the energy savings that are required for tackling climate breakdown virtually impossible.
"Another detrimental factor is the extraction of natural resources such as coal, oil, gas or minerals, as these industries need to be scaled back rapidly," she said.
Vogel added, "In short, we need to abandon economic growth in affluent countries, scale back resource extraction, and prioritise public services, basic infrastructures and fair income distributions everywhere.
With these policies in place, rich countries could slash their energy use and emissions whilst maintaining or even improving living standards, he noted.
Meanwhile, less affluent countries could achieve decent living standards and end material poverty without needing vast amounts of energy.
"That's good news for climate justice, good news for human well-being, good news for poverty eradication, and good news for energy security," he added.
Vogel said, however, that there is a need to be clear that achieving this ultimately requires a broader, more fundamental transformation of our growth-dependent economic system.
He proposed that the most promising and integral vision for the required transformation is the idea of de-growth, which is an idea whose time has come.


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