Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Demand-side solutions to climate change mitigation consistent with high levels of well-being

Felix Creutzig, Leila Niamir, Xuemei Bai, Max Callaghan, Jonathan M. Cullen, Julio Díaz‐José, Maria J. Figueroa, Arnulf Grübler, William F. Lamb, Adrian Leip, Eric Masanet, Érika Mata, Linus Mattauch, Jan C. Minx, Sebastian Mirasgedis, Yacob Mulugetta, Sudarmanto Budi Nugroho, Minal Pathak, Patrícia E. Perkins, Joyashree Roy, Stéphane de la Rue du Can, Yamina Saheb, Shreya Some, Linda Steg, J. Steinberger, Diána Ürge-Vorsatz

Nature Climate Change · 2021

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

Mitigation solutions are often evaluated in terms of costs and greenhouse gas reduction potentials, missing out on the consideration of direct effects on human well-being. Here, we systematically assess the mitigation potential of demand-side options categorized into avoid, shift and improve, and their human well-being links. We show that these options, bridging socio-behavioural, infrastructural and technological domains, can reduce counterfactual sectoral emissions by 40–80% in end-use sectors. Based on expert judgement and an extensive literature database, we evaluate 306 combinations of well-being outcomes and demand-side options, finding largely beneficial effects in improvement in well-being (79% positive, 18% neutral and 3% negative), even though we find low confidence on the social

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41558-021-01219-y
Catalogue ID
SNmokbvpc2-atiaik
Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.