2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2020.08.007
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Improving Climate Change Mitigation Analysis: A Framework for Examining Feasibility

Abstract: Limiting global warming to 2 C or less compared with pre-industrial temperatures will require unprecedented rates of decarbonization globally. The scale and scope of transformational change required across sectors and actors in society raises critical questions of feasibility. Much of the literature on mitigation pathways addresses technological and economic aspects of feasibility, but overlooks the behavioral, cultural, and social factors that affect theoretical and practical mitigation pathways. We present a… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 122 publications
(152 reference statements)
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“…Actual GHG emissions reductions achieved through changes in consumption depend on the product of the technical potential of a change and behavioural plasticity 2, 26 . The technical potential of actions, including adoption of a technology, refers to the emissions reductions that would be achieved if everyone took that action.…”
Section: Consumermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Actual GHG emissions reductions achieved through changes in consumption depend on the product of the technical potential of a change and behavioural plasticity 2, 26 . The technical potential of actions, including adoption of a technology, refers to the emissions reductions that would be achieved if everyone took that action.…”
Section: Consumermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Emission reduction pathways intended to answer the questions posed above are primarily generated and/or assessed using climate-economic integrated assessment models (IAMs), but these have been heavily criticized for their opacity (Robertson, 2020). It also been argued that mitigation assessments have emphasized technological and economic feasibility but done little to address behavioral, cultural, or social plausibility, with dietary choices noted as a key example (Nielsen et al, 2020). We are currently failing to implement the policy tools that modeled pathways use to bring down agricultural emissions (Leahy et al, 2020).…”
Section: Integrated Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead, it will often be necessary to use evidence from interventions targeting comparable behaviours relating to other actors, contexts or domains until more direct data become available 87 . Although considerations of technical potential and behavioural plasticity should guide the selection of behaviours to study and intervene against, we note that additional considerations may become pertinent when selecting interventions for implementation (for example, feasibility, stakeholder support and costs) [91][92][93] .…”
Section: Prioritising Behaviour Changesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first research question deals with prioritization. As with climate change interventions, there is a clear need for a more systematic understanding of the technical potential of different behaviour changes: which ones, if delivered, would be most likely to reduce a threat and thereby enhance the status of the conservation target, taking into account other threats it faces 80,91 ? Given the focus of many recent environmental interventions on appealing, tractable but relatively low-impact behaviour changes (for example, eating more locally grown food or avoiding plastic drinking straws), such prioritization is badly needed 88,90 .…”
Section: Emergent Research Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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