Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Environmental Law Reporter
Publication Date
11-2017
ISSN
0046-2284
Page Number
10941
Keywords
decarbonization, energy use, greenhouse gases
Disciplines
Environmental Law | Law
Abstract
This Article asks: why does household behavior matter for deep decarbonization, and how can laws, policies, and programs that target behavior change be employed to facilitate decarbonization? Individuals and households can affect carbon emissions in multiple ways through their behavior as environmental activists, by offering support or opposition to environmental public policies in their citizen roles, by exerting influence within organizations of which they are a part, by making investment decisions based on carbon considerations, and by acquiring and using energy and carbon-emitting goods and services or meeting their needs in ways that do not emit greenhouse gases. Each of these roles can be critical for achieving deep decarbonization. Our primary, although not exclusive, focus is on the roles of individuals and households as consumers, both of energy and of goods and services that have carbon foot- prints through their life cycles. The Article explores the implications of insights about behaviors affecting individual and household energy use, particularly from the noneconomic social and behavioral sciences, for legal and policy interventions intended to achieve the goal of the Deep Decarbonization Pathways Project (DDPP)-the reduction of net U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by at least 80% from 1990 levels by 2050.
Recommended Citation
Michael P. Vandenbergh and Paul C. Stern,
The Role of Individual and Household Behavior in Decarbonization, 47 Environmental Law Reporter. 10941
(2017)
Available at: https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/faculty-publications/1493