Assessing carbon lock-in
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 August 2015
- journal article
- letter
- Published by IOP Publishing in Environmental Research Letters
- Vol. 10 (8), 084023
- https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/10/8/084023
Abstract
The term 'carbon lock-in' refers to the tendency for certain carbon-intensive technological systems to persist over time, 'locking out' lower-carbon alternatives, and owing to a combination of linked technical, economic, and institutional factors. These technologies may be costly to build, but relatively inexpensive to operate and, over time, they reinforce political, market, and social factors that make it difficult to move away from, or 'unlock' them. As a result, by investing in assets prone to lock-in, planners and investors restrict future flexibility and increase the costs of achieving agreed climate protection goals. Here, we develop a straight-forward approach to assess the speed, strength, and scale of carbon lock-in for major energy-consuming assets in the power, buildings, industry, and transport sectors. We pilot the approach at the global level, finding that carbon lock-in is greatest, globally, for coal power plants, gas power plants, and oil-based vehicles. The approach can be readily applied at the national or regional scale, and may be of particular relevance to policymakers interested in enhancing flexibility in their jurisdictions for deeper emissions cuts in the future, and therefore in limiting the future costs associated with 'stranded assets'.Keywords
Funding Information
- Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency
- GIZ, on behalf of the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development of the Federal Republic of Germany (81180687)
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stranded on a low-carbon planet: Implications of climate policy for the phase-out of coal-based power plantsTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 2015
- Carbon lock-in through capital stock inertia associated with weak near-term climate policiesTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 2015
- Locked into Copenhagen pledges — Implications of short-term emission targets for the cost and feasibility of long-term climate goalsTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, 2015
- Energy, Climate Change and EnvironmentPublished by Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) ,2014
- Commitment accounting of CO 2 emissionsEnvironmental Research Letters, 2014
- Implications of weak near-term climate policies on long-term mitigation pathwaysClimatic Change, 2013
- Future CO 2 Emissions and Climate Change from Existing Energy InfrastructureScience, 2010
- The dynamic implications of increasing returns: Technological change and path dependent inefficiencyInternational Journal of Industrial Organization, 1997
- Induced Innovation, Evolutionary Theory and Path Dependence: Sources of Technical ChangeThe Economic Journal, 1997
- Competing Technologies, Increasing Returns, and Lock-In by Historical EventsThe Economic Journal, 1989