On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints

Abstract Background A wide variety of footprint concepts is proposed in the scientific literature giving rise to a selection problem. Method The objective of this paper is to provide an axiomatic foundation to the concept of ecological footprint indices, in particular carbon and energy footprints. F...

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Main Authors: Thomas Kuhn, Radomir Pestow, Anja Zenker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-05-01
Series:Energy, Sustainability and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13705-020-00254-5
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spelling doaj-5fc7a79ffa424ccf8c16bd1df7e7cc4f2020-11-25T02:04:33ZengBMCEnergy, Sustainability and Society2192-05672020-05-011011910.1186/s13705-020-00254-5On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprintsThomas Kuhn0Radomir Pestow1Anja Zenker2Department of Economics, Chemnitz University of TechnologyDepartment of Economics, Chemnitz University of TechnologyDepartment of Economics, Chemnitz University of TechnologyAbstract Background A wide variety of footprint concepts is proposed in the scientific literature giving rise to a selection problem. Method The objective of this paper is to provide an axiomatic foundation to the concept of ecological footprint indices, in particular carbon and energy footprints. For this purpose, we define five axioms representing general properties which any ecological footprint measure should fulfill. Results It can be shown that there exists a unique index which is characterized by the given set of axioms. Its functional form is determined, and an economic interpretation is given. The most prominent empirical application is discussed. Conclusion We find that the proposed index as a generalization of more specific indices like carbon and energy footprint indices may confirm some important issues discussed in the literature. First, it incorporates a trade component indicating the ecological footprint of economic activities embodied in the trade pattern of a country or region. Moreover, the productivity of land use in production as a means to mitigate the pressure on the ecological system is reflected. But, most importantly, from a methodological point of view, there is no longer the need for designing ecological footprint indices ad hoc, in particular for the sake of empirical application.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13705-020-00254-5Ecological footprint indicesAxiomatic foundationSustainability indicatorsSustainable welfare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Kuhn
Radomir Pestow
Anja Zenker
spellingShingle Thomas Kuhn
Radomir Pestow
Anja Zenker
On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
Energy, Sustainability and Society
Ecological footprint indices
Axiomatic foundation
Sustainability indicators
Sustainable welfare
author_facet Thomas Kuhn
Radomir Pestow
Anja Zenker
author_sort Thomas Kuhn
title On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
title_short On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
title_full On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
title_fullStr On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
title_full_unstemmed On the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
title_sort on the axiomatic foundation of carbon and energy footprints
publisher BMC
series Energy, Sustainability and Society
issn 2192-0567
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Abstract Background A wide variety of footprint concepts is proposed in the scientific literature giving rise to a selection problem. Method The objective of this paper is to provide an axiomatic foundation to the concept of ecological footprint indices, in particular carbon and energy footprints. For this purpose, we define five axioms representing general properties which any ecological footprint measure should fulfill. Results It can be shown that there exists a unique index which is characterized by the given set of axioms. Its functional form is determined, and an economic interpretation is given. The most prominent empirical application is discussed. Conclusion We find that the proposed index as a generalization of more specific indices like carbon and energy footprint indices may confirm some important issues discussed in the literature. First, it incorporates a trade component indicating the ecological footprint of economic activities embodied in the trade pattern of a country or region. Moreover, the productivity of land use in production as a means to mitigate the pressure on the ecological system is reflected. But, most importantly, from a methodological point of view, there is no longer the need for designing ecological footprint indices ad hoc, in particular for the sake of empirical application.
topic Ecological footprint indices
Axiomatic foundation
Sustainability indicators
Sustainable welfare
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13705-020-00254-5
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