Metrics for the sustainable development goals: renewable energy and transportation

被引:0
|
作者
Jonathan J. Buonocore
Ernani Choma
Aleyda H. Villavicencio
John D. Spengler
Dinah A. Koehler
John S. Evans
Jos Lelieveld
Piet Klop
Ramon Sanchez-Pina
机构
[1] Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health,Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment
[2] Harvard University,Population Health Sciences
[3] Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health,Department of Environmental Health
[4] UBS Asset Management,Atmospheric Chemistry Department
[5] Max Planck Institute for Chemistry,undefined
[6] PGGM,undefined
[7] NetPurpose,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The private sector is interested in contributing to the United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs); however, they lack credible objective metrics to measure progress, which hinders making a case for financial investing toward the SDGs. A set of science-based metrics could allow corporations and interested investors to meaningfully align their actions with the SDGs in locations around the world where they can make the greatest positive impact. Using existing data on country-level electricity generation and land transportation, we develop a set of simple-to-implement and user-friendly metrics to evaluate the benefits that investments in renewable electricity generation and improvements in land transportation can make toward reducing CO2 and air pollutant emissions and the health impacts of air pollution. We then apply these metrics to a set of renewable electricity companies and find meaningful differences in their progress toward the SDGs on health, energy, and climate. We found that under half of the renewable energy companies in our dataset disclose country-level data on where equipment is being sold, and that there is substantial variability in the CO2 reductions and health benefits of renewable energy based on where these companies have installed capacity. There was not a close statistical relationship between country CO2 emissions rates and country health impact rates, indicating that these metrics cannot serve as good proxies for one another. Future improvements to this methodology should be to implement explicit tracking of air pollution from sources to the locations where it has eventual health impacts, updating the underlying dataset, and improving the degree of detail in emissions inventories. Application of this methodology across the renewable energy sector is limited by the availability of country-level data on where a company has renewable energy capacity installed. The methodology developed here can serve as a basis for better measurement of progress toward climate, energy, and health-related SDGs in financial investing and other applications.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Do renewable energy mutual funds advance towards clean energy-related sustainable development goals?
    Marti-Ballester, Carmen-Pilar
    RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2022, 195 : 1155 - 1164
  • [42] An overview on microalgae as renewable resources for meeting sustainable development goals
    Oliveira, Carlos Yure B.
    Jacob, Ashwin
    Nader, Camila
    Oliveira, Cicero Diogo L.
    Matos, Angelo P.
    Araujo, Evando S.
    Shabnam, Nisha
    Ashok, Bragadeshwaran
    Galvez, Alfredo O.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2022, 320
  • [43] Quantile lens on carbon footprints: Renewable energy, tourism, financial development, and the pursuit of Sustainable Development Goals 2030
    Mehmood, Saqib
    Kaewsaeng-on, Rudsada
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF TOURISM RESEARCH, 2024, 38
  • [44] Assessing the impact of renewable energy on local development and the Sustainable Development Goals: Insights from a small Philippine island
    Bertheau, Paul
    TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 2020, 153
  • [45] Transition to renewable energy and sustainable energy development in Azerbaijan
    Vidadili, Nurtaj
    Suleymanov, Elchin
    Bulut, Cihan
    Mahmudlu, Ceyhun
    RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2017, 80 : 1153 - 1161
  • [46] Energy efficiency and sustainable development goals (SDGs)
    Zakari, Abdulrasheed
    Khan, Irfan
    Tan, Duojiao
    Alvarado, Rafael
    Dagar, Vishal
    ENERGY, 2022, 239
  • [47] Energy Security in Light of Sustainable Development Goals
    Luty, Lidia
    Ziolo, Monika
    Knapik, Wioletta
    Bak, Iwona
    Kukula, Karol
    ENERGIES, 2023, 16 (03)
  • [48] Renewable energy and sustainable development goals: Insights from latent dirichlet allocation thematic and bibliometric analysis
    Wang, Qiang
    Huang, Rui
    Li, Rongrong
    SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, 2024,
  • [49] Does the financial investment preference of renewable energy firms promote their advance towards sustainable development goals?
    Wang, Hu
    RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2023, 218
  • [50] Advancing sustainable development goals with machine learning and optimization for wet waste biomass to renewable energy conversion
    Zhu, Shoudong
    Preuss, Nathan
    You, Fengqi
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2023, 422