Millward-Hopkins Joel, Fisch-Romito Vivien, Nick Sascha, Chevrel Emile
University of Lausanne (UNIL), Quartier Centre, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Swiss Federal Technology Institute of Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
Nat Commun. 2025 Apr 30;16(1):4066. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-59276-2.
The idea that human needs should be secured for all people is largely uncontroversial, and recent research demonstrates that decent living standards could be secured for all, globally, with far lower energy and resource use than today. However, how the energy requirements of decent living vary across populations is poorly understood - particularly in high-income countries-and important questions regarding inequality remain unexplored. Here we show how, with a fairer distribution of energy, Switzerland could dramatically reduce energy consumption while securing wellbeing for all. We advance previous work on energy and wellbeing by decomposing an established net-zero scenario into the energy required to support human needs, and that related to affluence or excess. We estimate decent living energy in 2050 at 19.5 gigajoules per capita (18-26 gigajoules in varying subnational contexts), making it only ~13% of Switzerland's 2019 energy footprint, and ~23% of that projected in the net-zero scenario. This highlights the theoretical potential for affluent countries to move towards a more just, egalitarian global distribution of energy and resource consumption, while securing wellbeing for their own citizens.
确保所有人的人类需求能够得到满足这一观点在很大程度上是没有争议的,并且最近的研究表明,在全球范围内,所有人都能获得体面的生活水平,所需的能源和资源使用量要比现在低得多。然而,人们对体面生活的能源需求在不同人群中如何变化知之甚少——尤其是在高收入国家——而且关于不平等的重要问题仍未得到探讨。在这里,我们展示了通过更公平地分配能源,瑞士如何能够在保障所有人福祉的同时大幅降低能源消耗。我们通过将一个既定的净零情景分解为支持人类需求所需的能源以及与富裕或过剩相关的能源,推进了此前关于能源与福祉的研究。我们估计2050年体面生活所需能源为人均19.5吉焦(在不同的次国家背景下为18 - 26吉焦),这仅占瑞士2019年能源足迹的约13%,以及净零情景下预计能源足迹的约23%。这凸显了富裕国家在保障本国公民福祉的同时,朝着更公正、平等的全球能源和资源消费分配迈进的理论潜力。