An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect

Dematerialization is the reduction in the quantity of materials needed to produce something useful over time. Dematerialization fundamentally derives from ongoing increases in technical performance but it can be counteracted by demand rebound -increases in usage because of increased value (or decrea...

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Main Authors: Magee, Christopher L., Devezas, Tessaleno C.
Format: Working Paper
Language:en_US
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Engineering Systems Division 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/103014
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author Magee, Christopher L.
Devezas, Tessaleno C.
author_facet Magee, Christopher L.
Devezas, Tessaleno C.
author_sort Magee, Christopher L.
collection MIT
description Dematerialization is the reduction in the quantity of materials needed to produce something useful over time. Dematerialization fundamentally derives from ongoing increases in technical performance but it can be counteracted by demand rebound -increases in usage because of increased value (or decreased cost) that also results from increasing technical performance. A major question then is to what extent technological performance improvement can offset and is offsetting continuously increasing economic consumption. This paper contributes to answering this question by offering some simple quantitative extensions to the theory of dematerialization. An inequality criterion for dematerialization is developed that includes technical performance changes over time and demand rebound effects: the inequality highlights the importance of demand elasticity and the annual technical performance improvement rate. The paper then empirically examines the materials consumption trends as well as cost trends for a large set of materials and a few modern artifacts over the past decades. In all 57 cases examined, the particular combinations of demand elasticity and technical capability rate improvement for each case are consistent with continuation of materialization. Overall, the theory extension and empirical examination indicate that dematerialization and sustainability are significant challenges not easily met by undirected technological change.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1030142019-04-11T08:51:44Z An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect Magee, Christopher L. Devezas, Tessaleno C. Dematerialization is the reduction in the quantity of materials needed to produce something useful over time. Dematerialization fundamentally derives from ongoing increases in technical performance but it can be counteracted by demand rebound -increases in usage because of increased value (or decreased cost) that also results from increasing technical performance. A major question then is to what extent technological performance improvement can offset and is offsetting continuously increasing economic consumption. This paper contributes to answering this question by offering some simple quantitative extensions to the theory of dematerialization. An inequality criterion for dematerialization is developed that includes technical performance changes over time and demand rebound effects: the inequality highlights the importance of demand elasticity and the annual technical performance improvement rate. The paper then empirically examines the materials consumption trends as well as cost trends for a large set of materials and a few modern artifacts over the past decades. In all 57 cases examined, the particular combinations of demand elasticity and technical capability rate improvement for each case are consistent with continuation of materialization. Overall, the theory extension and empirical examination indicate that dematerialization and sustainability are significant challenges not easily met by undirected technological change. 2016-06-06T22:37:59Z 2016-06-06T22:37:59Z 2014-07 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/103014 en_US ESD Working Papers;ESD-WP-2014-21 application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Engineering Systems Division
spellingShingle Magee, Christopher L.
Devezas, Tessaleno C.
An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect
title An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect
title_full An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect
title_fullStr An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect
title_full_unstemmed An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect
title_short An Extension of Dematerialization Theory: Incorporation of Technical Performance Increases and the Rebound Effect
title_sort extension of dematerialization theory incorporation of technical performance increases and the rebound effect
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/103014
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