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Net emission reductions from electric cars and heat pumps in 59 world regions over time

journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-01, 08:53 authored by F Knobloch, S Hanssen, A Lam, H Pollitt, P Salas, U Chewpreecha, MAJ Huijbregts, J-F Mercure
Electrification of passenger road transport and household heating features prominently in current and planned policy frameworks to achieve greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets. However, since electricity generation involves using fossil fuels, it is not established where and when the replacement of fossil fuel-based technologies by1 electric cars and heat pumps can effectively reduce overall emissions. Could electrification policy backfire by promoting their diffusion before electricity is decarbonised? Here, we analyse current and future emissions trade-offs in 59 world regions with heterogeneous households, by combining forward-looking integrated assessment model simulations with bottom-up life-cycle assessment. We show that already under current carbon intensities of electricity generation, electric cars and heat pumps are less emission-intensive than fossil fuel-based alternatives in 53 world regions, representing 95% of global transport and heating demand. Even if future end19 use electrification is not matched by rapid power sector decarbonisation, it likely avoids emissions in world regions representing 94% of global demand.

Funding

62002139 ERC – CoG SIZE 647224

689150

ENER/ A4/2015-436/SER/S12.716128

EP/ K007254/1

EP/N002504/1

ES/N013174/1

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)

European Commission

European Research Council (ERC)

European Union Horizon 2020

Newton Fund

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© Nature Research, 2020.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the DOI in this record. Data availability: The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding authors on reasonable request. Code availability: The computer code used to generate results that are reported in this study are available from the corresponding authors on reasonable request.

Journal

Nature Sustainability

Publisher

Nature Research

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2020-02-26T15:44:57Z

FOA date

2020-09-22T23:00:00Z

Citation

Published online 23 March 2020.

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