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ID127997
Title ProperEconomic, social, energy and environmental assessment of inter-municipality commuting
Other Title Informationthe case of Portugal
LanguageENG
AuthorFerreira, João-Pedro ;  Barata, Eduardo ;  Ramos, Pedro Nogueira ;  Cruz, Luis
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Commuting is one of the main contributors to the high energy consumption patterns in modern economies. The need to reduce the energy spent in commuting has attracted the attention of academics and policy makers. The main goal of this research is to improve knowledge of the economic, social, energy and environmental opportunity costs of inter-municipality commuting and to support policy-oriented strategies that explicitly take them into account. For this, we use hypothetical assumptions based on the baseline scenario that Portuguese households do not travel between municipalities for commuting purposes coupled with the expected changes in private final consumption. Accordingly, the direct, indirect and induced opportunity costs of inter-municipality commuting are assessed using an input-output model. The significance of the estimated virtual net benefits of commuting is analyzed according to their macroeconomic (GVA, taxes, international imports and employment), energy (primary energy consumption) and environmental (CO2 emissions) dimensions. The results obtained empirically indicate that inter-municipality commuting has significant opportunity costs in the GVA and GDP as well as in primary energy consumption and CO2 emissions. The results also indicate that commuters in metropolitan regions and long-distance commuters are responsible for a major share of these opportunity costs.
`In' analytical NoteEnergy Policy Vol. 66, No. ; March 2014: p.411-418
Journal SourceEnergy Policy Vol. 66, No. ; March 2014: p.411-418
Key WordsEnergy Policy ;  Energy Consumption ;  Environmental Opportunity ;  Inter-Municipality Commuting ;  Energy Support Policy ;  Economic Policy ;  Energy Oriented Strategies ;  Portugal ;  Economic Assessment ;  Social Assessment ;  Political Assessment ;  Energy Demand ;  Environmental Security ;  Microeconomic Assessment ;  Energy Supply ;  Modern Economic Trends ;  Cost Analysis