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Bibtex

@article{reference_tag,
  author = "Haroldo V. Ribeiro, Diego Rybski & Jürgen P. Kropp",
  title = "Effects of changing population or density on urban carbon dioxide emissions",
  journal = "Nature Communications",
  year = 2019,
  abstract = "The question of whether urbanization contributes to increasing carbon dioxide emissions has been mainly investigated via scaling relationships with population or population density. However, these approaches overlook the correlations between population and area, and ignore possible interactions between these quantities. Here, we propose a generalized framework that simultaneously considers the effects of population and area along with possible interactions between these urban metrics. Our results significantly improve the description of emissions and reveal the coupled role between population and density on emissions. These models show that variations in emissions associated with proportionate changes in population or density may not only depend on the magnitude of these changes but also on the initial values of these quantities. For US areas, the larger the city, the higher is the impact of changing its population or density on its emissions; but population changes always have a greater effect on emissions than population density.",
  doi = "10.1038/s41467-019-11184-y",
}

RIS

TY  - JOUR
T1 - Effects of changing population or density on urban carbon dioxide emissions
AU - Haroldo V. Ribeiro, Diego Rybski & Jürgen P. Kropp
Y1 - 2019
DO - 10.1038/s41467-019-11184-y
N2 - The question of whether urbanization contributes to increasing carbon dioxide emissions has been mainly investigated via scaling relationships with population or population density. However, these approaches overlook the correlations between population and area, and ignore possible interactions between these quantities. Here, we propose a generalized framework that simultaneously considers the effects of population and area along with possible interactions between these urban metrics. Our results significantly improve the description of emissions and reveal the coupled role between population and density on emissions. These models show that variations in emissions associated with proportionate changes in population or density may not only depend on the magnitude of these changes but also on the initial values of these quantities. For US areas, the larger the city, the higher is the impact of changing its population or density on its emissions; but population changes always have a greater effect on emissions than population density.
ER - 

Journal Article

2019

Author(s)

  • Diego Rybski
  • Haroldo V. Ribeiro
  • Jürgen P. Kropp

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Effects of changing population or density on urban carbon dioxide emissions

Nature Communications

Nature Communications

The question of whether urbanization contributes to increasing carbon dioxide emissions has been mainly investigated via scaling relationships with population or population density. However, these approaches overlook the correlations between population and area, and ignore possible interactions between these quantities. Here, we propose a generalized framework that simultaneously considers the effects of population and area along with possible interactions between these urban metrics. Our results significantly improve the description of emissions and reveal the coupled role between population and density on emissions. These models show that variations in emissions associated with proportionate changes in population or density may not only depend on the magnitude of these changes but also on the initial values of these quantities. For US areas, the larger the city, the higher is the impact of changing its population or density on its emissions; but population changes always have a greater effect on emissions than population density.

Tags

  • Urban

More information

10.1038/s41467-019-11184-y

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