工作与生活(不)平衡:瑞士住房与通勤能源使用不平等评估

Work-life (im)balance: an assessment of housing and commuting energy use inequalities in Switzerland

Ecological Economics · 2026
被引 1 · 同刊同年前 3%
ABS 3

中文导读

研究了瑞士3848名个体的住房和通勤能源使用分布,发现能源使用比收入更不平等,前20%高能耗者分别占通勤和住房总能耗的76%和53%,并识别出性别、年龄、收入等关键影响因素。

Abstract

Reductions of final energy use are necessary for climate mitigation and energy security, but to be equitable, policies should take into account prevailing inequalities and their determinants. In this article, we first quantify final energy use related to everyday housing and commuting activities for 3848 individuals representative of the Swiss population, and analyze their distributions. We then assess how socio-economic, geographical, infrastructural, and behavioral determinants affect individual energy use through regression analysis. Finally, we build two typologies of commuting and housing determinants and context to map the inequality space using regression tree analysis. We find that energy use is more unequally distributed between individuals than income, with the top 20% energy users being responsible for 76% and 53% of the total energy use for commuting and housing respectively. We identify a significant gender gap for commuting, which widens as the household size increases. For housing, the top energy users can be characterized as individuals who are older and richer, living alone in more than 64 m² per capita with no heat pump. For commuting, the top energy users can be characterized as individuals who are middle-aged and richer, commuting more than 20 km by personal vehicle. The top users for housing tend to differ from the ones for commuting, which may increase policy acceptability and decrease vulnerability. Our results call for policies that target top users, include sufficiency levers, and go beyond cost-only approaches to be age and gender inclusive.

能源不平等住房能源消费通勤行为瑞士可持续发展