HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
According to Saunders, measuring the energy rebound effect ought to be straight forward, requiring only an estimate of the elasticity of demand for energy services2 with respect to changes in energy efficiency. For instance, one group of studies estimated the rebound effect indirectly through estimating price elasticities of energy demand (e_g, Bentzen, 2004; Dahlqvist et_al, 2020; Saunders, 2013). Using such elasticities potentially overestimates the size of the energy rebound effect, because energy demand responds more strongly to price increases than price decreases (see, e_g, Bentzen, 2004; Dahlqvist et_al, 2020). In practice, data about demand . . .
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