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Climate change mitigation / Emissions trading / Carbon offset / Economics of global warming / Low-carbon economy / Greenhouse gas emissions by the United States / Black carbon / Climate change policy / Environment / Climate change


Household actions can provide a behavioral wedge to rapidly reduce U.S. carbon emissions Thomas Dietza, Gerald T. Gardnerb, Jonathan Gilliganc, Paul C. Sternd,1, and Michael P. Vandenberghe aDepartment of Sociology and
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Document Date: 2009-10-26 23:26:46


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National Academy Press / RN (1980) Television / Jaffe AB / Cambridge Univ Press / Pearson Custom Publishing / Oak Ridge National Laboratory / Deploying Climate Change Mitigation Technologies / Abroms LC / National Academies Press / /

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Greenhouse Gases / Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station / Michigan State University / Vanderbilt University / Indiana University / University of Michigan / /

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constrained energy supply / media campaigns / cases product / greenhouse gas concentration targets / mass-media messages / energy audits / lobal greenhouse gas emissions / energy policy / household energy consumption / travel mode changes / energy use / energy-saving behaviors / greenhouse gas / energy-efficient building shells / standby electricity / few salient product / household electricity consumption / energy savings / food / residential energy efficiency / energy / solar technology / greenhouse gas emissions / Energy conservation policies / electricity / energy consumption / Direct energy use / household energy conservation / consumer products / energy-efficient appliances / past energy efficiency interventions / energy efficiency gap / home energy-efficiency investments / residential energy conservation / less energy intensive / energy-efficient equipment / longer-term greenhouse gas emissions targets / policy tools / energy-efficiency gap / continuous energy-use feedback / home energy use / energy efficiency / social networks / nonbusiness travel / energy crises / in-home energy consumption / low-carbon energy technologies / green electricity services / low-carbon energy supply / energy-efficient vehicle / mass media campaigns / greenhouse gas emitters / household equipment / improved rating/labeling systems / mass media appeals / personal transportation technologies / /

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University of Michigan / Dearborn / UCLA / Vanderbilt University Law School / National Research Council / Michigan State University / U.S. Department of Energy / Energy Information Agency / Energy Information Administration / New Society / Indiana University / Bloomington / Vanderbilt University / American Council for an EnergyEfficient Economy / European Union / /

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Thomas Dietza / Michael P. Vandenberghe / Paul C. Sternd / Jennifer Kelly / Jonathan Gilliganc / Gerald T. Gardnerb / /

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Psychologist / Vandenbergh MP / T.D. / petroleum Author / evaluator / /

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available data / /

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DC / /

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New York / Michigan / Tennessee / /

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telecommuting / personal transportation technologies / 15 existing technologies / low-carbon energy technologies / http / /

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www.pnas.org兾cgi兾doi兾10.1073兾pnas.0908738106 / www.globalcarbonproject.org/carbonbudget/07/index.htm / www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full / /

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