The Kaya identity is an identity stating that the total emission level of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide can be expressed as the product of four factors: human population, GDP per capita, energy intensity, and carbon intensity. It is a concrete form of the more general I = PAT equation relating factors that determine the level of human impact on climate. Although the terms in the Kaya identity would in theory cancel out, it is useful in practice in order to calculate emissions in terms of more readily available data, namely population, GDPper capita, energy per unit GDP, and emissions per unit energy. It furthermore highlights the elements of the global economy on which one could act in order to reduce emissions, notably the energy intensity per unit GDP and the emissions per unit energy.
Overview
The Kaya identity was developed by Japanese energy economist Yoichi Kaya.. It is the subject of his book Environment, Energy, and Economy: strategies for sustainability co-authored with Keiichi Yokobori as the output of the Conference on Global Environment, Energy, and Economic Development. It is a mathematically more consistent variation of Paul R. Ehrlich & John Holdren's I=PAT formula that describes the factors of environmental impact. Kaya identity is expressed in the form: Where:
The Kaya identity is reviewed in a 2002 paper. A 2007 article uses the Kaya Identity in its analysis of recent trends in carbon emissions, and finds:
... cessation or reversal of earlier declining trends in the energy intensity of gross domestic product and the carbon intensity of energy, coupled with continuing increases in population and per-capita GDP. Nearly constant or slightly increasing trends in the carbon intensity of energy have been recently observed in both developed and developing regions. No region is decarbonizing its energy supply.
Other uses
Bill Gates used a form of the Identity, without attribution, at a TED Talk called . Writing in ThinkProgress, Joseph J. Romm disputed the validity of Gates' arguments, as well as clarifying the key idea behind the identity.
Critique
It has been pointed out that the Kaya identity is a tautology, because it is nothing but a rewrite of the identity :, i.e., "Carbon is carbon". This implies there are any number of alternative formulations for calculating net carbon emissions using other indicators, which may highlight different ways of thinking about emissions reductions.