Green growth in the mirror of history
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Springer Nature
Date
2025-04-22Referencia bibliográfica
Infante-Amate, J., Travieso, E. & Aguilera, E. Green growth in the mirror of history. Nat Commun 16, 3766 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-58777-4
Sponsorship
MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 - FEDER, EU (PID2021-123220NB-I00, PID2021-124394NB-I00); Areces Foundation (CISP19A6420); European Research Council (ERC), Horizon Europe (StG Project 101115126 “WHEP”); MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 (Ramón y Cajal Grant RYC2022-037863-I / ESF+)Abstract
‘Green growth’ is a cornerstone of global sustainability debates and policy
agenda. Although there is no consensus definition, it is commonly associated
with the absolute decoupling of economic growth from greenhouse gas
emissions, which is indeed occurring in high-income countries today. Nevertheless, green growth thus defined could be insufficient to reach global mitigation goals. Here we examine long-term historical data and develop a
framework to identify global, regional, and national patterns of decoupling
between economic output and anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions. We
show that 60% of cumulative fossil-fuel CO2 reduction during 1820–2022 took
place under recessions rather than during instances of green growth, with just
5 global crises accounting for about 40%. While in the last 50 years national
episodes of green growth became more common, they have not been sustained over time. Crucially, historical episodes compatible with sustained
growth and the required emission reductions are anecdotal.





