“The path that countries follow is a predictable one. Pollution first rises as a country starts to move out of poverty. **At this stage, access to energy is the priority.** It burns coal, oil, gas without tight restrictions on how clean it needs to be. There are no demands for top-of-the-range power plants with anti-pollution controls, or new car engines with particle filters. Pollution levels continue to rise as more people get electricity, cars, and can afford to heat or cool their homes.
“The country enters an industrial boom. People have more money and life is getting better. **The pollution isn’t pleasant, but the trade-off seems worth it**.
“But, eventually, the country reaches a tipping point in its pathway to prosperity. Once life is comfortable, our concerns turn to the environment around us. **Our priorities shift, and we no longer want to tolerate dirty air**. Governments have to shift too; they are forced to take action and reduce levels of air pollution. The curve of air pollution reaches its peak and starts to decline. **This journey is often called the ‘[[Environmental Kuznets Curve]]’: plot an environmental metric against income and it forms an upside-down ‘U’** (it’s low when we’re poor; it rises to reach its peak at middle incomes; then falls again as we get richer). ([Location 982](https://readwise.io/to_kindle?action=open&asin=B0C3X6X695&location=982))”
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**Tags** -- [[quotes]], [[climate-change]], [[pollution]], [[growth]], [[economics]], [[public-policy]], [[energy-security]], [[Environmental Kuznets Curve|environmental-kuznets-curve]], [[Kuznets Curve|kuznets-curve]]
**Source** -- [[260103133118 - B - Not the End of the World]]