TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping Energy Poverty
T2 - How Much Impact Do Socioeconomic, Urban and Climatic Variables Have at a Territorial Scale?
AU - Encinas, Felipe
AU - Truffello, Ricardo
AU - Aguirre-Nuñez, Carlos
AU - Puig, Isidro
AU - Vergara-Perucich, Francisco
AU - Freed, Carmen
AU - Rodríguez, Blanca
N1 - Funding Information:
This research also received support from the FONDECYT Research Initiation Project No. 11221028 “Inclusion of geographic space in sample designs: application of spatial sampling to reduce uncertainty in the CASEN survey”.
Funding Information:
This research was funded by the National Agency for Research and Development of Chile, ANID, through the FONDECYT Regular No. 1201332 “THE HOUSING-ENERGY-POVERTY NEXUS: Public policies to address the energy poverty in metropolitan areas from housing”; the Centro Nacional de Excelencia para la Industria de la Madera (CENAMAD), ANID BASAL FB210015; and the Centre for Sustainable Urban Development (CEDEUS), ANID/FONDAP Project 15110020.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the authors.
PY - 2022/9
Y1 - 2022/9
N2 - Energy poverty, considered a form of deprivation distinct from income poverty, is associated with three factors: low-income levels, high energy costs, and poor residential energy efficiency. It is necessary to study the socio-spatial distribution of energy poverty, particularly in metropolitan areas, due to persistent socioeconomic segregation and their public agenda implications, including the U.N. SDGs. A model of these characteristics can propose a spatial analysis of urban and climate implications, contributing evidence for public policy. This article aims to address energy poverty from a spatial approach extended to the urban area in Santiago de Chile through an exploratory model that estimates the impact of socioeconomic, urban, and climatic variables at a territorial scale on the performance of homes. Using a geographical weighted regression with the inside home temperature in winter as the dependent variable, the independent variables were the percentage of professionals, NDVI, annual thermal amplitude, and housing material quality. A housing quality pattern that acts as a proxy for vulnerability to energy poverty was found, repeating the distribution pattern of the different socioeconomic sectors. The findings incorporate a new interpretive matrix into the complex reproduction of segregation and inequality in a capital city from a developing country.
AB - Energy poverty, considered a form of deprivation distinct from income poverty, is associated with three factors: low-income levels, high energy costs, and poor residential energy efficiency. It is necessary to study the socio-spatial distribution of energy poverty, particularly in metropolitan areas, due to persistent socioeconomic segregation and their public agenda implications, including the U.N. SDGs. A model of these characteristics can propose a spatial analysis of urban and climate implications, contributing evidence for public policy. This article aims to address energy poverty from a spatial approach extended to the urban area in Santiago de Chile through an exploratory model that estimates the impact of socioeconomic, urban, and climatic variables at a territorial scale on the performance of homes. Using a geographical weighted regression with the inside home temperature in winter as the dependent variable, the independent variables were the percentage of professionals, NDVI, annual thermal amplitude, and housing material quality. A housing quality pattern that acts as a proxy for vulnerability to energy poverty was found, repeating the distribution pattern of the different socioeconomic sectors. The findings incorporate a new interpretive matrix into the complex reproduction of segregation and inequality in a capital city from a developing country.
KW - GWR
KW - energy poverty
KW - segregation
KW - spatial analysis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85138830731&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/land11091449
DO - 10.3390/land11091449
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85138830731
SN - 2073-445X
VL - 11
JO - Land
JF - Land
IS - 9
M1 - 1449
ER -