Strategic Measures to Reduce China's Carbon Emissions: Based on an Index Decomposition Analysis of Carbon Emissions in Eight Industries

被引:13
|
作者
Tu, Zhengge [1 ]
机构
[1] Cent China Normal Univ, Sch Econ & Business Adm, Wuhan, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家社会科学基金;
关键词
low-carbon development; index decomposition analysis (IDA); carbon density; energy intensity;
D O I
10.1080/02529203.2014.927105
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
This article uses the refined Laspeyres index decomposition method to examine the overall trends and characteristics of carbon emissions in eight Chinese industries for the period 1994-2008. The results show that every one percentage point increase in economic scale will result in an average increase of 15 Mt (million tonnes) in carbon emissions. However, different industries vary greatly in terms of marginal carbon emissions caused by economic growth. The economic structure's bias toward heavy industry fuels the increase of carbon emissions: every one percentage point rise in the share of manufacturing industry produces an average of 56 Mt carbon emissions. Technological progress helps reduce energy intensity and serves as a core driver in reducing carbon emissions, in that every one percentage point decrease in energy intensity will cause an average reduction of 33 Mt in carbon emissions. Our coal-dominated energy structure has resulted in a persistently high level of carbon emissions, suggesting that the reduction effect brought about by changes in energy structure is not significant. Nevertheless, lowering the density of overall carbon emissions is a positive signal, indicating that China is optimizing its energy structure. Only by promoting industrial restructuring, optimizing energy structure, encouraging energy-saving technologies and technological innovation, and reorienting industry can China achieve low-carbon development and control pollution.
引用
收藏
页码:158 / 173
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Estimation and Factor Decomposition of Carbon Emissions in China's Tourism Sector
    Chen, Jiandong
    Zhao, Aifeng
    Zhao, Qiuping
    Song, Malin
    Balezentis, Tomas
    Streimikiene, Dalia
    PROBLEMY EKOROZWOJU, 2018, 13 (02): : 91 - 101
  • [32] Carbon emissions in China's trade
    Valerie J. Karplus
    Nature Climate Change, 2013, 3 : 703 - 704
  • [33] China’s carbon emissions overestimated
    Jeff Tollefson
    Nature, 2015, 524 : 276 - 276
  • [34] China's carbon emissions in Brazil
    Fearnside, Philip M.
    SCIENCE, 2021, 373 (6560) : 1209 - 1210
  • [35] An analysis of the decomposition and driving force of carbon emissions in transport sector in China
    Jing Gu
    Shuhua Jiang
    Jing Zhang
    Jinde Jiang
    Scientific Reports, 14 (1)
  • [36] Decomposition Analysis in Electricity Sector Output from Carbon Emissions in China
    Jiang, Xue-Ting
    Su, Min
    Li, Rongrong
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 10 (09)
  • [37] Driving forces of household carbon emissions in China: A spatial decomposition analysis
    Yuan, Rong
    Rodrigues, Joao F. D.
    Behrens, Paul
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2019, 233 : 932 - 945
  • [38] Decomposition and Decoupling Analysis of Carbon Emissions in Xinjiang Energy Base, China
    Qin, Jiancheng
    Gao, Lei
    Tu, Weihu
    He, Jing
    Tang, Jingzhe
    Ma, Shuying
    Zhao, Xiaoyang
    Zhu, Xingzhe
    Brindha, Karthikeyan
    Tao, Hui
    ENERGIES, 2022, 15 (15)
  • [40] Comparing climate policies to reduce carbon emissions in China
    Li, Aijun
    Lin, Boqiang
    ENERGY POLICY, 2013, 60 : 667 - 674