Carbon Offsetting Mechanism of China Province Based on Carbon Reduction Cost

被引:5
|
作者
Zhong S.-Y. [1 ]
Zhang X.-M. [1 ]
Wu J. [1 ]
Wu N. [1 ]
Feng Q. [1 ]
Fu Z.-Q. [1 ]
机构
[1] State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Eco-industry, Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, Beijing
来源
Huanjing Kexue/Environmental Science | 2023年 / 44卷 / 08期
关键词
carbon compensation; carbon reduction cost; carbon responsibility; embodied carbon; multi-regional input-output model;
D O I
10.13227/j.hjkx.202209038
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A reasonable definition of carbon emission responsibility and inter-provincial carbon compensation is an important approach to promote regional coordinated emission reduction. Here, based on the 2017 multi-regional input-output table, carbon emissions from provinces were decomposed by using the value-added trade decomposition method, the embodied carbon flows between provinces were measured, and a differentiated carbon compensation mechanism based on emission reduction cost was designed, which provides the reference for China to carry out horizontal carbon compensation. The main conclusions were as follows: ① the carbon emissions caused by the final demand within the province accounted for 53. 56%, whereas the carbon emissions caused by the final demand outside the province accounted for 32. 49%. The embodied carbon flows among provinces showed a significant existence. ② The embodied carbon showed a significant flow characteristic of transferring from the northern and central regions to the Beijing-Tianjin region and the southeastern coastal regions. ③ From the perspective of producers, consumers, and shared responsibility, the total carbon emissions of provinces and cities were equal, and the distribution idea of shared responsibility reflected the “benefit principle.” ④ There were differences in carbon emission reduction costs between provinces. In areas with low carbon emission reduction costs, direct carbon emissions were high, and the industries were dominated by heavy industry. In areas with high carbon emission reduction costs, direct carbon emissions were low, and the industries were high-tech industries and service industries. ⑤ The amount of compensation to be paid/ accepted by provinces varied based on the cost of emission reduction. Among them, Guangdong had the highest amount of compensation to be paid, and Inner Mongolia had the highest amount of compensation to be accepted. © 2023 Science Press. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:4637 / 4646
页数:9
相关论文
共 45 条
  • [1] Machado G, Schaeffer R, Worrell E., Energy and carbon embodied in the international trade of Brazil: an input-output approach, Ecological Economics, 39, 3, pp. 409-424, (2001)
  • [2] Hou H M, Wang J W, Yuan M N, Et al., Estimating the mitigation potential of the Chinese service sector using embodied carbon emissions accounting [ J ], Environmental Impact Assessment Review, 86, (2021)
  • [3] Li F, Hu J B., Dynamic analysis of influential factors on the change of embodied carbon emissions in China’s industrial sectors: empirical research based on the industrial data, On Economic Problems, 11, pp. 77-87, (2021)
  • [4] Qi Y, Li H M, Xu M., Accounting embodied carbon in import and export in China, China Population, Resources and Environment, 18, 3, pp. 8-13, (2008)
  • [5] Song J Z, Di X L, Wang X P., Structure analysis of embodied carbon emission flow among China’s industrial sectors: based on the perspective of complex networks, Statistics & Information Forum, 35, 3, pp. 49-58, (2020)
  • [6] Wang X L, Jin Q., China’s trade embodied carbon emissions and shared responsibility under the background of carbon neutrality, Environmental Science & Technology, 44, 11, pp. 205-210, (2021)
  • [7] Yan M, Sun H., Research on the network structural characteristics of China’s provincial implicit carbon transfer from the perspective of economic internal circulation, Ecological Economy, 38, 2, pp. 13-21, (2022)
  • [8] Zhang Q F, Fang K, Xu M, Et al., Review of carbon footprint research based on input-output analysis, Journal of Natural Resources, 33, 4, pp. 696-708, (2018)
  • [9] Zhang Z H, Zhao Y H, Su B, Et al., Embodied carbon in China’s foreign trade: an online SCI-E and SSCI based literature review, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 68, pp. 492-510, (2017)
  • [10] Sato M., Embodied carbon in trade: a survey of the empirical literature, Journal of Economic Surveys, 28, 5, pp. 831-861, (2014)