4.8 Article

Determinants of stagnating carbon intensity in China

Journal

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
Volume 4, Issue 11, Pages 1017-1023

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NCLIMATE2388

Keywords

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Funding

  1. China's National Basic Research Program [2014CB441301, 2010CB951803]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41328008, 41222036, 71325006, 71033004]
  3. ESRC
  4. German Ministry of Science and Technology as part of the 'Entdeken' Project
  5. Italian Ministry for Environment, Land and Sea
  6. Collaborative Innovation Centre for Regional Environmental Quality

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China committed itself to reduce the carbon intensity of its economy (the amount of CO2 emitted per unit of GDP) by 40-45% during 2005-2020. Yet, between 2002 and 2009, China experienced a 3% increase in carbon intensity, though trends differed greatly among its 30 provinces. Decomposition analysis shows that sectoral effciency gains in nearly all provinces were offset by movement towards a more carbon-intensive economic structure. Such a sectoral shift seemed to be heavily affected by the growing role of investments and capital accumulation in China's growth process which has favoured sectors with high carbon intensity. Panel data regressions show that changes in carbon intensity were smallest in sectors dominating the regional economy (so as not to endanger these large sectors, which are the mainstay of the provincial economy), whereas scale and convergence effects played a much smaller role.

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