4.7 Article

Measuring the environmental performance of the EU27 from the Water-Energy-Carbon nexus perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 265, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.121832

Keywords

Water-energy-carbon nexus; EU27; Environmental footprints; Input-output model

Funding

  1. project Sustainable Process Integration Laboratory - SPIL - EU CZ Operational Programme Research, Development and Education [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/15_003/0000456]
  2. Brno University of Technology
  3. Fudan University
  4. Beijing Normal University
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71774032, 71961137009]
  6. Newton Advanced Fellowship from the British Academy
  7. Newton Fund [NAFR2180103]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study seeks to estimate the Water-Energy-Carbon (WEC) nexus in the EU27 by using the Environmental Input-Output (EIO) model. The EmbodiedWater Consumption Coefficients (EWCC), Embodied Energy Consumption Coefficients (EECC) and Embodied CO2 Emission Coefficients (ECEC) are explored. Both the direct and indirect values of the above indicators are investigated. Water efficiency, energy efficiency and CO2 emission index per capita are calculated as well. The results identify the water and energy efficiencies, and carbon emission intensity of different countries in the EU27: 1) EU27 has higher average water efficiency (27 m(3)/k(sic)edededededededededededed) and energy efficiency (8.8 MJ/(sic)) than the worldwide (75 m(3)/k(sic), 13.9 MJ/(sic)), however, with more per capita consumption of water (1,332 m(3)) and energy (0.43 TJ), and CO2 emission (14 t); 2) Germany, France and Austria are the most eco-friendly countries, on the contrary, Bulgaria, Greece, Poland and Romania are water- energy- and carbon-intensivee; 3) France (0.42 TJ/cap), Sweden (0.7 TJ/cap), Lithuania (0.36 TJ/cap) and Portugal (0.29 TJ/cap) consume more energy and have less CO2 emissions because of higher renewable energy share; 4) Bulgaria, Luxembourg, Estonia and Malta import the most embodied water and energy per GDP, and transfer the most CO2 emission to the upstream countries. This study can contribute to understanding the environmental performance in the EU27, and provide a reference for future studies of other regions in the world. (c) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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