4.7 Article

Heterogeneous effects of environmental regulation on air pollution: evidence from China's prefecture-level cities

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 20, Pages 25782-25797

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-12434-7

Keywords

Environmental regulation; Air pollution; Heterogeneity effect; Prefecture-level cities

Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan) [26420190071]

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The research findings indicate that both formal and informal environmental regulations can significantly reduce air pollution levels in Chinese prefecture-level cities, and informal environmental regulations indirectly reduce pollution by improving formal environmental regulations.
Using environmental regulation to control air pollution is one of the essential means to resolve economic growth bottlenecks and ecological environment constraints. We construct a theoretical framework to analyse the impact of environmental regulation on air pollution by using balanced panel data from 2003 to 2016 of 248 Chinese cities. The results show that both formal and informal environmental regulations can significantly reduce air pollution in prefecture-level cities. Formal environmental regulation indirectly improves air pollution level by promoting technological innovation and formal environmental regulation indirectly reduces local air pollution by promoting the pollution industry transfer. In addition, informal environmental regulation indirectly reduces air pollution by improving formal environmental regulation. Moreover, formal and informal environmental regulations have inhibitory effects on air pollution in high administrative-level cities and low administrative-level cities, with both the regulations having significantly stronger inhibitory effects on air pollution in low administrative-level cities than in high administrative-level cities. Furthermore, the environmental Kuznets curve is established at the level of prefecture cities in China, and the upgrading of the industrial structure will reduce air pollution, while foreign direct investment and fiscal decentralisation will worsen air pollution.

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