4.7 Article

Exploring the dynamics of low-carbon technology diffusion among enterprises: An evolutionary game model on a two-level heterogeneous social network

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 101, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105399

Keywords

Low-carbon technology diffusion; Agent-based modeling; Complex network; Evolutionary game theory

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71673023]

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For mitigating carbon emissions, governments have formulated policies to promote the diffusion of low-carbon technologies (LCTs) with pivotal impact from enterprises' strategic choices and consumers' decisions. Carbon taxes show increasing marginal effectiveness in promoting LCT diffusion, while subsidies diminish in effectiveness over time. High demand for low-carbon products can stimulate enterprises to adopt LCTs, but could also magnify the fluctuation of LCT diffusion when demand increases from a low level.
For mitigating carbon emissions, series of policies have been formulated by governments to promote the diffusion of low-carbon technologies (LCTs). Enterprises' strategic choices and consumers' decisions have a pivotal impact on LCT diffusion. In this context, this study builds an evolutionary game model based on a social network comprised of two sub-networks with different typologies, which respectively depict the connections of enterprises and consumers. Enterprises choose to produce either low-carbon or un-low-carbon products according to the evolutionary game theory. Consumers purchase preferable products repeatedly according to their demands. Using the model, this research explores the impacts of carbon taxes, subsidies, and the demand for low-carbon products. The results show that carbon taxes have increasing marginal effectiveness in promoting LCT diffusion; high carbon taxes can mitigate the fluctuations of LCT diffusion caused by consumers' repeat purchases; while using the data from the electric vehicle industry, enterprises do not manifest high sensitivity to mild carbon taxation. Different from taxation, the effectiveness of subsidization diminishes and results in inefficiency. A large demand for low-carbon products can prominently stimulate enterprises to adopt LCTs. However, if demand increases from a low level, the fluctuation of LCT diffusion is magnified. This magnification does not last if demand continues to increase.

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