4.7 Article

Energy-saving R&D and carbon intensity in China

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 98, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105240

Keywords

Energy-saving R& D; Carbon intensity; Two step analysis; Propensity score matching; Difference-in-differences estimator

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Funding

  1. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [JBK2101061]

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This study focuses on energy-saving R&D in China, categorizing activities by participants and purposes to identify their heterogeneity. Findings suggest that enterprises have a more noticeable impact on reducing carbon intensity, utility-type R&D activities are more effective in cutting carbon intensity than invention-type R&D, and technology absorptive capacity plays a crucial role in the effectiveness of energy-saving R&D activities on carbon intensity.
China's domestic research and development (R&D), an important source of technological progress, is considered one of its most effective implements for cutting carbon intensity. However, few studies have yet focused on R&D in the energy field, or even explored the heterogeneity within energy-saving R&D. Considering its potential significance in yielding more effective environmental policies, this work focuses particularly on energy-saving R&D, which is representative of energy-saving technological progress, and categorizes these R&D activities according to actors and purposes to identify their heterogeneity. A series of estimators, including instrumental variable estimators, a propensity score matching and difference-in-differences estimator, and the generalized method of moments, are applied first. To obtain more detail on how energy-saving R&D influences carbon intensity, a two-step analysis and dynamic panel threshold model are then employed. Since enterprises' motivation for technological change arises from a profit-maximizing purpose, we hypothesize that the activities of enterprises, as opposed to universities or individuals, could produce more noticeable impacts on carbon intensity reduction. We further hypothesize that utility-type R&D activities are, in practice, more useful in cutting carbon intensity than invention-type R&D and that the technology absorptive capacity plays an important role in the effectiveness of energy-saving R&D activities on carbon intensity. Empirical results based on a Chinese provincial dataset (2000-2016) validate all our hypotheses, which enables us to provide policy suggestions for carbon intensity reduction in China. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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