4.7 Article

Energy transition, intensity growth, and policy evolution: Evidence from rural China

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 105, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2021.105746

Keywords

Energy transition; Energy intensity growth; Policy evolution; Rural energy; Rural China

Categories

Funding

  1. Philosophy and Social Science Planning Program of Zhejiang Province [22NDJC023Z]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [72073119]
  3. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LQ22G030018]
  4. Soft Science Research Program of Zhejiang Province [2021C35068]

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This study investigates the evolution of rural energy policies in China, finding that energy transition and intensity growth have different impacts on policy adoption. Various factors such as energy dependence, PM2.5 concentration, carbon intensity, income, rural energy technicians, and urbanization rate significantly influence rural energy policy evolution.
Influenced by the urban-rural energy dualism, developing rural energy is a matter of improving social equity rather than just correcting market imperfections in China. Energy transition and intensity growth have been two major characteristics of China's rural energy development for decades, leading to the evolution of rural energy policies. Based on 2608 provincial rural energy policies and rural energy consumption data from 1994 to 2014, this study investigates how energy policies evolve with energy transition and intensity growth in rural China. It proceeds by classifying provincial rural energy policies into five types and using the logit event history analysis model for first-time policy adoptions and the Cox model for subsequent policy adoptions. The findings are as follows: (1) energy transition has facilitated the first-time adoption of economic instruments, regulatory instruments, and supportive policy schemes, and the subsequent adoption of economic instruments and information and education policies, but hindered the subsequent adoption of supportive policy schemes; (2) energy intensity growth has promoted the first-time adoption of all policies and subsequent adoption of regulatory instruments and information and education policies; (3) energy dependence, PM2.5 concentration, carbon intensity, income, rural energy technicians, and urbanization rate significantly have influenced rural energy policy evolution. Corresponding policy implications are provided in the final section.

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