4.7 Article

Fresh insights for sustainable development: Collaborative governance of carbon emissions based on social network analysis

Journal

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 1873-1887

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/sd.2490

Keywords

carbon emissions; environmental policy; European Union; social network analysis; spatial network structure; sustainable development; weighted and directed network

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Global climate change caused by carbon emissions has posed severe challenges to the sustainable development of the global economy. This study constructs a weighted and directed carbon emission network for the European Union (EU), analyzes the structural characteristics of the network using social network analysis, investigates the role of countries within the network using cluster analysis, and explores the impacts of network characteristics on carbon emissions through linear regression. The findings reveal the network structure of carbon emissions among EU countries, the roles played by different countries in the network, and the effects of network characteristics on carbon emissions. Based on these findings, policy suggestions for collaborative governance of EU carbon emission abatement are put forward.
Global climate change caused by carbon emissions has brought severe challenges to the sustainable development of global economy. In this context, this study constructs a weighted and directed carbon emission network for the European Union (EU). We use social network analysis to measure the indicators of the structural characteristics of the EU carbon emission network, and employ cluster analysis to investigate the role of countries in the carbon emission network. Furthermore, we use linear regression to explore the impacts of structural characteristics of carbon emission network on carbon emissions. The results show that, first the carbon emissions ties among the EU countries show a typical network structure during the sample period. Countries such as Germany, France, and Belgium are at the center of the carbon emission network, while Malta, Cyprus, and Croatia are at the edge. Second, different countries play the roles of net spillover, broker, two-way spillover, and net receiver in the EU carbon emission network. Last, the increase of network density, the decrease of network hierarchy and the decrease of network efficiency all significantly reduce the carbon emission intensity of the EU, and narrow the spatial difference of carbon emissions among countries. Improving the weighted centrality indicators of nodes in the carbon emission network is helpful to reduce the carbon emission intensity of the EU countries. Based on the findings, this article puts forward policy suggestions for the collaborative governance of EU carbon emission abatement.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available