4.7 Article

Study on value Co-creation and evolution game of low-carbon technological innovation ecosystem

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 414, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2023.137720

Keywords

Low -carbon technology innovation; Innovation ecosystem; Value co -creation; Evolutionary game; Collaborative innovation

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As climate change worsens, governments and enterprises are increasingly emphasizing value creation through low-carbon technology innovation. However, challenges such as low innovation capability, the need for improved government regulation, and low investment from financial institutions hinder value creation.
As climate change becomes more and more serious, governments and enterprises have gradually attached great importance to achieving value creation through low-carbon technology innovation. However, the low innovation capability of low-carbon technology, the need to improve government regulation, and the low investment of financial institutions make value creation face great challenges. In this paper, a game model of value co-creation evolution in a low-carbon technological innovation ecosystem is constructed with enterprises, governments, and financial institutions as the main body. The results show that: (1) The best optimal evolutionary stabilization strategy is (collaborative innovation, loose regulation and support), that is, the optimal strategic goal of value cocreation; (2) When the comprehensive expenditure for collaborative innovation of low-carbon technologies and independent innovation of enterprises is less than the comprehensive income, the expansion of R & D costs, carbon emission gap, liquidated damages, synergistic advantage benefits and collaborative innovation support can promote the collaborative innovation of low-carbon technologies of enterprises; (3) In the absence of public credibility, the government can expand the subsidy for collaborative innovation of low-carbon technologies of enterprises or appropriately reduce the regulatory costs, so as to achieve the effect of loose regulation; (4) If the return on investment obtained by financial institutions from supporting low-carbon technology innovation is more than that of non-support, the return on investment ratio and penalty coefficient of low-carbon technology innovation can be increased, and the financial institution's willingness to invest in the collaborative innovation of low-carbon technologies shall be enhanced.

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