4.7 Article

Environmental regulation mitigates energy rebound effect

Journal

ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 125, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2023.106851

Keywords

Environmental regulation; Energy rebound effect; 11th Five-Year Plan; Energy efficiency

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Improving energy efficiency is considered effective in addressing climate warming and environmental degradation, but recent studies have found that it may lead to rebound effects. This paper aims to fill the literature gaps by exploring the role of environmental regulation in shaping the energy rebound effect. Using China's environmental policy as a case study, the findings suggest that environmental regulation plays a positive role in limiting the energy rebound effect.
Improving energy efficiency is frequently viewed as one of the most effective ways to tackle climate warming and environmental degradation. Yet recent studies recognized that producers might take advantage of energy efficiency gains such as substituting capital and labor with energy and expanding production scale, which diminishes the energy-saving effect of energy efficiency improvement. The so-called rebound effect has drawn extensive attention from both academia and policymakers. Nevertheless, the determinants of the magnitude of the energy rebound effect are rarely known. This paper aims to fill some literature gaps. We theoretically rationalize how environmental regulation shapes the energy rebound effect. Taking the environmental policy in China's 11th Five-Year Plan as a quasi-experiment, we employ the difference-in-difference-in-differences method to estimate the moderating effect of environmental regulation on the relationship between energy efficiency and energy consumption. We document that the rebound effect negatively correlates with the emission reduction mandates. Thus, environmental regulation plays a positive role in limiting the energy rebound effect.

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