4.7 Article

How to promote energy efficiency through technological progress in China?

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 143, Issue -, Pages 812-821

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2017.11.047

Keywords

Technological progress; Energy productivity; Structural transformation; Energy price; Dynamic panel data model

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71773028, 71603079, 71703120]
  2. Education Department Project of Hunan Province [17A142]
  3. Modern Enterprise Management Research Center of Hunan Province [17qgzd01]
  4. Grant for Collaborative Innovation Center for Energy Economics and Energy Policy [1260-Z0210011]
  5. Xiamen University Flourish Plan Special Funding [1260-Y07200]
  6. China National Social Science Fund [15ZD058]
  7. China Scholarship Council (the International Clean Energy Talent Programme)

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Technological progress plays a key role in promoting energy efficiency. In order to find the suitable path of technological progress to improve energy efficiency, this study adopts the growth-accounting method to investigate the effects of two types of technological progress, namely, the Hicks-neutral and the capital-embodied technological progress on the changes in energy productivity. Furthermore, dynamic panel data models are applied to investigate the various effects of these two types of technological progress on energy productivities 30 Chinese provinces from 1997 to 2012. The main results are: (1) the Hicks-neutral technological progress directly contributes to energy productivity improvement, and its indirect contribution comes from the optimization of manufacturing structure induced by technological catch-up; (2) the capital-embodied technological progress has a direct contribution to energy productivity improvement, while the indirect contribution is seen through its interaction with the upgrading of the manufacturing structure; (3) the energy-saving performance from the capital-embodied technological progress is poor because of energy rebound effect. These findings suggest that the capital embodied technological progress is effective for energy-saving in China; which can be made possible only by implementing energy price reforms. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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