4.8 Article

Unequal Exchange of Air Pollution and Economic Benefits Embodied in China's Exports

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 7, Pages 3888-3898

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b05651

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [71603097, 71433007, 71628301, 71473242, 71373294]
  2. Peking University-Lincoln Institute Centre for Urban Development and Land Policy
  3. Outstanding PhD Candidate Program of Nanjing University [201601B009, 201601B011]
  4. Clean Development Mechanism Project of China's National Development and Reform Commission [2013056]

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As the world's factory, China has enjoyed huge economic benefits from international export but also suffered severe environmental consequences. Most studies investigating unequal environmental exchange associated with trade took China as a homogeneous entity ignoring considerable inequality and outsourcing of pollution within China. This paper traces the regional mismatch of export-induced economic benefits and environmental costs along national supply chains by using the latest multiregional input-output model and emission inventory for 2012. The results indicate that approximately 56% of the national GDP induced by exports has been received by developed coastal regions, while about 72% of air pollution embodied in national exports, measured as aggregated atmospheric pollutant equivalents (APE), has been mainly incurred by less developed central and western regions. For each yuan of export-induced GDP, developed regions only incurred 0.4-0.6 g APE emissions, whereas less developed regions from western or central China had to suffer 4-8 times the amount of emissions. This is due to poorer regions providing lower value added and higher emission-intensive inputs and having lower environmental standards and less efficient technologies. Our results may pave a way to mitigate the unequal relationship between developed and less developed regions from the perspective of environment-economy nexus.

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