Growth of industrial CO2 emissions in Shanghai city: Evidence from a dynamic vector autoregression analysis

被引:37
作者
Lin, Boqiang [1 ]
Xu, Bin [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Xiamen Univ, Sch Management, China Inst Studies Energy Policy, Collaborat Innovat Ctr Energy Econ & Energy Polic, Xiamen 361005, Fujian, Peoples R China
[2] Jiangxi Univ Finance & Econ, Sch Stat, Nanchang 330013, Jiangxi, Peoples R China
[3] Jiangxi Univ Finance & Econ, Res Ctr Appl Stat, Nanchang 330013, Jiangxi, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
The industrial sector; Carbon dioxide emissions; Vector autoregression model; CARBON-DIOXIDE EMISSIONS; STEEL-INDUSTRY; CHINA IRON; REGIONAL DIFFERENCES; ENERGY EFFICIENCY; TRANSPORT SECTOR; DEMAND; MODEL; CONSUMPTION; REDUCTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.energy.2018.03.052
中图分类号
O414.1 [热力学];
学科分类号
摘要
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is one of the main sources of global warming, rising sea levels, and frequent outbreaks of extreme weather. China is now one of the largest energy consumer and CO2 emitters in the world. As one of China's economic centers, Shanghai city has a perfect industrial system with large industrial scale. The industrial sector is an energy and emission intensive industry, which contributes the significant part of CO2 emissions in Shanghai city. Therefore, an in depth investigation of the main driving forces of CO2 emissions in the industrial sector is essential to reduce CO2 emissions in the city. This study uses Vector Autoregressive model to analyze the main factors causing the increase in CO2 emissions in the industrial sector. The results show that economic growth leads to an increase in CO2 emissions in the short run, but is conducive to reducing CO2 emissions in the long run, due to the differences in fixed asset investment and export trade. Energy consumption structure leads to a growing CO2 emissions in the short term, and is beneficial to mitigate CO2 emissions in the long term, owing to the gradual optimization of energy consumption structure. However, urbanization helps to reduce CO2 emissions in the short term, but leads to an increase in CO2 emissions in the long term, because of urban real estate and infrastructure construction investments as well as vehicle use. Energy efficiency leads to an increase in CO2 emissions both in the short and long run since the scale effect exceeds the technical effect. Industrial structure produces a positive effect in the short run, but the impact is gradually narrowing in the long run. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:167 / 177
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] The role of CO2 emissions and economic growth in energy consumption: empirical evidence from Belt and Road and OECD countries
    Kongkuah, Maxwell
    Yao, Hongxing
    Fongjong, Brice Berinyuy
    Agyemang, Andrew Osei
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2021, 28 (18) : 22488 - 22509
  • [42] Dynamic evolution analysis of the factors driving the growth of energy-related CO2 emissions in China: An input-output analysis
    Ma, Yan
    Song, Zhe
    Li, Shuangqi
    Jiang, Tangyang
    PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (12):
  • [43] Analysis of energy-related CO2 emissions in China's mining industry: Evidence and policy implications
    Wang, Miao
    Feng, Chao
    RESOURCES POLICY, 2017, 53 : 77 - 87
  • [44] Exploring regional differences in the impact of high energy-intensive industries on CO2 emissions: Evidence from a panel analysis in China
    Liu, Hanchu
    Fan, Jie
    Zhou, Kan
    Wang, Qiang
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2019, 26 (25) : 26229 - 26241
  • [45] Decoupling Regional Economic Growth from Industrial CO2 Emissions: Empirical Evidence from the 13 Prefecture-Level Cities in Jiangsu Province
    Liu, Jingxing
    Li, Hailing
    Liu, Tianqi
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2022, 14 (05)
  • [46] Complete Decomposition Analysis of CO2 Emissions in the Health Sector in Portugal
    Robaina, Margarita
    Varum, Celeste
    Francisco, Ana
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2019, 13 (06) : 977 - 990
  • [47] Identification and analysis of driving factors of CO2 emissions from economic growth in Pakistan
    Akram, Zubair
    Engo, Jean
    Akram, Umair
    Zafar, Muhammad Wasif
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2019, 26 (19) : 19481 - 19489
  • [48] CO2 emissions from urban buildings at the city scale: System dynamic projections and potential mitigation policies
    Liu, Pei
    Lin, Borong
    Zhou, Hao
    Wu, Xiaoying
    Little, John C.
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2020, 277
  • [49] DECOUPLING ANALYSIS OF ENERGY-RELATED CO2 EMISSIONS FROM ECONOMIC GROWTH AT DIFFERENT STAGES IN CHINA
    Xu, Shi-Chun
    Zhang, Qing-Qing
    He, Zheng-Xia
    Long, Ru-Yin
    Chen, Hong
    FRESENIUS ENVIRONMENTAL BULLETIN, 2017, 26 (05): : 3118 - 3127
  • [50] Industrial water-use technical efficiency and potential reduction of CO2 emissions: evidence from industry-level data
    Lu, Wen-Cheng
    CARBON MANAGEMENT, 2019, 10 (06) : 513 - 522