Understanding decoupling China’s emissions from the economy and identifying the drivers of emissions at a sector perspective can facilitate China’s move to a low-carbon economy that makes economic growth compatible with carbon reduction. This study combined decoupling and decomposition econometric techniques to quantify both the decoupling effects and the driving elements of carbon emissions in China’s six major sectors. The study found that the leading source of all carbon emissions in China come from the industrial sector, followed by the ‘Other’ sectors and the Transport sector. Further, the decoupling status in those sectors differed: Construction (weak decoupling), other (weak decoupling), Trade (weak decoupling), Industry (weak decoup...
Faced with peaking carbon emissions and carbon neutrality goals, low-carbon transformation has becom...
With a continuously growing share of the world’s overall energy consumption, the transport sector ha...
Carbon neutrality is urgent as rapidly emerging economies aggravate their share of global energy dem...
Understanding decoupling China’s emissions from the economy and identifying the drivers of emissions...
ABSTRACT: This study analyses the decoupling relationship between energy-related CO2 emissions and e...
This paper uses the non-competitive I-O model and the Tapio decoupling model to comprehensively anal...
The transport sector is the major green-house gas emitter and most rapidly growing sector in terms o...
Many regions or countries seek to transition to a low-carbon economy, but there is ambiguity about h...
Economic development usually leads to increased energy consumption, which in turn will result in an ...
High-carbon emission industries are the most important source of carbon emissions in the Zhejiang Pr...
China has overtaken the United States as the world’s largest producer of carbon dioxide, with indust...
The world has witnessed unparalleled economic development over the past decades, but accompanied by ...
China has overtaken the United States as the world’s largest producer of carbon dioxide, with indust...
China has become the largest CO2 emission country since 2014. The industrial sector is the largest c...
Faced with peaking carbon emissions and carbon neutrality goals, low-carbon transformation has becom...
Faced with peaking carbon emissions and carbon neutrality goals, low-carbon transformation has becom...
With a continuously growing share of the world’s overall energy consumption, the transport sector ha...
Carbon neutrality is urgent as rapidly emerging economies aggravate their share of global energy dem...
Understanding decoupling China’s emissions from the economy and identifying the drivers of emissions...
ABSTRACT: This study analyses the decoupling relationship between energy-related CO2 emissions and e...
This paper uses the non-competitive I-O model and the Tapio decoupling model to comprehensively anal...
The transport sector is the major green-house gas emitter and most rapidly growing sector in terms o...
Many regions or countries seek to transition to a low-carbon economy, but there is ambiguity about h...
Economic development usually leads to increased energy consumption, which in turn will result in an ...
High-carbon emission industries are the most important source of carbon emissions in the Zhejiang Pr...
China has overtaken the United States as the world’s largest producer of carbon dioxide, with indust...
The world has witnessed unparalleled economic development over the past decades, but accompanied by ...
China has overtaken the United States as the world’s largest producer of carbon dioxide, with indust...
China has become the largest CO2 emission country since 2014. The industrial sector is the largest c...
Faced with peaking carbon emissions and carbon neutrality goals, low-carbon transformation has becom...
Faced with peaking carbon emissions and carbon neutrality goals, low-carbon transformation has becom...
With a continuously growing share of the world’s overall energy consumption, the transport sector ha...
Carbon neutrality is urgent as rapidly emerging economies aggravate their share of global energy dem...