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Does Global Value Chain Participation Decouple Chinese Development from CO2 Emissions? A Structural Decomposition Analysis

Hui Wang, Chen Pan, B.W. Ang, Peng Zhou

2020The Energy Journal21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Decoupling economic activities and CO2 emissions is central to achieving the climate goals of China. The country’s participation in global value chains has profound impacts on its economy as well as CO2 emissions. Assessing the impacts is fundamental to identifying strategies to decouple China’s development from emissions. To this end, we adopt the multi-region structural decomposition analysis technique to quantify the global value chain determinants of China’s CO2 emission intensity from both the production and consumption perspectives. It is found that China’s decoupling from emissions in 2007-2012 was driven mainly by global value chains. Nonetheless the decoupling slowed down after the global financial crisis. In particular, the value chains within China played a more important role in greening Chinese economy. Despite the considerable improvement in 2007-2012, global value chains remained the primary obstacle to environmental sustainability of China. More detailed results with policy implications are presented.

Topics & Concepts

Decoupling (probability)ChinaGlobal value chainSustainabilityObstacleEconomicsGreenhouse gasValue (mathematics)Natural resource economicsEmission intensitySustainable developmentEconomic systemBusinessInternational tradeComparative advantageGeographyPolitical sciencePhysicsMachine learningArchaeologyComputer scienceBiologyEcologyEngineeringOpticsLawPhotoluminescenceControl engineeringEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityEnergy, Environment, Economic GrowthEnergy, Environment, and Transportation Policies
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