Low-Carbon Consumption in China: Residential Behavior, Corporate Practices and Policy Implication, 1st ed. 2020

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Language: English

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Low-Carbon Consumption in China: Residential Behavior, Corporate Practices and Policy Implication
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327 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

158.24 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Low-Carbon Consumption in China: Residential Behavior, Corporate Practices and Policy Implication
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This book explores China?s low-carbon consumption in the context of residential behaviour, corporate practices and policy Implication. It first calculates the carbon and ecological footprints of residential consumption, including both direct and indirect emissions, before discussing Chinese residential behavioural aspects and determinants of electricity saving, low-carbon transportation, low-carbon product purchasing, and e-waste recycling. The authors then investigate the relationship between industrial growth and carbon emissions, using the example of the iron and steel industry to examine the motivation for energy intensive industries to reduce carbon emissions. They also consider energy efficiency and inter-company collaboration on carbon emission reduction. Lastly, the book describes the major low-carbon policies in China and their impact, economic cost and public acceptance.

Carbon dioxide emissions from residential consumption in China.- Features and determinants of electricity-saving behavior.- Empirical analysis of low carbon transportation in China.- Residential willingness in purchasing low carbon products.- E-waste recycling behavior in China.- Relationship between industrial growth and carbon emissions.- Motivation of energy intensive industries on carbon emission reduction: learning from iron & steel industry.- Energy efficiency and carbon emission abatement technology.- Inter-firm collaboration on carbon emission abatement.- Low carbon policies in China. 

Zhaohua Wang is a Professor and doctoral supervisor at the School of Management & Economics, Beijing Institute of Technology, China. He is also the director of the Chinese Society for Sustainable Development (CSSD) and a senior member of the Chinese Society of Technology Economics (CSTE). He received his doctoral degree from Dalian University of Technology in 2003, and completed his postdoctoral research at Tsinghua University from 2003 to 2005. Prof. Wang has extensive research experience in the field of low carbon consumption from both household and corporate perspectives. He has published more than 200 academic papers in international journals, such as Nature (Comment), Energy Economics, and Energy Policy, and his research findings have provided policy support for Chinese government institutions, such as the State Council and National Energy Bureau. He has also received numerous awards and titles, such as Cheung Kong Scholar Chair Professor, and National Outstanding Young Investigator Award in recognition of his outstanding research.

Bin Zhang is an Assistant Professor at the School of Management & Economics, Beijing Institute of Technology, China. He received his doctoral degree from Beijing Institute of Technology in 2014, and completed his postdoctoral research at Hong Kong Polytech University from 2015 to 2017. Dr. Zhang is an important member in Prof. Wang’s research group, and they have collaboratively published more than 30 academic papers on low carbon consumption in China.

 

Describes various theoretical methods to examine low carbon consumption in China

Discusses the rebound effect of electricity consumption and transportation

Uses data envelope analysis to calculate energy efficiency

Explores inter-firm collaboration on carbon emission reduction

Presents the major low carbon policies in China, and discusses the impact and economic cost of these policies