Peak Oil, Climate Change, and the Limits to China’s Economic Growth
Routledge Studies in Ecological Economics Series

Language: English

178.41 €

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Peak Oil, Climate Change, and the Limits to China's Economic Growth
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60.02 €

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Peak Oil, Climate Change, and the Limits to China's Economic Growth
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· 13.8x21.6 cm · Paperback

This book studies the limits imposed by the depletion of fossil fuels and the requirements of climate stabilization on economic growth with a focus on China. The book intends to examine the potentials of various energy resources, including oil, natural gas, coal, nuclear, wind, solar, and other renewables, as well as energy efficiency. Unlike many other books on the subject, this book intends to argue that, despite the large potentials of renewable energies and energy efficiency, economic growth eventually will have to be brought to an end as China and the world undertake the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energies.

China has overtaken the US to become the world?s largest energy consumer and greenhouse gas emitter. Their energy consumption is dominated by coal and China now accounts for one quarter of the world?s total carbon dioxide emissions. Moreover, China is set to become the world?s largest oil importer in the next decade.

This book will consider energy development in the broader context of economic and social changes, especially the historical dynamics of the capitalist world system. Historical lessons of capitalism and socialism will be discussed. The book will evaluate the implications of ecological limits to growth on the economic system and argue that the existing capitalist system is fundamentally incompatible with ecological sustainability.

1. Peak Oil, Climate Change, and China 2. China and the Capitalist World System 3. Energy and the Economy 4. Peak Oil 5. Peak Energy and the Limits to Global Economic Growth 6. Peak Energy and the Limits to China’s Economic Growth 7. The Crisis of the Chinese Capitalism 8. China and Climate Change 9. Transition to the End of Growth

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Minqi Li is Associate Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Utah, USA