Assessing China’s carbon intensity pledge for 2020: stringency and credibility issues and their implications
- 30 March 2011
- journal article
- Published by Springer Science and Business Media LLC in Environmental Economics and Policy Studies
- Vol. 13 (3), 219-235
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10018-011-0012-4
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
Other Versions
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is it fair to treat China as a Christmas tree to hang everybody's complaints? Putting its own energy saving into perspectiveEnergy Economics, 2010
- China in the transition to a low-carbon economyEnergy Policy, 2010
- Comparing Climate Commitments: A Model-Based Analysis of the Copenhagen AccordSSRN Electronic Journal, 2010
- The U.S. proposed carbon tariffs, WTO scrutiny and China’s responsesInternational Economics and Economic Policy, 2010
- China's climate target: is it achievable?Nature, 2009
- Why did the energy intensity fall in China's industrial sector in the 1990s? The relative importance of structural change and intensity changeEnergy Economics, 2003
- What is happening to China's GDP statistics?China Economic Review, 2001
- Can China afford to commit itself an emissions cap? An economic and political analysisEnergy Economics, 2000
- Decoupling China’s Carbon Emissions Increase from Economic Growth: An Economic Analysis and Policy ImplicationsWorld Development, 2000
- The Economics of Energy Policy in China: Implications for Global Climate Change. Zhongxiang ZhangThe China Journal, 1999