Industrial Energy Consumption in Northeast China under the Revitalisation Strategy: A Decomposition and Policy Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Method
3.1. Decomposition Analysis Method
3.2. Data Collection and Description
4. Results
4.1. Changes of Energy Consumption
4.2. Impacts of Different Factors
4.2.1. The Activity Effect
4.2.2. The Structure Effect
4.2.3. The Intensity Effect
5. Conclusions and Discussion
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Scale | Ref. | Method | Factors | Conclusion |
---|---|---|---|---|
National scale | [22] | Three-level perfect decomposition | intensity effect, structure effect, sectoral-specific activity intensity effect, sectoral-specific activity size effect | Energy-related CO2 emissions in China in 1985–1999 were driven by a trade-off between the positive sectoral-specific scale effects and the negative energy intensity effects. Structural change accounted for only a small portion. |
[23] | Overall energy system model | 23 factors on energy demand side and energy supply side | Increase in C-TPES before 1996 were mainly driven by changes on the energy demand side, declined C-TPES in 1996–2000 attributed to the acceleration of efficiency improvements in end-use and transformation sectors. | |
[24] | Subsystem input–output decomposition analysis | emissions intensity effect, the technological effect and the demand effect | The technological effect was the main contributor to decrease the CO2 emissions in energy-intensive industries during 2005–2010. The emissions intensities had positive effects on reducing the CO2 emissions in energy-intensive industries. The increased CO2 emissions mainly derived from the demand effect. | |
[25] | LMDI method | output effect, structural effect, intensity effect | Industrial energy savings over 1998-2006 were mainly the results of efficiency improvement, whereas the expansion of production scale and the shift towards a heavier industrial structure contributed to an increase in overall energy consumption. | |
[26] | LMDI method | activity effect, intensity effect, structural effect | The production effect was the dominant cause of the rapid growth in industrial energy consumption from 1996 to 2010, the intensity effect was the major factors slowing the growth of industrial energy consumption, while the cumulative structure effect was negligible. | |
[27] | LMDI method | emission coefficient effect, energy intensity effect, and structure effect | The energy intensity effect was the dominant factor in reducing carbon intensity of industrial sector in 1996–2012, the structure effect did not show a strong impact on carbon intensity, the emission coefficient effect gradually increased the carbon intensity. | |
Provincial scale | [28] | Three-level perfect decomposition | intensity effect, structure effect, sectoral-specific activity intensity effect, sectoral-specific activity size effect | Energy intensity of production sector was the dominant negative driving factor from 1995 to 2011, the changes of economic structure in most of the provinces favored the growth of CO2 emissions, but the contribution value was not obvious. |
[29] | Econometric models | economic growth | A long-run, bidirectional, positive relationship exists between economic growth, energy consumption, and CO2 emissions during 1995–2012. | |
[30] | LMDI method | economic structure effects, energy efficiency effects, energy structure effects and CO2 emission coefficient effects | In 1990–2010, energy efficiency effects remained the primary driving force to the downward trend of CO2 emissions per unit of GDP by region, economic structure effects contributed more and more to increase the levels of CO2 emissions per unit of GDP in most studied regions. | |
[31] | LMDI method | carbon emission density and energy consumption intensity | Due to the rapid development of the heavy industrial sectors, Carbon emission intensity (CI) did not decrease in 2003–2005, Energy intensity (EI) is the more significant driver for decrease of CI in 1995–2012.The most contribution of EI's decrease came from secondary industries. |
Year | Yeffect | Seffect | Ieffect | Actual Change (104t SCE) | Change of CO2 Emission (104 t) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Contribution Value (104t CE) | Contribution Rate (%) | Contribution Value (104t CE) | Contribution Rate (%) | Contribution Value (104t CE) | Contribution Rate (%) | |||
2003–2004 | 6178.6 | 277.2 | 3598.5 | 161.4 | −7548.0 | −338.6 | 2229.1 | 5557.1 |
2004–2005 | 4962.3 | 256.4 | 743.2 | 38.4 | −3769.8 | −194.7 | 1935.7 | 4825.7 |
2005–2006 | 6642.0 | 220.1 | −1700.6 | −56.3 | −1923.1 | −63.7 | 3018.3 | 7524.6 |
2006–2007 | 7631.0 | 180.6 | −2202.8 | −52.1 | −1203.0 | −28.5 | 4225.3 | 10,533.7 |
2007–2008 | 7537.9 | 307.7 | −2918.7 | −119.2 | −2169.8 | −88.6 | 2449.3 | 6106.1 |
2008–2009 | 7709.8 | 35,416.6 | −2296.0 | −10,546.9 | −5392.1 | −24,969.7 | 21.8 | 54.3 |
2009–2010 | 8026.9 | 177.6 | −1846.0 | −40.9 | −1662.2 | −36.8 | 4518.6 | 11,264.9 |
2010–2011 | 5359.1 | 125.1 | −2450.1 | −57.2 | 1376.2 | 32.1 | 4285.3 | 10,683.3 |
2011–2012 | 9819.3 | 1013.5 | −95.5 | −9.9 | −8755.0 | −903.7 | 968.8 | 2415.2 |
2003–2012 | 76,233.8 | 323.6 | −8973.7 | −38.1 | −43,699.5 | −185.5 | 23,560.6 | 58,736.6 |
Industrial Sector/Subsectors | Output Value (Billion Yuan) | Increase of Output Value (Billion Yuan) | |
---|---|---|---|
2003 | 2012 | ||
Industrial sector | 1124.9 | 5549.1 | 4424.2 |
Processing of agricultural products | 51.9 | 639.8 | 587.9 |
Manufacture of automobiles and transport equipment | 192.9 | 656.7 | 463.8 |
Manufacture and processing of ferrous metals | 105.7 | 444.9 | 339.2 |
Manufacture of non-metallic mineral products | 32.8 | 362.8 | 330.0 |
Manufacture of general purpose machinery | 44.6 | 329.8 | 285.2 |
Manufacture of chemical raw material and chemical products | 67.0 | 336.6 | 269.6 |
Processing of petroleum, coking and nuclear fuel | 146.0 | 406.9 | 260.9 |
Manufacture of special purpose machinery | 23.3 | 214.1 | 190.8 |
Production and supply of electric power and heat power | 62.3 | 246.2 | 183.9 |
Manufacture of electrical machinery & equipment | 23.7 | 180.6 | 156.9 |
Proportion (%) | 66.7 | 68.8 | 69.4 |
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Li, H.; Lo, K.; Wang, M.; Zhang, P.; Xue, L. Industrial Energy Consumption in Northeast China under the Revitalisation Strategy: A Decomposition and Policy Analysis. Energies 2016, 9, 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9070549
Li H, Lo K, Wang M, Zhang P, Xue L. Industrial Energy Consumption in Northeast China under the Revitalisation Strategy: A Decomposition and Policy Analysis. Energies. 2016; 9(7):549. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9070549
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, He, Kevin Lo, Mark Wang, Pingyu Zhang, and Longyi Xue. 2016. "Industrial Energy Consumption in Northeast China under the Revitalisation Strategy: A Decomposition and Policy Analysis" Energies 9, no. 7: 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9070549