1. Introduction
In recent years, rapid global industrialization has led to an increasing demand for fossil energy in various countries. With the massive use of fossil fuels in modern society, greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide, are accumulating, and the problem of ecological damage is becoming increasingly serious, most notably in the form of global warming, which is a matter of fundamental interest to every country. In 2021, global CO
2 emissions reached a record high of 363 tons, indicating an urgent need to reduce CO
2 emissions (
Figure 1). To comprehensively address the problems caused by warming, countries around the world have started to intervene in total CO
2 emissions using administrative methods. In December 1997, the Kyoto Protocol was signed, which specified the types of polluting gases that signatory countries needed to reduce their emissions and set the market mechanism as a new path for the issue of greenhouse gas emission reduction. The Kyoto Protocol also divided carbon trading into three specific forms: emissions trading, the Clean Development Mechanism, and Joint Implementation. In November 2016, 178 countries signed the Paris Agreement, which gave further impetus to the operation of green development mechanisms in the international community [
1].
The carbon emissions trading mechanism gives pollutants a certain economic value by clarifying their property rights so that the property rights of pollutants can be freely traded among different market players, thus encouraging each player to adjust the industrial structure and achieve technological innovation [
2]. Therefore, the carbon emissions trading mechanism is conducive to improving the utilization rate of production factors, guiding the transfer of capital, technology, manpower, and other factors from inefficient and high-polluting industries to high-efficiency and low-polluting industries, and ultimately realizing the optimal allocation of the industrial structure [
3]. To achieve the emission reduction commitments of the Kyoto Protocol, developed countries and regions have established regional emission reduction mechanisms for controlling greenhouse gas emissions. The EU first launched a carbon emissions trading system in 2005, which was the earliest, largest, and most widely covered carbon market in the world. In 2019, EU carbon emissions trading amounted to 168,966 million euros, accounting for 87.2% of the world’s total. After the successful establishment of the carbon emissions trading system in the EU, the United States, Japan, South Korea, and Kazakhstan followed the EU’s example and established carbon trading markets. As shown in
Figure 2, the scale of the global carbon emissions trading market has expanded over the past five years. In 2021, the global CO
2 emissions trading market grew by 163.98% and has reached €760 billion.
Since the reform and opening up, China’s economic development has always maintained a high growth rate, but rapid economic growth cannot be separated from the consumption of large amounts of fossil energy, which has led China to become the world’s highest carbon dioxide emissions [
4]. From 2016 to 2020, China’s total CO
2 emissions continued to grow, rising from 9.14 billion tons to 9.9 billion tons (
Figure 3). In this context, as a signatory of the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement, China is actively responding to the global call for carbon emission reduction and advocating green, energy-saving, and efficient development methods. In 2011, China promulgated the Notice of Carbon Emissions Trading Pilot Work, which clearly indicated that China would start the carbon emissions trading pilot work in Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, Chongqing, Hubei, Guangdong, and Shenzhen, one after another from 2013, which also marked the official start of the carbon trading market pilot work in China. China is the country that launched carbon emissions trading after the EU, the US, Japan, South Korea, and Kazakhstan, showing that the institutionalization of energy savings and emission reduction in China has achieved international synchronization.
By 2022, China will have carried out carbon emissions trading pilot projects for more than 10 years. In the context of promoting the overall goal of “carbon peaking” and “carbon neutrality,” carbon emissions trading pilot work, a market-based environmental regulation tool, has become an important grip for emission reduction targets. Has the implementation of this policy been effective in promoting green and sustainable development in China? Furthermore, as the national carbon emissions trading system continues to advance, can China’s implementation of the carbon emissions trading pilot policy promote the upgrading of China’s industrial structure, thereby achieving the win-win goal of economic development and environmental protection? If the pilot policy can promote industrial structure upgrading, what is its mechanism of action? Does this facilitation effect vary heterogeneously by city size, geographic location, and urban resource endowment? These issues deserve to be studied in depth, although there are important practical implications for China to continue to promote a green cycle path and high-quality economic development.
6. Discussion
The results in
Table 3 show that the positive promotion effect of carbon emissions trading pilot policy on industrial structure upgrading is proved both based on the perspective of the industrial organization rationalization and industrial structure heightening, which also verifies hypothesis H1 of this paper. This may be because the carbon emissions trading policy serves as a turning point for entities to bridge the energy-efficiency gap. It encourages enterprises to upgrade through technological transformation in order to achieve energy savings and emission reduction by means of market incentives, helping them to improve the energy efficiency gap of their facilities, thereby facilitating the shift of technology and capital to low-carbon development areas and promoting the industrial structure upgrading toward low energy consumption and high value-added, thus promoting a highly developed industrial structure [
51]. At the same time, technological innovation and institutional improvement caused by environmental regulation policy have led to the reasonable distribution of factors among industries and the coordinated development among industries, which in turn has promoted the rationalization of the industrial structure.
The results in
Table 5 may be because the larger the city, the more pronounced the agglomeration effect. The lower pollution control cost per unit and high revenue from environmental regulation in agglomeration areas, the more attractive it is for industrial agglomeration. This can promote technological innovation and industrial structure upgrading, so the impact of carbon emissions trading pilot policy on industrial structure upgrading in large cities is more significant. For megacities with a resident population of more than 5 million, the environmental pollution and other “urban diseases” that accompany population clustering can lead to inefficient urban governance. At the same time, the regional coordination mechanism and cross-regional governance mechanism between mega-cities and neighboring cities have not been fully established, which restricts technology diffusion and resource sharing between regions, resulting in the carbon emissions trading pilot policy being hindered in promoting industrial structure upgrading.
The results in
Table 6 may be due to the earlier economic start in the eastern part of China. Relying on regional advantages and preferential policies, the process of economic development has been smoother, and there is no need to sacrifice the environment excessively because of economic development. Meanwhile, for the western region, its weak economic foundation and late start of development have led to the lack of characteristic dominant industries, so the low level of repeated construction has led to the convergence of the industrial structure in the western region and the low correlation between enterprises, and the implementation of the carbon emissions trading pilot policy has not had a significant impact on the rational development of the industrial structure in the western region.
The results in
Table 7 may be due to resource-based cities being prone to the “resource curse” phenomenon compared with non-resource-based cities, and the resource-dependent path makes it more difficult to promote the upgrading of leading industries to tertiary industries in resource-based cities, so the pilot policy cannot play the expected role of promotion.
The results in
Table 8 may be due to the following reasons: (1) In terms of the consumer upgrade path, the possible reason is that the scale effect under green consumption can bring more development opportunities to the industry and promote the investment and production of the industry, so the resource factors are reasonably allocated and the industries get coordinated development through mutual cooperation; thus, the carbon emissions trading pilot policy drives the rationalization of industrial structure through consumption upgrading. (2) In terms of green innovation, the possible reason is that the implementation of the carbon emissions trading pilot policy will not have a negative impact on the economic performance of enterprises [
52]. Under the incentive of carbon emissions trading pilot policy, industrial enterprises have combined the specific processes of pollution emission management and cost savings to obtain more benefits, thus promoting the rationalization of industrial structure. (3) In terms of logistics development, the possible reason is that due to the fact that the pilot policy of carbon emissions trading stipulates carbon emission quotas for each enterprise upstream and downstream of the logistics industry chain, thus promoting logistics enterprises to improve resource utilization efficiency, strengthen the adoption of new energy materials and the development of new technologies, and also promote the development of other industries related to the logistics industry, such as the development of artificial intelligence and other new industries as well as the coordination, which can better improve the efficiency of resource allocation and thus significantly promote the rationalization of industrial structure.
The results in
Table 10 may be due to the following reasons: (1) In terms of the consumer upgrade path, the reason may be because although the carbon emissions trading pilot policy has promoted consumption upgrading in China as a whole, the economic development level and income level in the central and western regions are still low, and labor mo-bility to higher levels is still weak, so that consumption upgrading cannot influence the development of a heightened industrial structure. Combined with the results of the previous analysis, hypothesis H2a partially holds. (2) In terms of green innovation, this may be due to the fact that the specialization and socialization of industrial production will be promoted by the carbon emissions trading pilot policy, which in turn will lead to the transformation of each region from labor-intensive and polluting industries to green industries and promote the transformation of the industrial structure to a high level. Combined with the results of the previous analysis, hypothesis H2b is fully valid. (3) In terms of logistics development, this may be because the development of the logistics industry needs a large amount of labor, and although the development of the artificial intelligence industry can promote the transformation of the logistics industry to a high degree, the infrastructure in the central and western regions is more backward, the lack of financial and technological support, the logistics sharing platform is not perfect, and the allocation of logistics networks and regional economic resources is unreasonable. Therefore, promoting the development of the artificial intelligence logistics industry in the central and western regions temporarily faces greater obstacles. The development of the logistics industry in the central and western regions still needs a large amount of labor force as support, and logistics development does not promote the development of industrial structure in the direction of heightened. Combined with the results of the previous analysis, hypothesis H2c partially holds.
7. Conclusions
This study analyzes the data of 280 prefecture-level cities in China from 2006–2019 by constructing a multi-period DID model and a mechanism test model to study the impact of the carbon emissions trading pilot policy on industrial structure upgrading. The following conclusions are obtained.
First, the implementation of the carbon emissions trading pilot policy significantly promotes the rationalization of industrial structure and the development of a high industrial structure. The empirical study shows that the carbon emissions trading pilot policy can effectively promote rationalization, as well as the heightened development of industrial structure, which proves hypothesis H1. Meanwhile, this study verifies the robustness of the empirical results through four robustness tests: excluding possible interference from other policies, the reduced tail method, propensity score matching, and the placebo test.
Second, there are significant heterogeneous characteristics of the impact of carbon emissions trading pilot policies on upgrading the industrial structure. The rationalization and highly developed industrial structure of carbon emissions trading pilot policies are heterogeneous in three aspects: city size, geographical location, and nature resource endowment. The carbon emissions trading pilot policy has a significant promotion effect on the highly structured industrial structure of Type I large cities, and the promotion effect on other sized cities is not obvious. In terms of geographical location, the pilot policy significantly inhibits the rationalization of industrial structure in the eastern region, significantly promotes the rationalization and heightened development of industrial structure in the central region, and does not have a significant effect on the western region. In terms of resource endowment, the carbon emissions trading pilot policy makes a significant contribution to the rationalization of industrial structure development in both resource-based cities and non-resource-based cities, and the impact on the highly developed industrial structure in non-resource-based cities is more significant.
Third, there are multiple paths of action for the carbon emissions trading pilot policy on upgrading industrial structures. The carbon emissions trading pilot policy can promote the rationalization of industrial structure through three paths: consumption upgrading, green innovation, and logistics development. In terms of industrial structure heightening, carbon emissions trading pilot policy can only promote industrial structure heightening development through the green development path, while upgrading consumption and logistics development fail to form the path of the pilot policy’s effect on industrial structure.