Saving less in China facilitates global CO2 mitigation

Transforming China’s economic growth pattern from investment-driven to consumption-driven can significantly change global CO 2 emissions. This study is the first to analyse the impacts of changes in China’s saving rates on global CO 2 emissions both theoretically and empirically. Here, we show that...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-03, Vol.11 (1), p.1-12, Article 1358
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Chen, Qi, Jianchuan, Liang, Sai, Feng, Cuiyang, Wiedmann, Thomas O., Liao, Yihan, Yang, Xuechun, Li, Yumeng, Mi, Zhifu, Yang, Zhifeng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Transforming China’s economic growth pattern from investment-driven to consumption-driven can significantly change global CO 2 emissions. This study is the first to analyse the impacts of changes in China’s saving rates on global CO 2 emissions both theoretically and empirically. Here, we show that the increase in the saving rates of Chinese regions has led to increments of global industrial CO 2 emissions by 189 million tonnes (Mt) during 2007–2012. A 15-percentage-point decrease in the saving rate of China can lower global CO 2 emissions by 186 Mt, or 0.7% of global industrial CO 2 emissions. Greener consumption in China can lead to a further 14% reduction in global industrial CO 2 emissions. In particular, decreasing the saving rate of Shandong has the most massive potential for global CO 2 reductions, while that of Inner Mongolia has adverse effects. Removing economic frictions to allow the production system to fit China’s increased consumption can facilitate global CO 2 mitigation. The partial effects of saving rate changes on CO 2 emissions remain unclear. Here the authors found that the increase in saving rates of China has led to increments of global industrial CO 2 emissions by 189 million tonnes (Mt) during 2007-2012, while global CO 2 emissions would be reduced by 186 Mt if the saving rates of China decreased by 15 percentage points.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-15175-2