3 research outputs found
Multiperspective Decoupling Analyses between Global Embodied Carbon Chains and Global Value Chains
Decoupling global economic growth from carbon emissions
is essential
for mitigating global climate change while maintaining continuous
economic growth. Traditional production-side decoupling analysis alone
is insufficient to capture the decoupling status between carbon emissions
and the value added throughout global supply chains. This study investigates
the decoupling status between value added and greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions during 1995–2019 from consumption and income perspectives.
We find that the decoupling statuses of 17 regions (especially Russia,
Australia, and Malta) show significant differences across multiple
perspectives. For example, Malta’s direct GHG emissions decreased
with its GDP growth from a production perspective (i.e., achieved
strong decoupling). However, its consumption-based GHG emissions increased
with the growth of consumption-based value added (i.e., expansive
negative decoupling). Moreover, most international pairs have not
yet achieved strong decoupling from consumption and income perspectives.
International multilateral cooperation is crucial for decoupling global
GHG emissions from economic growth across global supply chains. This
study provides insights into the decoupling between embodied GHG emissions
and value added from consumption and income perspectives. The findings
of this study can complement existing policies on global GHG emission
mitigation and sustainable development
Multiperspective Decoupling Analyses between Global Embodied Carbon Chains and Global Value Chains
Decoupling global economic growth from carbon emissions
is essential
for mitigating global climate change while maintaining continuous
economic growth. Traditional production-side decoupling analysis alone
is insufficient to capture the decoupling status between carbon emissions
and the value added throughout global supply chains. This study investigates
the decoupling status between value added and greenhouse gas (GHG)
emissions during 1995–2019 from consumption and income perspectives.
We find that the decoupling statuses of 17 regions (especially Russia,
Australia, and Malta) show significant differences across multiple
perspectives. For example, Malta’s direct GHG emissions decreased
with its GDP growth from a production perspective (i.e., achieved
strong decoupling). However, its consumption-based GHG emissions increased
with the growth of consumption-based value added (i.e., expansive
negative decoupling). Moreover, most international pairs have not
yet achieved strong decoupling from consumption and income perspectives.
International multilateral cooperation is crucial for decoupling global
GHG emissions from economic growth across global supply chains. This
study provides insights into the decoupling between embodied GHG emissions
and value added from consumption and income perspectives. The findings
of this study can complement existing policies on global GHG emission
mitigation and sustainable development
