Benefiting from international economic cooperation on
income, technology
diffusion, and employment, China also suffers its environmental and
health impacts, from both international trade (IT), as is now widely
understood, and international industrial transfer (IIT), which has
been largely unrecognized. Here, we develop a comprehensive framework
to estimate the impacts of exporting IT and receiving IIT. We find
that China’s emissions of CO2 and almost all air
pollutants associated with IIT and IT together grew after 1997 but
then declined after 2010, with the peak shares of national total emissions
ranging 18–31% for different species. These sources further
accounted for 3.8% of nationwide PM2.5 concentrations and
94,610 (76,000–112,040) premature deaths in 2012, and the values
declined to 2.6% and 67,370 (52,390–81,810), respectively,
for 2017. Separated, the contribution of IIT to those impacts was
more than twice that of IT. Scenario analyses suggest that improving
emission controls in its less-developed regions would effectively
reduce the impact of economic globalization, but such a benefit could
be largely offset by strengthened international economic cooperation.
The outcomes provide a scientific basis for adjusting China’s
strategic roles in the international distribution of industrial production
and its formulation of relevant environmental policies from a comprehensive
perspective