A. Dubcek University of Trencin, Faculty of Social and Economic Relation
Abstract
In recent years there has been a growing concern about the emission trade balance of countries. It is due to the fact that countries with an open economy are active players in the international trade, though trade is not only a major factor in forging a country’s economic structure
anymore, but it does contribute to the movement of embodied emissions beyond the country borders. This issue is especially relevant from the carbon accounting policy’s point of view, as it is known that the production-based principle is in effect now in the Kyoto agreement.
The study aims at revealing the interdependence of countries on international trade and its
environmental impacts, and how the carbon accounting method plays a crucial role in
evaluating a country’s environmental performance and its role in the climate mitigation
processes. The input-output models are used in the methodology, as they provide an appropriate
framework for this kind of environmental accounting; the analysis shows an international
comparison of four European countries (Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and
Hungary) with extended trading activities and carbon emissions.
Moving from the production-based approach in the climate policy, to the consumptionperspective
principle and allocation [15], it would also help increasing the efficiency of emission
reduction targets and the evaluation of the sustainability dimension and its impacts of
international trade. The results of the study have shown that there is an importance of
distinction between the two emission allocation approaches, both from global and local level
point of view