4.7 Article

Regional energy-growth nexus and energy conservation policy in China

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 217, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2020.119414

Keywords

China's energy policy; Regional energy-growth nexus; Regional causality; Intra-region cross-section dependence

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Government's University Grants Committee's General Research Fund [241612]

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China's energy and economic growth have complex causal relationships, with different characteristics in different regions. The Eastern and Central regions show a bidirectional relationship between energy and income, while the Western region shows a unidirectional relationship. Therefore, energy conservation policies need to be tailored to the characteristics of each region.
China's ambitious decarbonization strategy disaggregates the national energy conservation target by province. Using panel data of 30 provinces for 1995-2017, we revisit China's energy-growth nexus that considers the likely cross-section dependence among the provinces within each of China's three regions. Our key finding is a bidirectional causal relationship of energy (natural log of per capita energy consumption) and income (natural log of per capita real GDP) for the Eastern and Central regions and a unidirectional causal relationship from income to energy for the Western region. The Eastern and Central regions' bidirectional relationship suggests caution in China's energy conservation policy which may decelerate these regions' economic growth. The Western region's unidirectional relationship suggests promoting energy conservation without adversely affecting this region's economic growth. Hence, the East and Central regions' conservation effort should be accompanied by cost-effective development of emissions-free renewable resources like hydro, solar and wind for displacing China's fossil-fuel consumption. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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