4.7 Article

China's transportation sector carbon dioxide emissions efficiency and its influencing factors based on the EBM DEA model with undesirable outputs and spatial Durbin model

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 238, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2021.121934

Keywords

Transportation sector carbon dioxide emissions efficiency; Influencing factors; The EBM DEA model With undesirable outputs; Spatial Durbin model

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Founda-tion of China [41925003]
  2. UKRI's Global Challenge Research Fund [ES/P011055/1]
  3. Ministry of Education Key Projects of Philosophy and Social Sciences Research [41925003]

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The study indicates that the overall TSCDEE of Chinese provinces is 0.618, suggesting the need for improvements, with the highest TSCDEE provinces located in developed coastal regions of China. Factors such as transportation structure and technological progress have significant positive effects on TSCDEE, while urbanization level and urban population density exert significantly negative effects on TSCDEE.
The threat of global climate change has caused the international community to pay close attention to atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide. Transportation sector carbon dioxide emissions efficiency (TSCDEE) is a key indicator used to prioritize sustainable development in the transportation sector. In this paper, the epsilon-based measure data envelopment analysis model with undesirable outputs is applied to estimate TSCDEE for 30 provinces in China from 2010 to 2016. We also analyze influencing factors using the spatial Durbin model. Research shows that the overall TSCDEE of the Chinese provinces studied was 0.618, indicating that most regions are still in need of improvements. The provinces with the highest TSCDEE are located in developed coastal regions of China. This study shows that factors such as transportation structure, traffic infrastructure level, and technological progress have prominent positive effects on TSCDEE, while both urbanization level and urban population density exert significantly negative effects on TSCDEE. The findings should have a far-reaching impact on the sustainable development of global transportation. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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