Focus on the Potential Cross-Country
Posted: Thu Feb 06, 2025 9:11 am
Industrial Relocation and CO2 Emission Intensity: Shift from China to India and SE Asia
Energy and carbon intensity: A study on the cross-country industrial shift from China to India and SE Asia
Energy and Industrial Growth in India: The Next Emissions Superpower?
These three pieces of research were china rcs data also notable for drawing on multiple IEA datasets, plus data from the World Bank and UNIDO.
Different pieces of research used the data to explore issues around energy consumption and emissions related to industrial production, transport and use of goods.
One by Doukas et al from the National Technical University of Athens and Imperial College London, assessed changes needed to make container shipping less emissions-heavy. Another by Meng et al, from University College London, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, investigated energy consumption during different stages of production across sectors and across nations. A further piece of research by Oswald, Owen and Steinberger, from the Sustainability Research Institute at the University of Leeds, examined how income groups and consumption categories affect energy footprints internationally (open access PDF).
Research by Gregor Semieiuk addressed an existing hypothesis that faster growth is greener. In concluding that this is not the case, the author suggests that there is
important new information for calibrating integrated assessment models, many of which make a green growth assumption in near term projections.”
Energy and carbon intensity: A study on the cross-country industrial shift from China to India and SE Asia
Energy and Industrial Growth in India: The Next Emissions Superpower?
These three pieces of research were china rcs data also notable for drawing on multiple IEA datasets, plus data from the World Bank and UNIDO.
Different pieces of research used the data to explore issues around energy consumption and emissions related to industrial production, transport and use of goods.
One by Doukas et al from the National Technical University of Athens and Imperial College London, assessed changes needed to make container shipping less emissions-heavy. Another by Meng et al, from University College London, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, investigated energy consumption during different stages of production across sectors and across nations. A further piece of research by Oswald, Owen and Steinberger, from the Sustainability Research Institute at the University of Leeds, examined how income groups and consumption categories affect energy footprints internationally (open access PDF).
Research by Gregor Semieiuk addressed an existing hypothesis that faster growth is greener. In concluding that this is not the case, the author suggests that there is
important new information for calibrating integrated assessment models, many of which make a green growth assumption in near term projections.”