Worsening Carbon Inequality Embodied in Trade within China

Environ Sci Technol. 2023 Jan 17;57(2):863-873. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.2c05990. Epub 2023 Jan 6.

Abstract

The mismatch between trade-embodied economic benefits and CO2 emissions causes carbon inequality, which is seldom analyzed from the intracountry level, especially across a long-term period. This study applied an environmentally extended multiregional input-output model to trace this mismatch and measure the carbon inequality quantitatively within China during 2007-2017. The results show that during the past decade, China's national carbon inequality was continuously worsening with carbon Gini coefficients rising regardless of production- (0.21-0.30) or consumption-based (0.12-0.18) accounting. The regional carbon inequality was deteriorating, where less developed provinces with 20% of total value-added emitted 32.9% of total CO2 emissions in 2007, while this figure rose to 42.6% in 2017. The eastern provinces (Jiangsu and Shanghai) had entered into net economic and carbon beneficiaries keeping high trade advantages, by contrast the northwest provinces (Ningxia and Xinjiang) were trapped in a lose-lose situation with trade benefits declining by 68%. The southwest provinces (Yunnan and Guangxi) shifted from being net carbon and value-added exporters to net importers, stepping into the earlier development mode of eastern provinces. This hidden and exacerbated carbon inequality calls for regional-specific measures to avoid the dilemma of economic development and CO2 mitigation, which also gives a good reminder for the rising economies, like India.

Keywords: Carbon inequality; Emission terms of trade; Gini coefficient; Multiregional input−output analysis; Trade-embodied CO2 emissions; Value-added.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Carbon Dioxide* / analysis
  • Carbon*
  • China
  • Economic Development
  • India

Substances

  • Carbon
  • Carbon Dioxide