Towards sustainable development in resource-based cities: Assessing the effects of extraregional technology and investment on the low-carbon transition
Publication date
2024-07
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taverne
Abstract
Resource-based cities (RBCs) worldwide with a single industrial structure face the double pressures of sustainable development to promote development (i.e., industrial upgrading) and mitigating carbon emissions. Although building extraregional linkages is a potential path to advance this goal, the action of these linkages still requires study since there are many contradictory conclusions in the literature. To fill this gap, the study addresses the relationship between extraregional linkages, industrial upgrading, and the low-carbon transition in RBCs from 2012 to 2019 with the help of econometric panel models with proposed variables (e.g., the coupling coordination degree of extraregional technology and investment, CCD) built from multiple new data sources. The results are as follows. First, the diversification and specialization of the local industrial structure in RBCs both reduce carbon efficiency (CE). Second, extraregional technology, on its own, does not directly enhance CE as investments do. Third, the CCD not only serves to augment CE but also acts as a mitigating factor against CE reduction during industrial diversification. Based on the above findings, distinct low-carbon transition pathways are suggested for various types of RBCs, considering their positions within the extraregional linkage network.
Keywords
Carbon emission efficiency, Extraregional linkage, Low carbon transition, Resource-based cities, Taverne, Environmental Engineering, Waste Management and Disposal, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, SDG 9 - Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities
Citation
Lu, S, Li, J, Zhang, W & Xiao, F 2024, 'Towards sustainable development in resource-based cities : Assessing the effects of extraregional technology and investment on the low-carbon transition', Journal of Environmental Management, vol. 364, 121388. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.121388