Abstract

This paper considers a recently developed consumption-based carbon emissions database from which emissions calculations are made based on the domestic use of fossil fuels plus the embodied emissions from imports minus exports, to test directly for the importance of trade in national emissions. The People’s Republic of China (PRC) alone is responsible for over half the global outflows of carbon via trade. The econometric estimations—which focused on a panel of 20 Asian countries—determined that: (i) trade flows were significant for consumption-based emissions but not for territory-based emissions; and (ii) exports and imports offset each other in that exports lower consumption-based emissions, whereas imports increase them. Hence, all countries should have both an interest and a responsibility to help lower the carbon intensity of energy in countries that are particularly important for global carbon transfers—the PRC and India.

Highlights

  • A consumption-based carbon emissions database has been developed [1] from which emissions calculations are made based on the domestic use of fossil fuels plus the embodied emissions from imports minus exports

  • We focus on 20 Asian countries/economies for which data could be assembled (Those countries/economies are: Bangladesh (BGD); Cambodia (KHM); the People’s Republic of China (CHN/PRC); Hong Kong, China (HKG); India (IND); Indonesia (IDN); Japan (JPN); Kazakhstan (KAZ); Kyrgyz Republic (KGZ); Malaysia (MYS); Mongolia (MNG); Nepal (NPL); Pakistan (PAK); Philippines (PHL); Singapore (SGP); Republic of Korea (KOR); Sri Lanka (LKA); Taipei, China (TWN); Thailand (THA); and Viet Nam (VNM))

  • When ordinary least squares (OLS) regressions are performed on time-series variables that are not stationary, measures like R-squared and t-statistics are unreliable, and there is a serious risk of the estimated relationships being spurious [31,32]

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Summary

Introduction

A consumption-based carbon emissions database has been developed [1] from which emissions calculations are made based on the domestic use of fossil fuels plus the embodied emissions from imports minus exports. We focus on 20 Asian countries/economies for which data could be assembled (Those countries/economies (and their World Bank code) are: Bangladesh (BGD); Cambodia (KHM); the People’s Republic of China (CHN/PRC); Hong Kong, China (HKG); India (IND); Indonesia (IDN); Japan (JPN); Kazakhstan (KAZ); Kyrgyz Republic (KGZ); Malaysia (MYS); Mongolia (MNG); Nepal (NPL); Pakistan (PAK); Philippines (PHL); Singapore (SGP); Republic of Korea (KOR); Sri Lanka (LKA); Taipei, China (TWN); Thailand (THA); and Viet Nam (VNM)) Does this group include many of the world’s most rapidly growing economies, these 20 countries/economies account for over half of the world’s population and nearly half (45%) of all territory-based carbon emissions

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