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ID116756
Title ProperImpacts of China's household consumption expenditure patterns on energy demand and carbon emissions towards 2050
LanguageENG
AuthorDai, Hancheng ;  Masui, Toshihiko ;  Matsuoka, Yuzuru ;  Fujimori, Shinichiro
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper explores how China's household consumption patterns over the period 2005-2050 influence the total energy demand and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in two baseline scenarios, and how it influences carbon prices as well as the economic cost in the corresponding carbon mitigation scenarios. To this end we first put forward two possible household consumption expenditure patterns up to 2050 using the Working-Leser model, taking into account total expenditure increase and urbanization. For comparison, both expenditure patterns are then incorporated in a hybrid recursive dynamic computable general equilibrium model. The results reveal that as income level increases in the coming decades, the direct and indirect household energy requirements and CO2 emissions would rise drastically. When household expenditure shifts from material products and transport to service-oriented goods, around 21,000 mtce1 of primary energy and 45 billion tons of CO2 emissions would be saved over the 45-year period from 2005 to 2050. Moreover, carbon prices in the dematerialized mitigation scenario would fall by 13% in 2050, thus reducing the economic cost.
`In' analytical NoteEnergy Policy Vol. 50; Nov 2012: p.736-750
Journal SourceEnergy Policy Vol. 50; Nov 2012: p.736-750
Key WordsHousehold Consumption Expenditure Pattern ;  Energy Demand and CO2 Emissions ;  Computable General Equilibrium Model