Counterpart cooperation is a major innovative measure in China’s strategy for revitalizing north-eastern China. While promoting economic progress, regional counterpart cooperation should also focus on low-carbon economy and sustainable development.… Click to show full abstract
Counterpart cooperation is a major innovative measure in China’s strategy for revitalizing north-eastern China. While promoting economic progress, regional counterpart cooperation should also focus on low-carbon economy and sustainable development. Under the background of China’s proposed innovative cooperation strategy, using a multi-regional input-output (MRIO) model and structural decomposition analysis (SDA), this study takes Jilin province and its counterpart Zhejiang province as an example and decomposes the change in carbon emission intensity (CEI), which is a widely used indicator to measure regional carbon emission performance. The decomposition spans the years 2007 to 2012, at the level of two provinces and departments. By comparing the factors that drive and inhibit CEI in the two provinces, it was found that the production technology effect in Jilin province primarily drove the growth in CEI, while in Zhejiang province, the opposite occurred. Second, the structural effects of agriculture and heavy industry in Jilin province accounted for the largest proportion of this change, and the pulling effect on the increase in CEI in Jilin was significantly higher than that in Zhejiang province. Third, the scale effect of agricultural demand in Zhejiang province was much higher than that in Jilin province, and the same trend was observed for the scale effect of heavy industrial exports.
               
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