2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2017.05.028
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Carbon intensity changes in the Asian Dragons. Lessons for climate policy design

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Cited by 28 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…With regard to the extent of decarbonization, we used the inverse of carbon intensity , measured as the ratio of CO 2 emissions in tons divided by firm value added (Rodríguez & Pena‐Boquete, ; Xu & Ang, ). On the one hand, many examples in the literature connect this ratio with the deployment of decarbonization initiatives: technological developments in the steel industry (Pinto, Szklo, & Rathmann, ), technological innovation in electricity production (Peng & Tao, ) or the adoption of the best practice technologies in the power industry (Xian et al, ), among others.…”
Section: Data and Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With regard to the extent of decarbonization, we used the inverse of carbon intensity , measured as the ratio of CO 2 emissions in tons divided by firm value added (Rodríguez & Pena‐Boquete, ; Xu & Ang, ). On the one hand, many examples in the literature connect this ratio with the deployment of decarbonization initiatives: technological developments in the steel industry (Pinto, Szklo, & Rathmann, ), technological innovation in electricity production (Peng & Tao, ) or the adoption of the best practice technologies in the power industry (Xian et al, ), among others.…”
Section: Data and Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, to explore if Green BMs are helping to achieve decarbonization of the economy, the value capture of a Green BM was measured by the inverse of one of the most common indicators in the fight against climate change and the upcoming Circular Economy monitoring framework: Carbon intensity: the ratio of CO2 emissions to revenue [111][112][113][114]. This measure (eq.…”
Section: Data and Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, to explore if green BMs are helping to achieve decarbonization of the economy, the value capture of a green BM was measured by the inverse of one of the most common indicators in the fight against climate change and the upcoming circular economy monitoring framework: carbon intensity: the ratio of CO 2 emissions to revenue [121][122][123][124]. This measure (Equation (1)) is used by researchers and institutions as a policy instrument (e.g., national targets and emission pledges) for valuing emission reduction potential and progress on decarbonization at the sector level [125,126].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%