1. Introduction
With the rapid development of urbanization and industrialization, the control of carbon emissions has long been an important issue faced by all mankind [
1,
2]. China’s rapid industrial growth, and urbanization consume a lot of energy and resources. At the same time, share of heavy industry is very high in the national economy, and the factor supporting the huge heavy industrial production is the combustion of coal, which makes China gradually become the largest carbon emission country in the world. Facing the increasingly severe global climate change problem, China proposed the goal of “Carbon Peaking and Carbon Neutrality” in 2021 (referred to as the “dual carbon” goal), and implementing carbon emission reduction and improving carbon emission efficiency has become an important strategy to achieve ecological civilization building and green and low-carbon development. Advanced technological infrastructure such as Broadband and other digital network infrastructure can make the current activities more environment friendly as well as can help to transform the local economic structure. Cities are the core development hubs to achieve the “dual carbon” goal, and they are also the main fronts to deal with the above challenges. Resource-based cities, as important strategic bases for energy resources in China, are characterized by high carbon emissions and mostly sluggish economic development, and the proposed carbon neutrality target also brings new challenges and opportunities for the transformation of resource-based cities.
Specifically, resource-based cities, as special cities, have gradually developed into having an important economic status in China by relying on their own rich mineral resources development and operation. However, in recent years, as the global resource market has entered a recession, coupled with the gradual depletion of resources, the overall economic development of resource-based cities in China has been slow, and some cities have even experienced a decline. Among them, as a typical old industrial base and resource-based city agglomeration in China, the economic development situation in the three northeastern provinces is still unsatisfactory and the brain drain is serious, despite a series of special policies introduced by the state to revitalize the northeast. In addition, many resource-based cities still make articles around resource-based industries in the process of transformation, such as coal resource-based cities around coal vigorously develop coal power, coal chemical industry, coal machinery and equipment manufacturing industries, which has achieved certain economic benefits in the short term. However, in the long term, the transformation mode of extending the traditional industrial chain and relying on high energy consumption industries such as mineral resources mining and related energy industries to develop the economy will still lead to high carbon emissions in resource-based cities, and the transformation of resource-based cities to develop the economy in the context of carbon neutrality also faces the pressure of controlling carbon emissions. Therefore, a reasonable assessment of the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities is conducive to their low-carbon economic transformation and the achievement of China’s “dual carbon” goal.
The rise of the Internet has increased opportunities to transform economic development and promote sustainable development, and to a certain extent, it can alleviate environmental pressure [
3]. As a key link in the construction of information infrastructure, broadband supports the development of the Internet of Things, cloud computing and other high-tech industries, plays an important role in the high-quality development of the economy and society, and has important strategic significance in the new round of technological revolution and industrial transformation integrating cyber physical systems (CPS) [
4]. As an emerging market has tremendous challenge to develop private sector led digital infrastructure, Chinese government introduced “broadband policy” to push for developing rapid infrastructure. Broadband infrastructure refers to a series of facilities required in the process of obtaining broadband network or broadband network construction, which includes broadband network infrastructure involved in the adoption of wired access such as xDSL and FTTx and wireless access such as 3G, 4G, LTE and broadband satellite, etc., and other mobile communication technology and wireless access related infrastructure. The development of broadband networks allows the sharing of effective information in environmental protection at any time, improving the efficiency of environmental monitoring and information management, and realizing the organic combination of environmental protection and information technology. And the improvement of broadband facilities provides hardware foundation for the development of information technology, which can drive the rapid development of new business models such as digital economy and information technology applications, while eliminating backward industries with high energy consumption and serious pollution, and improving the overall efficiency of key industries and ecosystems. At the same time, with the vigorous development of information technology, the improvement of broadband infrastructure can also help break the time and space limitations of environmental governance, realize dynamic environmental monitoring, real-time risk assessment and timely feedback [
5], and improve the overall environmental governance efficiency. Currently, an increasing number of countries and regions have launched Internet strategies. Among them, China explicitly proposed the concept of new infrastructure construction (hereafter referred to as new infrastructure) for the first time in 2018, stating that it should “accelerate the pace of 5G commercialization and strengthen the construction of new infrastructure such as artificial intelligence, industrial Internet, and Internet of Things”. Resource-based cities usually regard the mining of mineral resources as the pillar industry, along with the interference of mining activities, the green infrastructure network structure of resource-based cities is also damaged to different degrees, promoting the construction of broadband infrastructure and vigorously developing the Internet is the key path to solve the environmental problems of resource-based cities.
In this context, it is particularly important to objectively and accurately assess the effect of broadband infrastructure construction on economic and social development. The “Broadband China” strategy has elevated broadband facilities to national strategic public infrastructure for the first time, which helps regions to build and improve broadband infrastructure. Therefore, taking the “Broadband China” pilot policy as the entry point to study the construction of broadband infrastructure and its relationship with carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities is of great theoretical and practical significance to explore new paths and new models for low-carbon economic transformation and high-quality development.
2. Literature Review
Regarding carbon emission efficiency, domestic and foreign scholars have conducted extensive research, mainly focusing on the analysis of carbon emission efficiency measurement. Tone [
6,
7], by constructing a measurement model based on slack variables and considering undesired outputs, for the first time added slack variables to the constructed objective function to effectively measure environmental efficiency. Fare [
8] and Fukuyama et al. [
9] proposed a more general SBM directional distance function based on Tone’s study. Ramanathan et al. [
10,
11,
12] used the DEA method to measure the carbon emission efficiency of 17 countries in the Middle East and North Africa, and analyzed the relationship between GDP, energy consumption and carbon emissions. Herrala et al. [
13] used the SFA model to measure the carbon emission efficiency of 170 countries from 1997 to 2007, and their findings indicated that China had the lowest carbon emission efficiency. Zhou et al. [
14] used the Malmquist carbon index to study the emission efficiency of the 18 countries with the highest global carbon emissions and analyzed the factors influencing the MCPI. Domestic scholars also used similar methods to study carbon emission efficiency, among which data envelopment analysis, stochastic frontier analysis and distance function were commonly applied. Zha et al. [
15] used DEA model to construct carbon emission performance indexes from static and dynamic aspects respectively, and measured the industrial carbon emission performance of 30 provinces in China. Li et al. [
16] explored the characteristics and differences of energy carbon emission efficiency in different economic regions of China using three-stage DEA and three-stage DEA-Malmquist index. Zhang et al. [
17]. Used a stochastic frontier analysis model to evaluate and analyze the carbon emission efficiency of 30 provinces and the Yangtze River Delta region in China, respectively. Li et al. [
18] measured the carbon emission efficiency by using the scale direction distance function considering slack variables. From this, it can be seen that the measurement of carbon emission efficiency is mainly focused on inter-provincial level and industry level, but there is no microscopic study on city level, and the research method is mainly based on DEA model.
In recent years, resource-based cities have gradually become the object of carbon emission research in academia, and the studies on carbon emission in resource-based cities are mainly divided into two categories. One category is to study all resource-based cities as research objects, such as Feng et al. [
19] based on Chinese high spatial resolution grid data (CHRED), combined with DPSIR model, classification comparison and scenario analysis methods, systematically analyzed the CO
2 emission characteristics of 126 resource-based cities in China, and analyzed the CO
2 emission trends and emission reduction potential of resource-based cities in the future. Sun et al. [
20] selected 106 resource-based cities in China according to their classification, and studied their carbon emission efficiency by combining the DEA model and SE-SBM model. Another type of study is to investigate the similarities and differences of carbon emission characteristics and drivers between modern industrial cities and traditional resource-based cities, such as Baotou and Wuxi, respectively. Another type of research is conducted with each resource-based city as the object of study. Zhang et al. [
21] take modern industrial cities and traditional resource-based cities as the research objects, and select Baotou and Wuxi as the representative cities to investigate the similarities and differences of carbon emission characteristics and drivers of the two types of cities respectively. Chen and Sun [
22] used eight petroleum-based resource cities as research objects to calculate the ecological deficit of petroleum-based resource cities based on carbon emissions from energy consumption and carbon carrying capacity of different land uses, and measured the spatial carbon footprints of different industries by combining different industrial spatial divisions. In general, although the research related to carbon emissions of resource-based cities is gradually abundant, the research area for resource-based cities at the prefecture level and above still needs to be expanded.
The role of information and communication technologies (ICT), especially broadband, in the development of individuals and socio-economics has been widely discussed [
23,
24,
25]. Several studies have argued that ICT penetration has driven the development of the digital economy, which in turn has driven economic and technological paradigm change. Thus, broadband infrastructure or ICT penetration has grown by leaps and bounds and has a non-linear impact on economic, social and environmental systems [
26,
27]. Broadband Internet access and broadband infrastructure improvements have profoundly changed all aspects of China’s economic development, and unlike traditional infrastructure such as roads and bridges, which are significantly different, broadband can fundamentally affect the way economic activities are organized and run, Koutroumpis [
28] found increasing returns on broadband investments based on data from 22 OECD countries from 2002 to 2007, and Czernich et al. [
29] point out that broadband can facilitate the development of new business models by facilitating the spatial dissemination of information, which in turn reduces industry entry costs and increases market transparency. In terms of environmental protection, most scholars focus on the impact of traditional infrastructure represented by transportation infrastructure on environmental pollution, Yang et al. [
30] showed that the opening of high-speed rail suppressed sulfur dioxide emissions from urban industries in China, Dalkic et al. [
31] took high-speed rail in Turkey as an example, and found that the opening of high-speed rail reduced carbon emissions, and some studies concluded that urban rail transit, electric vehicles, and rapid transit systems (BRTs) were more effective in reducing carbon emissions. Some studies have also suggested that urban rail, electric vehicles, and bus rapid transit (BRT) systems can also help reduce air pollution [
32,
33].
At present, as the network information infrastructure and carbon emissions have gradually attracted the attention of various countries, the relationship between the two has also become a hot research topic in academia. According to the existing theoretical research [
34,
35,
36], the development of the Internet can change the transaction space, prolong the transaction time, expand more transaction channels, save unnecessary intermediate links, and have a wide-ranging and far-reaching influence on activities such as production and operation, transaction distribution, and organizational behavior, thereby improving the energy utilization efficiency of enterprises, which indirectly improves the efficiency of carbon emissions. And with the increasing integration of the Internet and industrial development, the role of the Internet in improving energy efficiency has been confirmed by more and more empirical studies [
37,
38,
39,
40,
41,
42]. However, few scholars directly study the relationship between network information infrastructure and carbon emission efficiency, and most of them discuss it indirectly. Some scholars believe that the rapid development of Internet-based information and communication technology and related industries leads to the rapid growth of electricity consumption [
43], thereby promoting the increase of carbon emissions [
44]. Other scholars believe that the development of information and communication technology will improve environmental quality by reducing greenhouse gas emissions. For example, some studies have shown that the use of the Internet and the increase in Internet penetration will significantly reduce carbon emissions in the long run [
45,
46]. Increasing investment in information and communication technology infrastructure also has a significant effect on reducing carbon emissions [
47], and the carbon trading platform based on digital information technology can also reduce the cost of carbon trading [
48], and accelerate the reduction of carbon emissions and carbon emission intensity.
It can be seen that the existing research has laid an important foundation for understanding the relationship between information infrastructure construction and carbon emission efficiency. However, the analytical framework, research objects and research methods for studying the relationship between information infrastructure construction and carbon emission efficiency still have certain limitations and need to be further deepened. First, in terms of analytical framework, the existing research mainly focuses on the carbon emission reduction effect of Internet infrastructure development, and few scholars have conducted in-depth studies on its influence mechanism. Second, in terms of research objects, the existing research mainly studies carbon emissions from the macro perspective of countries, regions or industries, and rarely evaluates the influence of information/digital infrastructure on carbon emission efficiency from the perspective of cities (i.e., resource-based cities) with obvious high carbon emissions characteristics. Third, in terms of research methods, most of the existing research on the development of information infrastructure uses a single indicator for measurement, and the analysis process rarely involves the discussion of endogeneity.
Therefore, based on the exogenous policy influence of “Broadband China”, this paper examines the effects of information infrastructure development on carbon emission efficiency and its influence mechanism from the city level, in an attempt to supplement the existing literature. The marginal contributions of this paper are mainly reflected in: First, this paper uses the DID method to evaluate the effects of “Broadband China” pilot policy on the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities from the city level. To a large extent, the endogeneity problems faced by research at the micro-level are avoided. At the same time, in order to further test whether there is an endogeneity problem in the regression results, this paper conducts a series of robustness tests to ensure the reliability of the empirical results. Second, this paper further examines the difference in the influence of “Broadband China” pilot policy on the carbon emission efficiency of different locations and different types of resource-based cities. Third, based on the mediation effect model, this paper analyzes the mechanism by which “Broadband China” pilot policy promotes the upgrading of industrial structure, the accumulation of human capital, and the improvement of urban innovation levels of resource-based cities, thereby promoting carbon emission efficiency.
7. Conclusions and Discussion
7.1. Conclusions
This paper takes the “Broadband China” pilot policy as a quasi-natural experiment and uses the DID method to investigate the influence of broadband infrastructure on the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities and the influence mechanism. The main conclusions are as follows: First, the broadband infrastructure has a significant role in promoting the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities. Secondly, the influence of broadband infrastructure on the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities has city location heterogeneity and city type heterogeneity. Finally, the “Broadband China” pilot policy can promote the improvement of carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities by promoting the upgrading of industrial structure, the accumulation of human capital, and the improvement of urban innovation level.
Combining the above conclusions, the policy implications are as follows: First, local governments should actively promote the construction of broadband infrastructure. All localities should seize the opportunity of the “Broadband China” pilot policy to increase investment in broadband network infrastructure development. At the same time, it is necessary, in order to achieve high-quality development of city, to vigorously strengthen the construction of 5G networks, data centers, and the Internet of Things, give full range to the functions of broadband infrastructure, and activate the organic connection between urban innovation subjects, elements, and industries, truly internalize the new generation of information technology as the driving force for urban innovation and low-carbon development. Second, policies should be classified according to different locations and types of resource-based cities. Combined with various factors such as the development level of network infrastructure, technology level, and geographical location in each region, the “Broadband China” strategic action is carried out in a targeted manner to better play the role of broadband infrastructure construction in improving the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities. On the one hand, for resource-based cities in different locations, the government should steadily advance the pace of broadband infrastructure in the eastern region and increase the financial and technological support needed for the development of the “Broadband” infrastructure in the central and western regions. On the other hand, for resource-based cities of different city types, the government should focus on supporting resource-based cities in the recession period and guide them to vigorously develop the information technology industry, so as to stimulate their latecomer advantages. Meanwhile, it is necessary for resource-based cities in the growth stage to accelerate the cultivation of innovation talent, and gradually improve the construction of broadband infrastructure. Additionally, for resource-based cities in the mature stage, the steady promotion of the construction of broadband infrastructure should be continued. Third, we should make full use of the influence mechanism of broadband infrastructure construction on the carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities. Above all, according to the development strategies of different cities, more resource-based cities in the dilemma of industrial transformation should be included in the pilot scope, so that they can rely on the construction of network infrastructure to stimulate the vitality of industrial transformation, and realize the transformation of manufacturing from the traditional raw material manufacturing industry with high pollution and high energy consumption to the high-end equipment manufacturing industry with high intelligent processing degree. Additionally, this will further promote the transformation of the service industry to the high-end industry of the value chain, form a multi-dimensional transformation and upgrading path of the industrial structure, and help reduce city pollution. Furthermore, relevant departments should strengthen the introduction of talents, guiding the inflow of high-quality human capital into high-tech industries on the basis of improving the introduction mechanism of high-tech talents. At the same time, relevant departments also need to pay attention to the secondary training of talents, improve the training and reward mechanism of talents, and give full play to the mechanism of capital accumulation on carbon emission efficiency improvement. Lastly, local governments should actively guide and encourage scientific research institutions and enterprises to use broadband networks for informatization, digitization, and intelligent construction, in particular, increasing support for R&D institutions, enterprises, and scientific research institutes related to cleaner production, pollution prevention and green ecology, and building a comprehensive network innovation research and development platform. Promoting the formation of the green innovation research and development platform is especially necessary to fully stimulate the vitality of city green innovation, improve the city green technology innovation ability, and realize the improvement of carbon emission efficiency of resource-based cities.
7.2. Discussion
There is still much room for improvement in this study. In this paper, a quasi-natural experiment is constructed through the “Broadband China” pilot policy to assess the effects of broadband infrastructure development on the carbon efficiency of resource-based cities and the mechanisms of effects. Although the findings of this paper are supported by a rigorous analytical approach, more in-depth exploration is needed to determine whether the policy choice can truly cover all aspects of broadband development and whether there are more appropriate policies. In addition, the research object of this paper is limited to resource-based cities with special development characteristics, and different countries, regions and city clusters are at different levels of development, and further research is needed to see whether the findings of this paper can be extended to countries, other types of cities or regions. As the world enters the era of digital economy, the development of digital economy cannot be separated from the development of broadband network, and further evaluation of the effects of broadband infrastructure and other policies related to digital economy is of great significance to the national digital economy and digital transformation. For example, building high-tech smart cities has become one of the important ways to solve urban problems such as environmental pollution, and the effects of smart city construction on carbon emission efficiency can be further analyzed.