1. Introduction
Green public finance has increasingly become a valuable instrument for nations to deal with global climate change and promote carbon neutrality [
1]. The European Union (EU) has been at the forefront of tackling climate change and adopted a series of critical documents, such as the “
EU Strategic Long-Term Vision 2050” and “
Fit for 55” in 2018, which formalized the long-term objective of creating a climate-neutral economy by 2050 [
2]. During this phase, the EU has mainly supported member states in implementing CE reduction policies through fiscal measures, environmental taxes, CE trading mechanisms, energy taxes, and other aspects. As another example, Japan promulgated the “
2050 Carbon Neutral Green Growth Strategy” in 2020, which encourages local governments to participate in CE reduction activities actively and mobilizes all sectors of society to develop a low-carbon economy through tax incentives and financial subsidies, thus promoting CE reduction and laying the foundation for achieving carbon neutrality. A consensus is emerging among the world’s leading economies on reaching global net zero emissions by mid-century. Based on the above, testing the effect of green public finance on low-carbon development has also become a research hotspot [
3,
4,
5].
As an effective measure to promote energy conservation and pollution control, green public finance has also been widely used in China to promote CE reduction. As the world’s largest energy consumer and carbon emitter, China’s CO
2 emissions account for a third of global emissions. The rate at which China can reduce emissions in the coming decades is an essential factor in whether the world will succeed in limiting global warming to 1.5 °C. To this end, the Chinese government regards green public finance as a critical measure to promote ECER. The Chinese government’s introduction of green public finance for the ECER demonstration cities’ construction in 2011 offers an opportunity to study the profound effect of green public finance on CEs of this work. The policy aims to play the role of a fiscal policy in fully promoting ECER systematically and holistically. In 2011, 2013, and 2014, the Chinese government selected three batches of 30 ECER demonstration cities to promote “dual control” of TCEs and CEI. The latest studies have also evaluated the effectiveness of the ECER policy, mainly focusing on the aspects of urban development [
6], green technological innovation [
7], pollution emissions [
8], and energy consumption [
9], but a mere fraction of studies have directly explored the CE reduction effect of it, especially the critical issue of whether the ECER demonstration cities’ construction can effectively promote “dual control” of CEs, which provides a valuable space for this study.
In the context of CE practices in China, prior to the proposal of “dual control” in the CE framework, the “dual control” of energy consumption was the predominant theme in the early energy assessments in China. In December 2020, China came up with ambitious targets for addressing climate change, which include peaking CEs by 2030, striving for carbon neutrality by 2060, reducing CEs per unit GDP by 18%, and implementing a system to control TCEs and CEI. In December 2021, the Chinese government emphasized the need to create conditions for the rapid shift from “dual control” of energy consumption to “dual control” of CEs, promoting the improvement of incentive and restraint policies for pollution reduction, developing green public finance, and expediting the adoption of low-carbon lifestyles, which was reiterated in 2022. In this context, a natural question is whether China’s formulated ECER new development model is environmentally friendly. Can it empower the “dual control” of CEs? Moreover, what are the internal operational mechanisms if green public finance can drive “dual control”? These are all issues worthy of discussion.
For this reason, this study takes three batches of ECER demonstration cities in China from 2006 to 2019 as quasi-natural experiments. A difference-in-differences (DID) model is used to analyze the effect and mechanism of the ECER policy on both TCEs and CEI. Based on reviewing relevant policies and theories, this study first puts forward four research hypotheses. Then, we take three batches of ECER demonstration cities as quasi-natural experiments to empirically examine the effect and mechanism of green public finance on CEs, especially in western cities, southern cities, lower-administrative-level cities, and cities with weaker financial strength. We found that the ECER policy has effectively promoted “dual control” of CEs. This conclusion still stands after conducting a battery of rigorous tests. Moreover, the mechanism tests show that optimizing energy structure, accelerating green technology innovation, and improving energy efficiency are the three ways the ECER policy promotes “dual control” of CEs.
In this study, we make three marginal contributions. First, with respect to the research perspective, this study further tests the effect of green public finance on the “dual control” of CEs based on the ECER policy. Most previous research has addressed the CE reduction effect of environmental policies, while only a few have approached the subject from the perspective of green public finance. Meanwhile, although many studies have discussed the effects of green public finance from various aspects, such as enterprise structure upgrading [
10] and industrial agglomeration [
11], only a few studies pay attention to its CE reduction effect, particularly from the perspective of “dual control”. Our work effectively adds a new research perspective and deepens the research on the effect of green public finance. Second, with respect to the research content, this study delves deeper into analyzing the mechanisms of the ECER policy from the structure effect, technique effect, and efficiency effect, which extend the existing literature and provide a scientific basis for applying green public finance to reduce CEs. Third, with respect to the significance of the research, we provide an update on the research evidence for promoting CE reduction through green public finance. In the context of the global trend to promote “carbon neutrality” actively, it provides environmental policymakers with empirical references.
7. Conclusions and Discussion
7.1. Research Findings
China is in the critical period of actively promoting “carbon neutrality”, and how to fully play the role of green public finance to achieve it is an important theoretical and practical question that needs to be answered urgently. With the help of 276 Chinese urban samples from 2006 to 2019, this study exploits a DID model to evaluate the effectiveness of the ECER policy on the “dual control” of TCEs and CEI from the perspective of green public finance. Our key findings are the following. First, the ECER policy has effectively reduced TCEs and CEI. This finding validates the study hypothesis H1. Second, the mechanism tests show that the ECER policy can facilitate the “dual control” of CEs by optimizing energy structure, accelerating green technology innovation, and improving energy efficiency. This finding validates the study Hypotheses H2a, H2b, and H2c. Third, the heterogeneity analyses find that only the western cities, southern cities, lower-administrative-level cities, and cities with weaker financial strength can significantly promote the “dual control” of CEs.
7.2. Theoretical Contributions
First, our study contributes to the literature on CE reduction drivers by identifying the critical role of the ECER policy. Although the existing research has provided rich discussions of the influencing factors of CEs, it mainly focuses on the impact of environmental policies, technological factors, and economic reform on CEs [
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24], and few studies have paid attention to the CE reduction utility of green public finance. On the other hand, the research on CEs in the current literature is limited to the measurement at a single level, that is, the TCEs or CEI [
24,
36]. This study also provides a new and reasonable research reference for comprehensively measuring the effect of CE reduction.
Second, we contribute to the literature on green public finance by studying the impact of ECER demonstration city construction on CEs. As a typical green public finance pilot policy in China, ECER policy is a new exploration to promote ECER with cities as the carriers, which is original and representative. As for the effect of the ECER policy, a few studies have evaluated it from the aspects of technological innovation and pollutant discharge [
6,
35] and found many meaningful insights. For example, the most relevant studies discussed the single impact of ECER policy on TCEs [
36,
68]. However, few studies have directly focused on the possible causal relationship between green public finance and the “dual control” of CEs. As a supplement and extension to these studies, this work analyzes the CE reduction effect of the ECER policy from the unique perspective of “dual control”.
Finally, we contribute to complementing existing theories by constructing a multidimensional theoretical analysis framework. Specifically, we further clarify the relationship between green public finance and CEs. Existing studies on whether fiscal policy is conducive to promoting low-carbon development and CE reduction have not reached a consensus [
4,
27,
28]. Our research results show that green public finance can promote the “dual control” of CEs and creatively explore the mechanism of green public finance affecting CEs through three channels: the structural effect, the technique effect, and the efficiency effect. These theoretical discussions not only enrich the existing relevant research theories but also provide valuable theoretical references for future research.
7.3. Practical Implications
The implications of this study hold significant value for policymakers and local governments. First, they strengthen the leadership of ECER demonstration cities in promoting low-carbon development, especially by highlighting the ecological benefits of green public finance. According to the benchmark regression results, the ECER policy demonstrates a significant capability to achieve “dual control” of CEs. To ensure the continuous decline of CEs and provide an inexhaustible driving force for achieving “dual control”, it is imperative that we expand the scope of ECER demonstration cities. Furthermore, we should encourage demonstration cities at the forefront of ECER to expand new construction models, such as trying to carry out demonstration city construction at the county level.
Second, they accelerate formulating and deploying the overall development strategy guided by green public finance and exploring multiple channels to promote CE reduction. The mechanism tests show that the ECER policy primarily reduces CEs with the optimization of energy structure, the acceleration of green technology innovation, and the improvement of energy efficiency. Government departments should promote two-way agglomeration of technology and capital within the demonstration cities, optimize and upgrade industrial structure, and allocate resources rationally to provide the endogenous impetus for “dual control” of CEs.
Third, they expand the ECER demonstration cities’ construction and adhere to the development idea of “matching the medicine to the disease”. The heterogeneity analyses show that the CE reduction effect of the ECER policy varies in different cities. On the one hand, we should focus on expanding the breadth and depth of green public finance and promoting ECER demonstration construction cities in central, eastern, and northern regions. On the other hand, in line with the practical demands of the “carbon neutrality” strategy, the local governments of demonstration cities should promote the implementation of the ECER policy in light of their realities and the local conditions to add efforts to better the “dual control” of CEs.
7.4. Limitations and Future Directions
Although this study has important theoretical and practical implications, this study inevitably has some limitations. First, although our research results confirm that the ECER policy can promote CE reduction, this finding is based on China’s national conditions. Therefore, the conclusions of this study may lack applicability to and inclusiveness for other countries or regions. In future research, we can comprehensively consider the actual situation of each country to explain the relationship between the two from a more comprehensive perspective to make the research results universal. This limitation could be improved in future research as the concept and practice of ECER gradually evolve globally. Second, this study relies predominantly on city-level data, precluding a more comprehensive micro-level evaluation, particularly in terms of the impact of ECER policies on micro-enterprise CE reduction. Enterprises are fundamental constituents of a market economy, and a thorough understanding of how ECER policies promote ECER activities among them holds tremendous research value. In-depth exploration can be pursued in subsequent studies by analyzing microdata, which can provide valuable insights.