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Greening Behavior towards Carbon Neutrality

A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 May 2023) | Viewed by 2835

Special Issue Editors

School of Economics and Trade, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, Guangzhou 510006, China
Interests: environmental economics; energy economics; productivity and efficiency analysis

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Guest Editor
School of Economics and Management, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China
Interests: environmental economics; green-technology innovation; productivity and efficiency analysis; international economic and trade analysis

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Carbon neutrality means net-zero carbon, indicating that any actions that lead to emissions should be accompanied by other actions that confidently reduce—or offset—emissions. It is the consensus of governments around the world that there is an urgent need to respond to climate change and achieve carbon neutrality. As a comprehensive strategy for sustainable development and green transition, greening behaviour and voluntary emission-reduction schemes are important measures to deal with climate change and maintain sustainable development. Households (or individuals), firms, and the public make up the main body of economic activities, and they are also the decisive force that affects sustainable development. Only by effective management of the green behavior of households (or individuals), firms, and the public can we truly realize the green low-carbon development of the economy. There is a need to establish reasonable constraints and standard mechanisms for the behavior of households (or individuals), firms, and the public, open the national carbon-emissions trading market, and how to effectively guide the greening behavior of households (or individuals), firms, and the public, then establish corresponding dynamic response mechanisms, which are related to whether the future of the world can effectively achieve the sustainable development goals. It is necessary to explore the greening behaviour of households (or individuals), firms, and the public based on the perspective of the complexity of human behavior.

Thus, this Special Issue aims to discuss the greening behavior towards carbon neutrality, which involves models, theories, simulations, empirical studies, and related research on greening behavior and carbon neutrality. We cordially invite authors to contribute either original research articles or review articles dealing with a broad range of topics, including, but not limited to, the following areas:

  • The greening behaviour of households (or individuals), firms, and the public towards carbon neutrality;
  • Methods of measuring greening behaviour of households (or individuals), firms, and the public;
  • Voluntary emission-reduction scheme towards carbon neutrality;
  • Potential environmental effects of a voluntary emission-reduction scheme;
  • Green low-carbon transition towards carbon neutrality;
  • Cost–benefit analysis of green behaviour;
  • Other environmental policies towards carbon neutrality.

Dr. Yantuan Yu
Dr. Zhangqi Zhong
Dr. Yanmin Shao
Guest Editors

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Keywords

  • the greening behaviour of households (or individuals), firms, and the public towards carbon neutrality
  • methods of measuring greening behaviour of households (or individuals), firms, and the public
  • voluntary emission-reduction scheme towards carbon neutrality
  • potential environmental effects of a voluntary emission-reduction scheme
  • green low-carbon transition towards carbon neutrality
  • cost–benefit analysis of green behaviour
  • other environmental policies towards carbon neutrality

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

17 pages, 863 KiB  
Article
Green Finance and Industrial Low-Carbon Transition: Evidence from a Quasi-Natural Experiment in China
by Yayun Ren, Jian Yu, Shuhua Xu, Jiaomei Tang and Chang Zhang
Sustainability 2023, 15(6), 4827; https://doi.org/10.3390/su15064827 - 8 Mar 2023
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 2290
Abstract
Under the constraints of carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals, research on effective policies for China’s industrial low-carbon transition is of both theoretical and practical importance. This study conducts a difference-in-differences strategy to investigate whether the green finance pilot policy (GFPP) promotes industrial [...] Read more.
Under the constraints of carbon peaking and carbon neutrality goals, research on effective policies for China’s industrial low-carbon transition is of both theoretical and practical importance. This study conducts a difference-in-differences strategy to investigate whether the green finance pilot policy (GFPP) promotes industrial low-carbon transition based on a provincial panel dataset. Our results show: (1) The GFPP has decreased the industrial carbon intensity of pilot zones by 4.09% on average, which still holds after several robustness checks. (2) This negative effect of the GFPP varies by geographic location (east, central, and west regions) and population size (high and low population groups). (3) The GFPP mainly promotes the low-carbon transition of industrial enterprises in the pilot zones by promoting energy transition rather than developing short-term emission reduction technologies. Finally, we propose some corresponding policy recommendations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Greening Behavior towards Carbon Neutrality)
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