Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period
The study employs structural decomposition approach based on Kaya identity and utilizes data from International Energy Agency (IEA, 2010) to analyze the relation between CO2 emission increase and GDP per capita, energy intensity of GDP, CO2 energy intensity and pop...
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Đại học Kinh tế
2016
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/14132 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Institution: | Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
Language: | English |
id |
oai:112.137.131.14:VNU_123-14132 |
---|---|
record_format |
dspace |
spelling |
oai:112.137.131.14:VNU_123-141322020-06-26T08:52:41Z Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period Nguyen, Thi Kim Anh Kaya identity CO2intensity energy intensity The study employs structural decomposition approach based on Kaya identity and utilizes data from International Energy Agency (IEA, 2010) to analyze the relation between CO2 emission increase and GDP per capita, energy intensity of GDP, CO2 energy intensity and population in Vietnam. The research brings about the following outcomes: The rapid GDP increase (y/p) and high CO2 energy intensity (c/e) are two major factors causing high increase in CO2 emission even though GDP energy intensity (-e/y) continuously declined and population growth was lower than 1.67% yearly in 1986-2008. The economic structural change and the shift of fuel mix were the main forcesdriving GDP growth while suppressing CO2 emissions in Vietnam in 1989. The trend of c/e coefficient is due to the increase in fossil fuel dependency, economic structural change toward industrialization concentrating on manufacturing industries, a large inflow of FDI into manufacturing and construction industrieswithout paying due attention to screening whether the acquired technology is environmentally friendly. Moreover, an increased number of vehicles and urbanization in Vietnam also boostedenergyconsumption. Consequently CO2 emission had risen. Therefore, improvement of energy efficiency incorporated with a shift in energy mix to renewable energy, and applying energy-saving and environment friendly technology (EFT) are the most important steps to curb CO2 emission 2016-09-13T01:57:22Z 2016-09-13T01:57:22Z 2012 Article Nguyễn, T. K. A. (2012). Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period. VNU Journal of Science, Economics and Business, 28, No. 2, p. 115-123 2588-1108 http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/14132 en VNU Journal of Science, Economics and Business application/pdf Đại học Kinh tế |
institution |
Vietnam National University, Hanoi |
building |
VNU Library & Information Center |
country |
Vietnam |
collection |
VNU Digital Repository |
language |
English |
topic |
Kaya identity CO2intensity energy intensity |
spellingShingle |
Kaya identity CO2intensity energy intensity Nguyen, Thi Kim Anh Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
description |
The study employs structural decomposition approach based on Kaya identity and utilizes data from International Energy Agency (IEA, 2010) to analyze the relation between CO2 emission increase and GDP per capita, energy intensity of GDP, CO2 energy intensity and population in Vietnam. The research brings about the following outcomes: The rapid GDP increase (y/p) and high CO2 energy intensity (c/e) are two major factors causing high increase in CO2 emission even though GDP energy intensity (-e/y) continuously declined and population growth was lower than 1.67% yearly in 1986-2008. The economic structural change and the shift of fuel mix were the main forcesdriving GDP growth while suppressing CO2 emissions in Vietnam in 1989. The trend of c/e coefficient is due to the increase in fossil fuel dependency, economic structural change toward industrialization concentrating on manufacturing industries, a large inflow of FDI into manufacturing and construction industrieswithout paying due attention to screening whether the acquired technology is environmentally friendly. Moreover, an increased number of vehicles and urbanization in Vietnam also boostedenergyconsumption. Consequently CO2 emission had risen. Therefore, improvement of energy efficiency incorporated with a shift in energy mix to renewable energy, and applying energy-saving and environment friendly technology (EFT) are the most important steps to curb CO2 emission |
format |
Article |
author |
Nguyen, Thi Kim Anh |
author_facet |
Nguyen, Thi Kim Anh |
author_sort |
Nguyen, Thi Kim Anh |
title |
Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
title_short |
Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
title_full |
Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
title_fullStr |
Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
title_full_unstemmed |
Structural decomposition analysis of CO2 emission variability in Vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
title_sort |
structural decomposition analysis of co2 emission variability in vietnam during the 1986-2008 period |
publisher |
Đại học Kinh tế |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/14132 |
_version_ |
1680965993022619648 |