Title of article
International trade and the geographical separation between income and enabled carbon emissions
Author/Authors
Marques، نويسنده , , Alexandra Alves-Rodrigues، نويسنده , , Joمo and Domingos، نويسنده , , Tiago، نويسنده ,
Pages
8
From page
162
To page
169
Abstract
In this paper we study how international trade allows the geographical separation between the place where carbon emissions occur and the place where income from those emissions is derived. We do so by studying the carbon emissions enabled by the primary inputs of products downstream along the production chain. We find that 18% of global carbon emissions are enabled abroad and that Developed Economies, Fossil Fuel Exporters and Asia account for 80% of the downstream emissions enabled by international trade. Both Developed Economies and Fossil Fuel Exporters exhibit a positive trade balance of enabled emissions while for Asia the opposite is true. Developed Economies and Fossil Fuel Exporters enable emissions mainly through the export of manufactured products (690 Mt) and fossil fuels (684 Mt), respectively, while Asia exhibits an outflow of enabled emissions through the import of fossil fuels (209 Mt). The measurement of enabled emissions allows the understanding of how a regionʹs income is derived from carbon emissions occurring abroad.
Keywords
Multi-regional input–output model , Enabled emissions , Supply-side approach , Carbon responsibility
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Record number
1941950
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