Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions

This paper consolidates and applies statistical methods to the per-capita carbon dioxide emissions and emissions per unit of the gross domestic product (GDP) data of the World Bank member nations, and presents an analysis of the temporal and geographical sources of carbon dioxide emissions. The resu...

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Main Authors: Zheng Zang, Xinqing Zou, Qiaochu Song, Teng Wang, Guanghe Fu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:Carbon Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2017.1418594
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author Zheng Zang
Xinqing Zou
Qiaochu Song
Teng Wang
Guanghe Fu
author_facet Zheng Zang
Xinqing Zou
Qiaochu Song
Teng Wang
Guanghe Fu
author_sort Zheng Zang
collection DOAJ
description This paper consolidates and applies statistical methods to the per-capita carbon dioxide emissions and emissions per unit of the gross domestic product (GDP) data of the World Bank member nations, and presents an analysis of the temporal and geographical sources of carbon dioxide emissions. The results indicate that during the observation period, the countries’ per-capita carbon dioxide emissions and emissions per unit of GDP both displayed evidence of convergence. The global per-capita carbon dioxide emissions are relatively stable, and are converging at a rate lower than that of the emissions per unit of GDP. In terms of per-capita income levels, the total emissions of the mid-tier countries continue to grow, and countries with mid-tier per-capita income levels exhibit higher emissions per unit of GDP than both the low and high per-capita income countries. In terms of location of low- and middle-income countries, Southeast Asia and the Pacific have relatively high emission levels, while the per-capita carbon emission levels and the emissions per unit of GDP for Latin America and the Caribbean, South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa are below the global average. The gap between emission levels across different countries, geographic regions, and income groups continues to decrease.
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spelling doaj.art-0c92234c6d3348f18a76ee3ee7b2737e2023-09-21T15:09:04ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCarbon Management1758-30041758-30122018-01-0191455510.1080/17583004.2017.14185941418594Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributionsZheng Zang0Xinqing Zou1Qiaochu Song2Teng Wang3Guanghe Fu4Nanjing UniversityNanjing UniversityNanjing UniversityNanjing UniversityNanjing UniversityThis paper consolidates and applies statistical methods to the per-capita carbon dioxide emissions and emissions per unit of the gross domestic product (GDP) data of the World Bank member nations, and presents an analysis of the temporal and geographical sources of carbon dioxide emissions. The results indicate that during the observation period, the countries’ per-capita carbon dioxide emissions and emissions per unit of GDP both displayed evidence of convergence. The global per-capita carbon dioxide emissions are relatively stable, and are converging at a rate lower than that of the emissions per unit of GDP. In terms of per-capita income levels, the total emissions of the mid-tier countries continue to grow, and countries with mid-tier per-capita income levels exhibit higher emissions per unit of GDP than both the low and high per-capita income countries. In terms of location of low- and middle-income countries, Southeast Asia and the Pacific have relatively high emission levels, while the per-capita carbon emission levels and the emissions per unit of GDP for Latin America and the Caribbean, South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa are below the global average. The gap between emission levels across different countries, geographic regions, and income groups continues to decrease.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2017.1418594carbon dioxide emissionsconvergence trendsregional contributionsstatistical analysis
spellingShingle Zheng Zang
Xinqing Zou
Qiaochu Song
Teng Wang
Guanghe Fu
Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions
Carbon Management
carbon dioxide emissions
convergence trends
regional contributions
statistical analysis
title Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions
title_full Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions
title_fullStr Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions
title_short Analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015: convergence trends and regional contributions
title_sort analysis of the global carbon dioxide emissions from 2003 to 2015 convergence trends and regional contributions
topic carbon dioxide emissions
convergence trends
regional contributions
statistical analysis
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2017.1418594
work_keys_str_mv AT zhengzang analysisoftheglobalcarbondioxideemissionsfrom2003to2015convergencetrendsandregionalcontributions
AT xinqingzou analysisoftheglobalcarbondioxideemissionsfrom2003to2015convergencetrendsandregionalcontributions
AT qiaochusong analysisoftheglobalcarbondioxideemissionsfrom2003to2015convergencetrendsandregionalcontributions
AT tengwang analysisoftheglobalcarbondioxideemissionsfrom2003to2015convergencetrendsandregionalcontributions
AT guanghefu analysisoftheglobalcarbondioxideemissionsfrom2003to2015convergencetrendsandregionalcontributions