Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis

Energy intensity reduction has become a constrained target from the 11th five-year plan in China. Energy consumption is expected to increase because of rapid urbanization and economic growth, whereas energy intensity reduction is regarded as a method to alleviate the pressure of growing energy deman...

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Main Authors: Yulan Lv, Wei Chen, Jianquan Cheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/11/3167
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spelling doaj-028025e1eced4e4e823ab48be32867382020-11-25T01:51:03ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-06-011111316710.3390/su11113167su11113167Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity AnalysisYulan Lv0Wei Chen1Jianquan Cheng2School of Economics, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, ChinaSchool of Economics, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, ChinaSchool of Science and the Environment, Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU), Manchester M1 5GD, UKEnergy intensity reduction has become a constrained target from the 11th five-year plan in China. Energy consumption is expected to increase because of rapid urbanization and economic growth, whereas energy intensity reduction is regarded as a method to alleviate the pressure of growing energy demand. An important contribution of this study is the investigation of urbanization impact on energy intensity across China at the urban level. This research uses a balanced panel data set of 224 cities for the period between 2005 and 2016 and reports deep insights into and innovative findings for the reduction of energy intensity across different regions and cities in China. To examine the direct, indirect, and total effects and regional heterogeneous effects, we employ spatial Durbin models and spatial decomposition techniques. It reveals significant and negative direct effects of urbanization in the western and full regions. However, the indirect and total effects of urbanization are significantly negative in the eastern and western regions. The pressure of urbanization on energy has alleviated and is reversing, especially under the construction of people-oriented and green new-type urbanization. The empirics highlight industrialization as a contributing factor for high energy intensity in the spatial outcomes of regional analysis. The direct effect of per capita GDP supports the existence of the inverted U-shaped relationship between economic development and energy intensity. The study proposes fruitful implications to construct new-type urbanization for energy conservation and sustainable development in China.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/11/3167energy intensityurbanizationspatial autocorrelationregional heterogeneityChinese cities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yulan Lv
Wei Chen
Jianquan Cheng
spellingShingle Yulan Lv
Wei Chen
Jianquan Cheng
Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis
Sustainability
energy intensity
urbanization
spatial autocorrelation
regional heterogeneity
Chinese cities
author_facet Yulan Lv
Wei Chen
Jianquan Cheng
author_sort Yulan Lv
title Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis
title_short Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis
title_full Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis
title_fullStr Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Direct and Indirect Effects of Urbanization on Energy Intensity in Chinese Cities: A Regional Heterogeneity Analysis
title_sort direct and indirect effects of urbanization on energy intensity in chinese cities: a regional heterogeneity analysis
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Energy intensity reduction has become a constrained target from the 11th five-year plan in China. Energy consumption is expected to increase because of rapid urbanization and economic growth, whereas energy intensity reduction is regarded as a method to alleviate the pressure of growing energy demand. An important contribution of this study is the investigation of urbanization impact on energy intensity across China at the urban level. This research uses a balanced panel data set of 224 cities for the period between 2005 and 2016 and reports deep insights into and innovative findings for the reduction of energy intensity across different regions and cities in China. To examine the direct, indirect, and total effects and regional heterogeneous effects, we employ spatial Durbin models and spatial decomposition techniques. It reveals significant and negative direct effects of urbanization in the western and full regions. However, the indirect and total effects of urbanization are significantly negative in the eastern and western regions. The pressure of urbanization on energy has alleviated and is reversing, especially under the construction of people-oriented and green new-type urbanization. The empirics highlight industrialization as a contributing factor for high energy intensity in the spatial outcomes of regional analysis. The direct effect of per capita GDP supports the existence of the inverted U-shaped relationship between economic development and energy intensity. The study proposes fruitful implications to construct new-type urbanization for energy conservation and sustainable development in China.
topic energy intensity
urbanization
spatial autocorrelation
regional heterogeneity
Chinese cities
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/11/3167
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AT weichen directandindirecteffectsofurbanizationonenergyintensityinchinesecitiesaregionalheterogeneityanalysis
AT jianquancheng directandindirecteffectsofurbanizationonenergyintensityinchinesecitiesaregionalheterogeneityanalysis
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