Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector

Environmental authoritarianism characterizes China’s energy transition and its renewable energy boost as a top-down process initiated by the centralized developmental state. This article attempts to present a contrary viewpoint and argues that China’s energy transition is a process of repeated integ...

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Main Author: Dan Wu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2019-01-01
Series:Global Transitions
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589791819300155
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spelling doaj-6b3a2243af5d4284abbd8d7dd2cca0b32021-02-02T08:11:55ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Global Transitions2589-79182019-01-011171180Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sectorDan Wu0Graduate School of East Asian Studies, Freie Universität Berlin, 14195, Berlin, GermanyEnvironmental authoritarianism characterizes China’s energy transition and its renewable energy boost as a top-down process initiated by the centralized developmental state. This article attempts to present a contrary viewpoint and argues that China’s energy transition is a process of repeated integrative bargaining and non-zero-sum games that both the central and sub-national actors play. An examination of the roles of central and provincial governing authorities in market reforms of China’s electric power sector finds that China has embarked on electricity market restructuring by adjusting the accountability relationship between the central and provincial governing authorities. From an actor-centered institutionalist perspective and based on the consideration that central and provincial authorities are institutional constraints of each other, this article studies the capabilities and preferences of central and provincial actors in order to explain their modes of interactions and the resulting policy outcomes. It draws the conclusion that the central and provincial authorities have always shared fluid and dynamic accountability relations. The balance of power is constantly changing with the changes in policy objectives. The transformation of energy governance and particularly the accountability relations in Chinese spatial politics have enabled China to get its market reforms on track in the electric power sector. Keywords: China, Electric power sector, Market reform, Accountability relations, Central and provincial authorities, Decentralizationhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589791819300155
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dan Wu
spellingShingle Dan Wu
Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector
Global Transitions
author_facet Dan Wu
author_sort Dan Wu
title Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector
title_short Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector
title_full Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector
title_fullStr Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector
title_full_unstemmed Accountability relations and market reform in China’s electric power sector
title_sort accountability relations and market reform in china’s electric power sector
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Global Transitions
issn 2589-7918
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Environmental authoritarianism characterizes China’s energy transition and its renewable energy boost as a top-down process initiated by the centralized developmental state. This article attempts to present a contrary viewpoint and argues that China’s energy transition is a process of repeated integrative bargaining and non-zero-sum games that both the central and sub-national actors play. An examination of the roles of central and provincial governing authorities in market reforms of China’s electric power sector finds that China has embarked on electricity market restructuring by adjusting the accountability relationship between the central and provincial governing authorities. From an actor-centered institutionalist perspective and based on the consideration that central and provincial authorities are institutional constraints of each other, this article studies the capabilities and preferences of central and provincial actors in order to explain their modes of interactions and the resulting policy outcomes. It draws the conclusion that the central and provincial authorities have always shared fluid and dynamic accountability relations. The balance of power is constantly changing with the changes in policy objectives. The transformation of energy governance and particularly the accountability relations in Chinese spatial politics have enabled China to get its market reforms on track in the electric power sector. Keywords: China, Electric power sector, Market reform, Accountability relations, Central and provincial authorities, Decentralization
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2589791819300155
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