Title
Beyond peak emission transfers: historical impacts of globalization and future impacts of climate policies on international emission transfers
Author
Wood, R.
Grubb, M.
Anger-Kraavi, A.
Pollitt, H.
Rizzo, B.
Alexandri, E.
Stadler, K.
Moran, D.
Hertwich, E.
Tukker, A.
Publication year
2019
Abstract
Globalization of supply chains has resulted in rapid increases in emission transfers from the developing to the developed world. As outsourcing has risen, developed countries have been able to decarbonize domestically, at the expense of increased emissions in developing countries. However, the rapid improvement of carbon efficiency in developing regions together with the post-2008 deceleration in international trade raises the question of whether such embodied emission transfers have peaked. Here we update historical analysis, finding that emission transfers between OECD and non-OECD countries peaked in 2006, and have been declining since. The reversal is principally due to the reduction in the emissions intensity of traded goods, rather than the volume of trade. A more recent decline in embodied emissions transfers is also observed in trade between developing countries. We analyse whether these trends are likely to continue, by exploring a baseline and a Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) scenario with the Macro-ejconometric Energy-Environment-Economy Model (E3ME) model. The results suggest that absolute embodied emissions will plateau at current levels or slowly return to pre-2008- crisis levels, and differences between the NDC and baseline scenarios imply that NDC policies will not result in significant carbon leakage. However, the share of national footprint embodied in imports, at least for countries with ambitious decarbonization policies, will likely increase. This suggests that, despite the world-wide stabilization of emissions transfers, addressing emissions embodied in imports will become increasingly important for reducing carbon footprints. Key policy insights Emissions embodied in imports have plateaued since 2006, and are unlikely to return to the peak of the mid-2000s. For developed countries, as domestic decarbonization occurs, the share of emissions embodied in imports as a percentage of the total national carbon footprint will increase. The Paris NDCs in themselves are unlikely to cause significant carbon leakage. Climate policy will ideally focus on reducing both production and consumption emissions, through a variety of mechanisms, especially centred around international assistance. © 2019, © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Subject
Consumption-based emissions
Energyenvironment-economy (E3) modelling
Carbon footprint
Multi-regional input-output
Scenarios
NDCs
Environment & Sustainability
Urbanisation
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:a414944e-89f0-4df2-89df-f794baee3b3e
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/14693062.2019.1619507/
TNO identifier
867826
Publisher
Taylor and Francis Ltd.
ISSN
1469-3062
Source
Climate Policy, 1-15
Document type
article