Energy and emission scenarios for China in the 21st century - exploration of baseline development and mitigation options

Publication

In this paper, we have used the simulation model IMAGE/TIMER to develop a set of energy and emission scenarios for China between 1995 and 2100, based on the global baseline scenarios published by IPCC. The purpose of the study was to explore possible baseline developments and available options to mitigate emissions.

The two main baseline scenarios of the study differ, among others, in the openness of the Chinese economy and in economic growth, but both indicate a rapid growth in carbon emissions (2.0% and 2.6% per year in the 2000–2050 period). The baseline scenario analysis also shows that an orientation on environmental sustainability can not only reduce other environmental pressures but also lower carbon emissions. In the mitigation analysis, a large number of options has been evaluated in terms of impacts on investments, user costs, fuel imports costs and emissions. It is found that a large potential exists to mitigate carbon emissions in China, among others in the form of energy efficiency improvement (with large co-benefits) and measures in the electricity sector. Combining all options considered, it appears to be possible to reduce emissions compared to the baseline scenarios by 50%.

Authors

Vuuren D van , Fengqi Z , Vries B de , Kejun J , Graveland C , Yun L

Specifications

Publication title
Energy and emission scenarios for China in the 21st century - exploration of baseline development and mitigation options
Publication date
1 January 2003
Publication type
Publication
Magazine
Energy Policy 2003; 31:369-87
Product number
90969