Archive for 1.1.3 International and Foreign Think-tanks, Research Institutes, NGOs and Individual Researchers

End-Use Energy Modelling for China’s 10th Five-Year Plan

Abstract The government of China views energy efficiency as one of the key approaches to ensuring that China has adequate energy to support economic growth, and to reducing environmental impacts from energy production. The 10th Five Year Plan will include a series of recommendations for new policies and programs to encourage energy efficiency. The Beijing Energy Efficiency Center and several US national laboratories are teaming up to develop models and analyses to assist in formulating recommended policies and support those policies throughout the discussions and debates that will produce the final Five Year Plan
Author Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Report (LBNL-48044), Lamont, Alan; Sinton, Jonathan; Guo, Yuan; 2000
Publisher
Link http://china.lbl.gov/sites/all/files/lbl-48044-energy-modeling-10fyp2000.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.1 General Energy Concerns, 1.1.3 International and Foreign Think-tanks, Research Institutes, NGOs and Individual Researchers

What Goes Up: Recent Trends in China’s Energy Consumption

Abstract Since 1996, China’s energy output has dropped by 17%, while primary energy use has fallen by 4%, driven almost entirely by shrinking output from coal mines and declining direct use. Since China is the world’s second-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, it is important to understand the sources of this apparent transformation, and whether it portends a permanent change in patterns of energy use. This remarkable reversal of the long-term expansion of energy use has occurred even as the economy has continued to grow, albeit more slowly than in the early 1990s. Generation of electric power has risen, implying a steep fall in end uses, particularly in industry. Available information points to a variety of forces contributing to this phenomenon, including rapid improvements in coal quality, structural changes in industry, shutdowns of factories in both the state-owned and non-state segments of the economy, improvements in end-use efficiency, and greater use of gas and electricity in households. A combination of slowing economic growth, industrial restructuring, broader economic system reforms, and environmental and energy-efficiency policies has apparently led to at least a temporary decline in, and perhaps a long-term reduction in the growth of energy use, and therefore greenhouse gas emissions
Author Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Report (LBNL-44283); Sinton, Jonathan E.; Fridley, David G., 2000
Publisher
Link http://china.lbl.gov/sites/all/files/lbl-44283-energy-use-trendfeb-2000.pdf
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.1 General Energy Concerns, 1.1.3 International and Foreign Think-tanks, Research Institutes, NGOs and Individual Researchers

A Provisional Evaluation of the 1998 Reforms to China’s Government and State Sector: The Case of the Energy Industry

Author Philip Andrews-Speed, Stephen Dow and Zhiguo Gao
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1 Energy and Climate, 1.1 General Energy Concerns, 1.1.3 International and Foreign Think-tanks, Research Institutes, NGOs and Individual Researchers