Reprint

Available Energy and Environmental Economics

Edited by
April 2023
280 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-7280-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-7281-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Available Energy and Environmental Economics that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Physical Sciences
Summary

This reprint focuses on the rapid development of the social economy which is accompanied by the continuous growth of energy demand, such as in the heavy industry, agriculture sector, and tourism sector. Meanwhile, large-scale energy consumption in the short term has increased the risk to the energy supply and ecological safety. This has contributed to the exploration and exploitation of energy supply risk management, carbon emission reduction, and renewable energy technological innovation, aiming to solve the bottlenecks in energy and environmental economics. Thus, this reprint aims to present and disseminate the most recent advances related to the theory, design, modelling, and application of all types of energy and environmental economics.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© by the authors
Keywords
atmospheric environmental quality; industrial structure; Taiyuan city; coupling coordination model; VAR model; renewable energy business; fixed-effects model; GMM model; sustainable growth (SG); credit default prediction; energy industry; class imbalance; cost-sensitive; threshold method; DDF; TGR; wastewater; waste gas; treatment funds; Yellow River; carbon emission reduction; city cluster policy; difference-in-difference method; environmental Kuznets curve; carbon dioxide emissions; CO2; urbanization; energy consumption; European Union; tourism carbon emission efficiency; tourism economy high-quality development; interactive mechanism; the Yellow River Basin; tourism development; green economy; carbon emissions; spillover effect; superefficient EBM; environmental regulation; green innovation; TCZ policy; human capital; environmental Kuznets curve; South Asian countries; trade openness; energy consumption; economic growth; carbon dioxide emissions; NARDL model; ARDL model; innovation input; climate change; renewable energy consumption; greenhouse gas emissions; green economic growth; simultaneous equation model; carbon neutrality; China; economic impact; computable general equilibrium model; carbon tax; carbon emission trading scheme; new energy vehicle industry; technological innovation; industrial policy; government subsidy; innovation quality; risk assessment; electricity market; natural gas market; system dynamics; Longji; ethnic areas; environment; ecological balance; tourism