Global Climate Change: The Empirical Study of the Sensitivity Model in China’s Sustainable Development, Part 2

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Date
2015
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis Online : Energy Sources, Part A: Recovery, Utilization, and Environmental Effects,
Abstract
In the evolution of CO2 emission intensity, population, total CO2 emission, annual gross domestic product growth, emission intensity, and emission per unit energy index is mainly an empirical issue that cannot resolve with certainty from the experience of a group of countries during a given period of time. The present empirical study reveals that the listed variables cannot be evaluated unambiguously using either variation in carbon emission factor or product of many factors put together as the criteria. Different levels of CO2 emission intensities in different regions resulting from different causes are not a constant or evaluated using constant variables. The article focuses on the challenges of climate change on development in recent times—observed and future climate change and variability, which are a factor of the energy mix utilization within China for some years ago, thus establishing methodology that linked greenhouse gases effect and climate change by Sensitivity Model Prof. Vester in China, in an attempt to evaluate a sustainable indicator in greenhouse gases and change effects.
Description
Staff Publication
Keywords
CO2 emission,, emission intensity,, global climate change,, round/year sensitivity model,, variability
Citation