Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP14081
Authors: Octavio Fernández-Amador; Joseph François; Doris Oberdabernig; Patrick Tomberger
Abstract: We analyze the impacts of economic growth on methane emissions per capita at the sectoral level for the period 1997–2014. We cover three stages of the supply chain, distinguishing between emissions embodied in production, final production, and consumption. We investigate the effects of economic growth on two components of methane emissions per capita, namely methane emissions per unit of value added and value added per capita. We uncover substantial heterogeneity across sectors. Economic growth led to expansions of economic activity in all sectors but reduced the methane intensity of sectoral value added in some sectors. In sectors that experienced pronounced reductions in methane intensity, economic growth did not strongly affect emissions per capita. However, in the absence of large methane-intensity gains, economic growth raised emission per capita substantially.
Keywords: Economic Growth; Methane Emissions; Sectoral Analysis; Threshold Estimation
JEL Codes: F18; F64; O44; Q54; Q56
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
economic growth (O49) | methane emissions per capita (P18) |
income per capita (D31) | methane emissions per capita (P18) |