The impact of online education on carbon emissions in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic – Taking Chinese universities as examples

Zhaohui Yin, Xiaomeng Jiang, Songyue Lin*, Jin Liu

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    28 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    While the COVID-19 pandemic has had various impacts on economic and social development, it may have partially reduced human energy use, thereby helping achieve the goals of reducing carbon emissions and promoting carbon neutrality. During the pandemic, online education was widely used to replace traditional education all over the world. There is a lack of empirical studies on whether and to what extent the change of education model can reduce carbon emissions. Taking Chinese universities as cases, this study, concentrating on two main elements – transportation and electricity consumption – constructs a model and calculates the impact of online education on carbon emissions. The results show that online education can significantly reduce energy consumption and lower carbon emissions. In the field of higher education alone, the carbon emissions reduction caused by online education in half a year is equivalent to the total carbon emissions reduction of college students caused by online education during the half-year is equivalent to the total carbon emissions in 1.296 h in China, 2.688 h in the United States, 5.544 h in India, 12 h in Japan and 3.864 h in European countries of OECD. Therefore, this study suggests that the impact of online education on carbon emissions should be further studied, online education should be promoted through legislation and other systemic measures, and the goals of carbon emissions and carbon neutrality should be explored further within the field of education.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number118875
    JournalApplied Energy
    Volume314
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 15 May 2022

    Keywords

    • COVID-19 pandemic
    • Carbon emissions
    • Carbon neutrality
    • Chinese universities
    • Electricity consumption
    • Online education

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