Economy-wide assessment of achieving carbon neutrality in China's power sector: A computable general equilibrium analysis

Qiang Teng, Yu Fei Zhang, Hong Dian Jiang*, Qiao Mei Liang

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    3 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The low-carbon transition in the power sector is essential for realising carbon peak and neutrality goals. However, there is a lack of research assessing the policy mix needed to achieve ambitious targets such as power sector's carbon neutrality. Therefore, using a computable general equilibrium model with a detailed power technology module, this study evaluates the macroeconomic and environmental impacts of four abatement approaches for achieving carbon neutrality in China's power sector. Results show that, first, subsidising renewable electricity combined with carbon pricing is a relatively optimal means of achieving power sector's carbon neutrality, with the lowest carbon price and the least loss to the macroeconomy and household welfare. Moreover, it will increase the renewable energy proportion most strongly, also exerting the superior co-benefits on pollutants. Second, subsidising CCS combined with carbon pricing is the least advantageous mean. It causes the largest loss of both GDP and household welfare, and the promotion effects of renewable energy and co-benefits are relatively weak. Third, considering the carbon neutrality goal in China's power sector, if subsidised renewable electricity and carbon pricing are adopted, the targeted measures for pollutants could be significantly relaxed, whereas combined CCS subsidies and carbon pricing can moderately weak measures intensity for pollutant.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number119508
    JournalRenewable Energy
    Volume219
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

    Keywords

    • Carbon neutrality
    • Computable general equilibrium
    • Economy-wide impact
    • Power sector

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