Swedish CO2-Emissions 1993 - 2006 – An Application of Decomposition Analysis and Some Methodological Insights
Abstract
This study undertakes a decomposition analysis to identify the
drivers of carbon emissions change in the Swedish business and industry sectors
1993 - 2006. On aggregate, energy intensity decreased, but this does not seem to
have been very important for reducing emissions. Rather, fuel substitution seems
to have been more important, which is in line with findings from the decomposition
literature on Sweden. However, at the sectoral level, we find no clear pattern
of the effect of fuel substitution and energy intensity on emissions. We also draw
some methodological conclusions: decomposition analysis should be undertaken
at the most disaggregate level possible; assessing decomposition results by summing results over several time periods leads to biased results; and decomposition
analysis should not be based only on some initial and final years of a long time
period. Furthermore, we address the problem of double counting energy flows in
decomposition analysis of aggregate effects when the energy sector is included, and
point out potential problems related to output measured in monetary terms.
University
University of Gothenburg. School of Business, Economics and Law
Institution
Department of Economics
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Date
2008-06-24Author
Löfgren, Åsa
Muller, Adrian
Keywords
carbon dioxide emissions
energy intencity
decomposition
fuel substitution
sectoral change
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
311
Language
eng