China's Energy Strategy: Economic Structure, Technological Choices, and Energy Consumption
By (Author) Xiannuan Lin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
19th January 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Environmental management
Energy industries and utilities
333.790951
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
China has reduced the energy intensity of its economy dramatically. This book explores how this reduction was achieved and determines the major sources of energy savings. Using extensive data, the author examines the impacts of technological and structural changes on energy consumption and identifies the factors that were primarily responsible for the energy-efficiency improvements. It is an interesting work that will be useful for policy makers in assessing the energy consequences of development strategies and for economists in analyzing the relationship between energy use and economic growth.
XIANNUAN LIN is an Assistant Professor in the Center for Energy and Environmental Studies and the Department of Geography at Boston University, where he teaches courses and conducts research in environmental policy and management, and energy and infrastructure economics. His current research focuses on the relationship between the consumption pattern, production technology, and energy/material demand, and on innovative strategies to link environmental protection with economic development.