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Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector

The Chinese government set a target to reduce China’s carbon intensity by 40%-45% in 2020 at its 2005 level. To achieve this target, the government has allocated targets to provinces, cities, and large enterprises, and selected five pilot provinces and eight cities for CO2 emission trading. Such emi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yang, Ming, Yang, Fan
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-4057-3
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2705379
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author Yang, Ming
Yang, Fan
author_facet Yang, Ming
Yang, Fan
author_sort Yang, Ming
collection CERN
description The Chinese government set a target to reduce China’s carbon intensity by 40%-45% in 2020 at its 2005 level. To achieve this target, the government has allocated targets to provinces, cities, and large enterprises, and selected five pilot provinces and eight cities for CO2 emission trading. Such emission trading process will involve decentralization, optimization, and negotiation. The prime objective of this book is to perform academic research on simulating the negotiation process. Through this research, a methodological framework and its implementation are set up to analyze, model and facilitate the process of negotiation among central government and individual energy producers under environmental, economical and social constraints. Negotiation in Decentralization: Case Study of China's Carbon Trading in the Power Sector discusses research carried out on negotiation issues in China regarding Chinese power sector reform over the past 30 years. Results show that conflicts exist between power groups and the national government, and that the most current negotiation topics in China's power industry are demand and supply management, capital investment, energy prices, and CO2 emission mitigations. Negotiation in Decentralization: Case Study of China's Carbon Trading in the Power Sector is written for government policy makers, energy and environment industry investors, energy program/project managers, environment conservation specialists, university professors, researchers, and graduate students. It aims to provide a methodology and a tool that can resolve difficult negotiation issues and change a loss-loss situation to a win-win situation for key players in a decentralized system, including government policymakers, energy producers, and environment conservationists.
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spelling cern-27053792021-04-21T18:12:03Zdoi:10.1007/978-1-4471-4057-3http://cds.cern.ch/record/2705379engYang, MingYang, FanNegotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sectorEngineeringThe Chinese government set a target to reduce China’s carbon intensity by 40%-45% in 2020 at its 2005 level. To achieve this target, the government has allocated targets to provinces, cities, and large enterprises, and selected five pilot provinces and eight cities for CO2 emission trading. Such emission trading process will involve decentralization, optimization, and negotiation. The prime objective of this book is to perform academic research on simulating the negotiation process. Through this research, a methodological framework and its implementation are set up to analyze, model and facilitate the process of negotiation among central government and individual energy producers under environmental, economical and social constraints. Negotiation in Decentralization: Case Study of China's Carbon Trading in the Power Sector discusses research carried out on negotiation issues in China regarding Chinese power sector reform over the past 30 years. Results show that conflicts exist between power groups and the national government, and that the most current negotiation topics in China's power industry are demand and supply management, capital investment, energy prices, and CO2 emission mitigations. Negotiation in Decentralization: Case Study of China's Carbon Trading in the Power Sector is written for government policy makers, energy and environment industry investors, energy program/project managers, environment conservation specialists, university professors, researchers, and graduate students. It aims to provide a methodology and a tool that can resolve difficult negotiation issues and change a loss-loss situation to a win-win situation for key players in a decentralized system, including government policymakers, energy producers, and environment conservationists.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:27053792012
spellingShingle Engineering
Yang, Ming
Yang, Fan
Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector
title Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector
title_full Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector
title_fullStr Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector
title_full_unstemmed Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector
title_short Negotiation in decentralization: case study of China's carbon trading in the power sector
title_sort negotiation in decentralization: case study of china's carbon trading in the power sector
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-4057-3
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2705379
work_keys_str_mv AT yangming negotiationindecentralizationcasestudyofchinascarbontradinginthepowersector
AT yangfan negotiationindecentralizationcasestudyofchinascarbontradinginthepowersector