经济

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Clearing the Air

July 19, 2007

Check the reviews of Clearing the Air, a Harvard China Project book on the health damages of air pollution, and comprehensive costs and benefits of taxes to control pollutants and CO2. Reporting an interdisciplinary study by Harvard University and Tsinghua University engineers, economists, and health scientists, the book is edited by Mun Ho and Chris Nielsen:

 

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《中国日报》引述Jorgenson教授和Nielsen总监关于碳定价的观点

《中国日报》引述Jorgenson教授和Nielsen总监关于碳定价的观点

September 30, 2016

《中国日报》美国版援引Dale JORGENSON教授和哈佛大学中国项目执行总监Chris Nielsen先生关于中国计划实施主要针对重污染行业的全国排污权交易的观点;关于税收对中国在其他经济领域实现碳定价目标的潜在作用,《中国日报》也引述了二位的观点。... Read more about 《中国日报》引述Jorgenson教授和Nielsen总监关于碳定价的观点

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《华尔街日报》、《哈佛志》、《气候发展》和《南华早报》报道哈佛大学中国项目关于空气污染和碳税的研究

December 17, 2013

《华尔街日报》《气候发展》《哈佛志》《南华早报》援引了Chris Nielsen总监、何文胜博士和曹静教授关于碳税的看法,三人也指出了中国在能源与环境方面的优势与不足,相关观点引述自哈佛大学中国项目的新书《中国更晴朗的天空》(Clearer Skies Over China)。
... Read more about 《华尔街日报》、《哈佛志》、《气候发展》和《南华早报》报道哈佛大学中国项目关于空气污染和碳税的研究

smog in china nytimes

《纽约时报》报道哈佛大学中国项目调研及研讨会

July 14, 2014

区域性气候的不断变化有可能增加中国华北地区入冬后的大气静稳现象,并因此导致了近来的极端雾霾天气。这是中国及国际大气科学学术界都在积极研究的课题,也是哈佛大学中国项目举办的主题为 “中国2035年:能源、气候与发展”的研讨会上的议题之一——该研讨会于2014年6月18日至19日在哈佛上海中心召开,集结了中国顶尖的科学家、经济学家和政策分析家。
... Read more about 《纽约时报》报道哈佛大学中国项目调研及研讨会

2016 May 30

"Carbon Taxes in China's Future: Role and Feasibility"

Mon - Tue, May 30 to May 31, 8:30am - 2:00pm

Location: 

Beijing, China

A closed-door interdisciplinary symposium sponsored by:

  • The Harvard China Project and Harvard Global Institute
  • The Energy Foundation China and the Innovative Green Development Program

Interviews about the symposium of the event chair, Prof. Dale Jorgenson, and Project Executive Director, Chris Nielsen, are reported in Caixin and the Harvard Gazette

 

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Rui Wang. 2009. “The structure of Chinese urban land prices: Estimates from benchmark land price data.” Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 39, 1, Pp. 24-38. Publisher's VersionAbstract
Taking the recent benchmark land prices published by the Chinese city governments, the paper estimates commercial and residential land price curves of Chinese cities using cross-sectional data, controlling for urban population size and income level. The urban land leasing price–distance relationship is estimated based on the argument that monocentric urban structure is representative for Chinese cities. Both population size and income level are found to positively affect urban land price and price–distance gradients. Commercial land prices are higher than residential land prices except in suburbs or outer central urban areas, where the land prices of different uses converge. In most situations, commercial use price gradients are larger than those of residential use.
Clearer Skies Over China: Reconciling Air Pollution, Climate, and Economic Goals
2013. Clearer Skies Over China: Reconciling Air Pollution, Climate, and Economic Goals. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Publisher's VersionAbstract

A groundbreaking U.S.–Chinese inquiry into the effects of recent air pollution controls and prospective carbon taxes on China's economy and environment.

China's carbon dioxide emissions now outstrip those of other countries and its domestic air quality is severely degraded, especially in urban areas. Its sheer size and its growing, fossil-fuel-powered economy mean that China's economic and environmental policy choices will have an outsized effect on the global environmental future. Over the last decade, China has pursued policies that target both fossil fuel use and atmospheric emissions, but these efforts have been substantially overwhelmed by the country's increasing energy demands. With a billion citizens still living on less than $4,000 per year, China's energy and environmental policies must be reconciled with the goals of maintaining economic growth and raising living standards.

This book, a U.S.–Chinese collaboration of experts from Harvard and Tsinghua University, offers a groundbreaking integrated analysis of China's economy, emissions, air quality, public health, and agriculture. It first offers essential scientific context and accessible summaries of the book's policy findings; it then provides the underlying scientific and economic research. These studies suggest that China's recent sulfur controls achieved enormous environmental health benefits at unexpectedly low costs. They also indicate that judicious implementation of carbon taxes could reduce not only China's carbon emissions but also its air pollution more comprehensively than current single-pollutant policies, all at little cost to economic growth.

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