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Astrid Kander. Photo.

Astrid Kander

Professor

Astrid Kander. Photo.

Technology-adjusted carbon accounting

Author

  • Nicolai Baumert
  • Magnus Jiborn
  • Astrid Kander
  • Viktoras Kulionis

Editor

  • Michael Jakob

Summary, in English

We present technology-adjusted consumption-based accounting (TCBA) – a measure of shared responsibility for global greenhouse gas emissions. Unlike in conventional consumption-based accounting (CBA), countries are assigned the emission responsibility for the technology they use to produce their exports. This ensures that national emission responsibilities are not driven by differences in export production technology. If the technology for exports is less (more) carbon-intensive than world average for the relevant product group, the exporters are credited (penalized) for providing the world with these goods. By comparing the evidence on TCBA trends to conventional findings on CBA and production-based accounting (PBA) for the period 2000–2014, the map of emission responsibility is redrawn – albeit not in a way that systematically favors developed or developing countries. Lastly, we discuss how TCBA has been received in academia and among policy makers since its conceptualization.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History
  • Economic development of the Global South
  • Sustainability transformations over time and space

Publishing year

2022

Language

English

Pages

256-271

Publication/Series

Handbook on Trade Policy and Climate Change

Document type

Book chapter

Publisher

Edward Elgar Publishing

Topic

  • Economics and Business
  • Climate Research

Keywords

  • outsourcing
  • CBA
  • TCBA
  • technology
  • emission
  • carbon accounting

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-1-83910-323-0