中国关系与非洲低碳工业化

Chinese ties and low carbon industrialization in Africa

Energy Economics · 2025
被引 7
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究了中国对非洲制造业的外商直接投资如何影响该地区的低碳工业化,发现这些投资增加了工业碳排放,尤其在劳动和资源密集型行业,而东道国环境规制可能缓解这一负面效应。

Abstract

This paper examines the impact of Chinese foreign direct investment (FDI) on low-carbon industrialization in Africa, within the context of China's growing economic ties with the continent. The analysis relies on a panel dataset comprising Chinese greenfield FDI into the manufacturing sectors of 34 African countries from 2003 to 2014, employing the Lewbel Instrumental Variable approach to address potential endogeneity issues. The results show that these Chinese FDI inflows increased industrial carbon emissions in Africa. This adverse effect is particularly pronounced when Chinese FDI targets labor and resource-intensive manufacturing sectors. We attribute this finding to two mechanisms: the sector concentration on labor and resource-intensive manufacturing and the manufacturing processes of Chinese FDI characterized by suboptimal de facto implementation of environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards compared to the international best practices. Additional analysis underscores the potential moderating influence of FDI-host countries' environmental regulations, albeit statistically insignificant, highlighting the legacy of ineffective institutional enforcement that is prevalent on the Africa continent. • Examines how low-carbon industrialization in Africa is affected by Chinese FDI in the region's manufacturing sector. • Chinese FDI adversely affects low-carbon industrialization in Africa. • Adverse effect of Chinese FDI is more pronounced in labor and resource-intensive manufacturing sectors. • If environmental regulation in the FDI host country in Africa is enforced, it can attenuate the adverse effect of Chinese FDI.

中国对外直接投资非洲低碳工业化碳排放环境规制