CAN MANUFACTURING OUTPUT SERVITIZATION REDUCE CARBON EMISSIONS?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.23055/ijietap.2023.30.2.8529Keywords:
manufacturing servitization, CO2 emission reduction, carbon intensity, green developmentAbstract
Carbon emissions from manufacturing have been a growing global concern in recent years. The growth in manufacturing firms’ service output and its carbon emission reduction effect have received less attention, though. Using data from 2008-2020 for listed companies in China, this study empirically analyzed the effects of manufacturing output servitization on carbon intensity. The results revealed a significant negative relationship between them. Heterogeneity analysis finds that the carbon emission reduction effect of manufacturing servitization is strongest in (i) private and relatively small-scale firms and (ii) developed regions and capital-intensive industries. The mediating effect study shows that green TFP and revenue growth rate are the transmission channels for the environmental impact of manufacturing servitization. This study verifies that servitization is a feasible path to coordinate high-quality economic development with resource and environmental constraints from different perspectives to provide a reference for the realistic development of diverse economies.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The Author(s) must formally transfer each article's copyright before publication in the INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING. Such transfer enables the Journal to defend itself against plagiarism and other forms of copyright infringement. Your cooperation is appreciated.
You agree that the copyright of your article to be published in the INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING - THEORY, APPLICATIONS, AND PRACTICE is hereby transferred, throughout the World and for the full term and all extensions and renewals thereof, to INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING - THEORY, APPLICATIONS, AND PRACTICE.
The Author(s) reserve(s): (a) the trademark rights and patent rights, if any, and (b) the right to use all or part of the information contained in this article in future, non-commercial works of the Author's own, or, if the article is a "work-for-hire" and made within the scope of the Author's employment, the employer may use all or part of the information contained in this article for intra-company use, provided the usual acknowledgments are given regarding copyright notice and reference to the original publication.
The Author(s) warrant(s) that the article is Author's original work and has not been published before. If excerpts from copyrighted works are included, the Author will obtain written permission from the copyright owners and credit the article's sources.
The author also warrants that the article contains no libelous or unlawful statements and does not infringe on the rights of others. If the article was prepared jointly with other Author(s), the Author agrees to inform the co-Author(s) of the terms of the copyright transfer and to sign on their behalf; or in the case of a "work-for-hire," the employer or an authorized representative of the employer.
The journal does not provide the author copy of the final paper when it is published. The author(s) can make(s) a subscription to INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING - THEORY, APPLICATIONS, AND PRACTICE if they want to get the final paper that has already been published.
The journal is registered with the Library of Congress (ISSN # 1943-670X). All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the journal.
The author reserves patent and trademark rights and the right to use all or part of the information contained in the article in future non-commercial works.