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Constraining Energy Consumption of China's Largest Industrial Enterprises Through the Top-1000 Energy-Consuming Enterprise ProgramLynn Price, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory KeywordsAbstractBetween 1980 and 2000, China’s energy efficiency policies resulted in a decoupling of the traditionally linked relationship between energy use and gross domestic product (GDP) growth, realizing a four-fold increase in GDP with only a doubling of energy use. However, during China’s transition to a market-based economy in the 1990s, many of the country’s energy efficiency programs were dismantled and between 2001 and 2005 China’s energy use increased significantly, growing at about the same rate as GDP. Continuation of this one-to-one ratio of energy consumption to GDP – given China’s stated goal of again quadrupling GDP between 2000 and 2020 – will lead to significant demand for energy, most of which is coal-based. The resulting local, national, and global environmental impacts could be substantial. PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 59_5_016.pdf Panels of the 2007 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in IndustryPanel 1. Energy Markets and Global Competition Panel 2. Energy-Saving Technologies and Practices Panel 3. Environmental Constraints and Opportunities | CalendarGreen ICT for growth and sustainability? Linking science and policy 03 – 08 Jun 201238th IEEE Photovoltaic Specialist Conference 04 Jun 2012Call for papers MILEN 2012 08 Jun 2012Call for Abstracts - International workshop on energy efficiency for a more sustainable world 12 – 14 Jun 2012IEPEC - International Energy Program Evaluation Conference 15 Jun 2012Call for papers - IIASA Conference 2012. Worlds within reach: from science to policy 20 Jun 2012Energy futures and civil society in the EU - building a low carbon alliance |