2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0055642
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Greenhouse Gas Emissions Accounting of Urban Residential Consumption: A Household Survey Based Approach

Abstract: Devising policies for a low carbon city requires a careful understanding of the characteristics of urban residential lifestyle and consumption. The production-based accounting approach based on top-down statistical data has a limited ability to reflect the total greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from residential consumption. In this paper, we present a survey-based GHG emissions accounting methodology for urban residential consumption, and apply it in Xiamen City, a rapidly urbanizing coastal city in southeast Ch… Show more

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Cited by 141 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…Urban residents have a more fast pace of lifestyle and suffer much heavier work pressure, less physical activity and unhealthy living habits than rural residents. This lifestyle may cause obesity, cardiovascular and bad dietary habits, which are all risk factors of gastric cancer (Popkin 1999(Popkin , 2003Jemal and Siegel 2011;Li et al 2012;Lin et al 2013b).…”
Section: Human Behavior Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Urban residents have a more fast pace of lifestyle and suffer much heavier work pressure, less physical activity and unhealthy living habits than rural residents. This lifestyle may cause obesity, cardiovascular and bad dietary habits, which are all risk factors of gastric cancer (Popkin 1999(Popkin , 2003Jemal and Siegel 2011;Li et al 2012;Lin et al 2013b).…”
Section: Human Behavior Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lenzen et al 2006, Weber and Matthews 2008, Baiocchi et al 2010, conclusions have generally been drawn from individual-level assessments under a narrow spatial scope. Prior findings inform about the relevance of socio-economic effects such as income, household size, education, social status and degree of urbanization (Jones and Kammen 2014, Baiocchi et al 2010, Minx et al 2013, Lin et al 2013, Wilson et al 2013b, geographic effects such as temperature and geographic location (Tukker et al 2010, Newton andMeyer 2012) and technical effects such as the infrastructural context (Chancel and Piketty 2015, Tukker et al 2010, Sanne 2002. We would like to test whether influences that have been previously identified as important for consumption impacts may be apparent on the regional aggregated level as well (see table 1).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other CF concepts with different system boundaries exist. For example, the community-wide infrastructure CF includes all territorial GHGs as well as embodied GHG emissions associated with all trans-boundary infrastructure supply chains (Ramaswami et al 2008, Hillman and Ramaswami 2010, Chavez and Ramaswami 2011, Chavez et al 2012, Ramaswami et al 2012, Chavez and Ramaswami 2013, Lin et al 2013a, 2013b. Such trans-boundary footprints combining territorial and embodied GHG emissions are further discussed in the supplementary information (SI, available at stacks.iop.org/ ERL/8/035039/mmedia).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%