Article ID: | iaor20131562 |
Volume: | 55 |
Issue: | 5-6 |
Start Page Number: | 626 |
End Page Number: | 635 |
Publication Date: | Apr 2013 |
Journal: | Energy Policy |
Authors: | Yang Dewei, Lin Yanjie, Gao Lijie, Sun Yanwei, Wang Run, Zhang Guoqin |
Keywords: | economics |
Sustainability research at the city scale is increasingly focusing on urban household consumption in the context of global climate change. We use a complementary emergy accounting (EMA) and carbon footprint accounting (CFA) method to investigate the environmental pressure generated by household consumption in Xiamen, China. We distinguish between the resource extraction, consumption and disposal stages within an urban spatial conceptual framework, comprising the Urban Footprint Region (UFR) and Urban Sprawl Region (USR), and analyze five environmental footprint categories associated with cross‐boundary household emergy and carbon flows. Cross‐boundary activities, which link the USR with its UFR, contributed nearly 90% of total emergy and 70% of total GHG emissions in CFA. Transport fuel, building materials and food contribute most to environmental pressure in both EMA and CFA. The results indicate a significant cross‐boundary resource burden and environmental footprint associated with household activities. The employed framework, method, and scope challenge the conventional spatial boundary of the urban system, and the results have important policy implications for urban sustainability and cross‐boundary environmental management.