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Foreign trade and declining pollution in Sweden: a decomposition analysis of long-term structural and technological effects

✍ Scribed by Astrid Kander; Magnus Lindmark


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
241 KB
Volume
34
Category
Article
ISSN
0301-4215

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✦ Synopsis


This article examines whether there exists any causal relationship between foreign trade and declining pollution in developed countries. In other words, do developed countries outsource their problems to less developed countries rather than solve them? The case study is the Swedish economy and the two environmental indicators employed are energy consumption and CO 2 emissions. No causal relationships are found, since Sweden has long been a net exporter of embodied energy and CO 2 and continues to be so after 1970, when energy consumption stabilizes and CO 2 emissions decline. In addition, the ratios of net exported energy and CO 2 to total consumption remain stable, which means there were no effects on the energy intensity or CO 2 intensity either. These results suggest that internal forces, like efficiency improvements, changed consumption patterns and transformation of the energy system, have been crucial for relative environmental improvement in Sweden, while foreign trade has played no role.