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Potential futures for road transportation CO2 emissions in the Asia Pacific
Peter J. Marcotullio*, and Julian D. Marshall
  *Hunter College, CUNY, 695 Park Ave, New York, NY, 10065, USA and   United Nations University Institute of Advanced Studies, UNU Office at the UN, 2 UN Plaza, DC2-2060, New York, NY 10017.
Email: peter.marcotullio@hunter.cuny.edu

  Department of Civil Engineering, University of Minnesota, 500 Pillsbury Drive S.E, Minneapolis, MN 55455-0116, USA.
Email: julian@umn.edu
Copyright © 2007 The Authors; Journal compilation © 2007 Victoria University of Wellington
KEYWORDS
Asia Pacific • carbon dioxide emissions • road transportation

ABSTRACT

Abstract:  Will future transportation carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions per capita in Asia Pacific economies follow historical trends of the now developed world? Evidence to date is inconclusive. A comparison at similar income levels (purchasing power parity) between recent emissions in Asia Pacific countries and historical emissions in developed countries suggests diverging patterns. (A) High-income Asia economies (Japan, Hong Kong and Singapore –'low emitters') exhibit lower emissions than a selected sample of seven developed countries (United States, Australia, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden and United Kingdom). (B) Another set of Asian countries (South Korea and Taiwan –'medium emitters') follow the emissions trends of European countries, which are lower than those of Australia and the United States. (C) A third Asian group (Malaysia and Thailand –'high emitters') exhibit emission trends comparable to that of Australia. We describe these trends, examine their causes and extrapolate likely futures for emissions in low-income Asia Pacific economies (China, Indonesia, Philippines and Vietnam). Although such predictions are speculative, the available evidence suggests that road CO2 emissions for Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam will follow those of the third group (high emitters), while those for China may follow either Group B or Group C.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1467-8373.2007.00353.x About DOI

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