51. Can industrial symbiosis policies be effective? Evidence from the nationwide industrial symbiosis system in China.
- Author
-
Wang, Lei, Zhang, Qin, Zhang, Guoqing, Wang, Difei, and Liu, Caijie
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRIAL ecology , *INDUSTRIALISM , *INDUSTRIAL policy , *IRON mining , *EVIDENCE gaps , *FLY ash , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *GEOTHERMAL ecology - Abstract
Policies directly or indirectly influence the development of industrial symbiosis (IS). Quantitatively analyzing the effects of policies on IS at a national level is necessary, but current research has lagged. Focusing on the symbiotic system that includes the thermal power industry, cement industry, iron and steel industry, and social sector in China, this paper assesses the efficacy of policies on this nationwide IS system between 2015 and 2022. A policy influence framework is proposed, combining a cost-benefit analysis, agent-based model, and comparative analysis. Results show: (1) the symbiosis probability of the nationwide IS system experiences a fluctuating increase. The maximum increments of the symbiosis probability are 5%, and the resulting environmental benefits are equivalent to an emission reduction of 6.99 Mt from blast furnace slag, 20.97 Mt from iron mine tailing, 36.02 Mt from household waste, 25.01 Mt from steel slag, and 22.95 Mt from fly ash. However, the stimulation effects of policies vary across different subsystems. (2) Thermal power-chemical subsystems, thermal power-environmental protection subsystems, iron and steel-environmental protection subsystems, and social sector-cement subsystems need policy support in the future. (3) Approximately 50% of fields in this nationwide IS system is insensitive to current policies; policy approaches should shift from economic stimulation to symbiotic guidance. This paper fills the research gap by quantitatively studying the IS policy efficacy from a national level. The findings can contribute to the improvement of the Chinese IS policy system. [Display omitted] • Quantitatively analyzing the effects of policy on industrial symbiosis at a national level. • Policy-sponsored incentive effects vary across different types of waste and subsystems. • Half of the symbiotic utilization fields are insensitive to current policy. • The policy should shift from economic stimulation to symbiotic utilization guidance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF