Energy carbon performance curse: an analysis based on the economic restructuring stickiness

    Yanwei Lyu Info
    Wenqiang Wang Info
    Luyan Wang Info
    You Wu Info
    Jinning Zhang Info
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3846/tede.2026.25574

Abstract

Although natural resource’s negative impacts on economic growth have been extensively explored, its curse on energy carbon performance may remain ignored. Combining theoretical analysis, this paper further examines the curse of mineral resource dependence on energy carbon performance and the specific mechanism. In 2019, if optimal production is achieved in all sample cities, China would reduce electricity consumption by 42.941% and carbon emissions by 43.958%. Compared to non-resource-based cities, the potential ratios of energy savings and carbon reduction in resource-based cities are 5.403% and 6.059% higher, respectively. When the mineral resource dependence is less than 0.042%, it contributes to energy carbon performance, but when the mineral resource dependence exceeds 0.042%, higher mineral resource dependence implies more serious energy carbon performance curse, which explains the coexistence of resource blessing and resource curse. Economic restructuring stickiness caused by mineral resource dependence serves as a key mechanism for energy carbon performance curse, and energy, factor and industry restructuring stickiness are specific channels for this mechanism.

First published online 4 June 2026

Keywords:

mineral resource dependence, energy carbon performance, economic restructuring, transmission mechanism

How to Cite

Lyu, Y., Wang, W., Wang, L., Wu, Y., & Zhang, J. (2026). Energy carbon performance curse: an analysis based on the economic restructuring stickiness. Technological and Economic Development of Economy, 1-37. https://doi.org/10.3846/tede.2026.25574

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2026-06-04

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Lyu, Y., Wang, W., Wang, L., Wu, Y., & Zhang, J. (2026). Energy carbon performance curse: an analysis based on the economic restructuring stickiness. Technological and Economic Development of Economy, 1-37. https://doi.org/10.3846/tede.2026.25574

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