Showing 3,721 - 3,740 results of 21,342 for search '(( significantly linear decrease ) OR ( significant decrease decrease ))', query time: 0.31s Refine Results
  1. 3721
  2. 3722
  3. 3723
  4. 3724
  5. 3725
  6. 3726
  7. 3727
  8. 3728
  9. 3729
  10. 3730
  11. 3731
  12. 3732
  13. 3733
  14. 3734
  15. 3735
  16. 3736
  17. 3737
  18. 3738
  19. 3739

    Benchmark regression results. by Pengyu Yang (2668450)

    Published 2024
    “…The findings reveal that: (1) At this stage, digital transformation in listed companies effectively reduces their carbon intensity, but the relationship between the two is not linear; instead, it exhibits a U-shaped trajectory, initially decreasing then increasing. (2) Analysis of mechanism indicates that costs associated with environmental governance and innovations in green technology serve as critical pathways through which corporate digital transformation influences carbon intensity. (3) The analysis of driving effect suggests that the digital transformation significantly curtails the carbon emission intensity of both upstream and downstream enterprises as well as those within the same industry and geographical region, through industrial linkage and the cohort effect. (4) Heterogeneity analysis elucidates that the digital transformation of enterprises in regions with stronger government environmental regulations has a markedly more pronounced effect on reducing the carbon emission intensity. …”
  20. 3740

    Heterogeneity test. by Pengyu Yang (2668450)

    Published 2024
    “…The findings reveal that: (1) At this stage, digital transformation in listed companies effectively reduces their carbon intensity, but the relationship between the two is not linear; instead, it exhibits a U-shaped trajectory, initially decreasing then increasing. (2) Analysis of mechanism indicates that costs associated with environmental governance and innovations in green technology serve as critical pathways through which corporate digital transformation influences carbon intensity. (3) The analysis of driving effect suggests that the digital transformation significantly curtails the carbon emission intensity of both upstream and downstream enterprises as well as those within the same industry and geographical region, through industrial linkage and the cohort effect. (4) Heterogeneity analysis elucidates that the digital transformation of enterprises in regions with stronger government environmental regulations has a markedly more pronounced effect on reducing the carbon emission intensity. …”