Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Lyu L" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Feasibility analysis of recycling and repurposing end-of-life vehicle batteries in isolated island areas: A case study in British Columbia, Canada Wang Z; Lyu L; Huang G; An C; 40795495
ENCS
2 Post-subsidy Era: Potential for Carbon Pricing in Industrial Fisheries among Global Major Fishing Countries Peng H; Hao J; Lyu L; Wan S; An C; 40737555
ENCS
3 Unraveling the resuspension and transformation of stranded oil: Mechanisms driving oil-particle aggregate formation in intertidal zones Yang X; Bi H; Huang G; Zhang H; Lyu L; An C; 40544777
ENCS
4 An integrated environmental and economic assessment for the disposal of food waste from grocery retail stores towards resource recovery Zhou S; Chen Z; Huang X; Yang X; Lyu L; An C; Peng H; 39480576
ENCS
5 The degradation of polylactic acid face mask components in different environments Lyu L; Bagchi M; Ng KTW; Markoglou N; Chowdhury R; An C; Chen Z; Yang X; 39378804
ENCS
6 Revealing the Freezing-Induced Alteration in Microplastic Behavior and Its Implication for the Microplastics Released from Seasonal Ice Chen Z; Elektorowicz M; An C; Tian X; Wang Z; Yang X; Lyu L; 39031076
ENCS
7 Evaluating Sustainable Practices for Managing Residue Derived from Wheat Straw Shanmugam H; Raghavan V; Rajagopal R; Goyette B; Lyu L; Zhou S; An C; 38927790
ENCS
8 Innovations and development of sustainable personal protective equipment: a path to a greener future Lyu L; Bagchi M; Markoglou N; An C; 38911061
ENCS
9 Spotlight on the vertical migration of aged microplastics in coastal waters Yang X; Huang G; Chen Z; Feng Q; An C; Lyu L; Bi H; Zhou S; 38503206
ENCS
10 Unveiling the Vertical Migration of Microplastics with Suspended Particulate Matter in the Estuarine Environment: Roles of Salinity, Particle Properties, and Hydrodynamics Yang X; Huang G; Feng Q; An C; Zhou S; Bi H; Lyu L; 38306690
ENCS
11 Towards environmentally sustainable management: A review on the generation, degradation, and recycling of polypropylene face mask waste Lyu L; Bagchi M; Markoglou N; An C; Peng H; Bi H; Yang X; Sun H; 37742382
ENCS
12 An insight into the benefits of substituting polypropylene with biodegradable polylactic acid face masks for combating environmental emissions Lyu L; Peng H; An C; Sun H; Yang X; Bi H; 37734618
ENCS
13 Preparation, characteristics, and performance of the microemulsion system in the removal of oil from beach sand Bi H; Mulligan CN; Lee K; An C; Wen J; Yang X; Lyu L; Qu Z; 37399736
ENCS

 

Title:Post-subsidy Era: Potential for Carbon Pricing in Industrial Fisheries among Global Major Fishing Countries
Authors:Peng HHao JLyu LWan SAn C
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40737555/
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.5c02550
Publication:Environmental science & technology
Keywords:carbon pricingclimate policy assessmentfishery carbon emissionsfishery harmful subsidiesfishing stock sustainabilityfossil fuel usageindustrial fishery
PMID:40737555 Category: Date Added:2025-07-30
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Department of Building, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Concordia University, Montréal, Quebec H3G 1M8, Canada.
2 Department of Civil Engineering, Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Suzhou 215123, PR China.

Description:

Industrial fishing's harmful subsidies fuel both a fish stock crisis and rising greenhouse gas emissions, even as calls for a global ban by the World Trade Organization persist amid slow progress. This study employs the framework of climate policy stringency assessment to examine fisheries subsidy reform through a carbon pricing lens. Using emissions, political, and economic data, this study proposes the Objective Fisheries Carbon Pricing Intention (OFCPI) index for the 19 largest fishing nations. Supported by a Monte Carlo simulation, the results reveal that except for Denmark and Iceland, potential carbon revenues seldom offset the scale of harmful subsidies, frequently resulting in substantial shortfall. The findings suggest that policy change is primarily constrained by inadequate driving forces and objective limitations rather than by overt resistance. To address these challenges, we propose a fishery carbon pricing framework based on downstream emissions trading and individual transferable quotas, which offers a promising strategy for gradually eliminating harmful subsidies while promoting sustainable fisheries, mitigating climate impacts, and reconciling economic realities with environmental imperatives.





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