Lei Tian, Yuming Sun and Yonggang Jia
To facilitate technical managers and field workers to master and understand the provisions of Technical Management Regulations for Railway more accurately, so as to better serve…
Abstract
Purpose
To facilitate technical managers and field workers to master and understand the provisions of Technical Management Regulations for Railway more accurately, so as to better serve the comprehensive revision of the Regulations, this paper carries out the research on the traceability and evolution of the provisions of the Regulations.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper studies and analyzes the evolution of the 11th edition of the Regulations by analyzing the relevance of clauses and summarizes the historical background of the development of calendar editions of the Regulations. The basic research on the traceability and evolution of the Regulations is carried out from four aspects: the continuity of the development of the Regulations, the authority of contents, the relevance of clauses and the richness of historical materials.
Findings
From the first edition of the Regulations issued by the former Ministry of Railways in 1950 to the 11th edition, there have been ten comprehensive revisions. There is a strong correlation and continuity between the calendar editions of the Regulations in terms of chapter structure and clauses. Studying the context of the terms of the Regulations is an important way to understand and master the current clauses of the Regulations.
Originality/value
Through the research on the traceability and evolution of the clauses of the Regulations, one is to explore the context of the development of railway technical equipment in China, the other is to clarify the historical background when the provisions were formulated and the third is to trace the development and evolution of the provisions. The revision of the Regulations is based on an accurate grasp of the context of the provisions, which can effectively judge the possible security risks caused by the revision of the provisions and avoid the possible risks in field implementation from the source.
Details
Keywords
Abstract
Purpose
Increasing carbon productivity is an effective way to reduce carbon emissions, while boosting economic prosperity. For appropriate formulating and enforcement of energy saving and carbon emissions reduction policies in various sectors, it is of great significance to investigate the evolution characteristics and convergence modes of carbon productivity across the manufacturing sectors.
Design/methodology/approach
Using slack-based measure directional distance function (SBM-DDF) and global Malmquist–Luenberger (GML) productivity index, this paper measures the carbon productivities of 29 manufacturing subsectors in Shanghai, China, from 2001 to 2016 under the total factor framework. Furthermore, based on the convergence theories, it empirically examines the convergence of carbon productivity across these manufacturing sectors.
Findings
The measurement results suggest that the carbon productivities of the manufacturing sectors in Shanghai show an increasing tendency on the whole, and technical efficiency instead of technological change makes a main contribution to the increase. It is found that there is no obvious σ convergence across the manufacturing sectors in Shanghai, but there exist both absolute ß convergence and conditional ß convergence. Moreover, there is heterogeneity in convergence characteristics between the clean sectors and polluting sectors. The findings also show that firm size and industry structure have significant positive impacts on the growth of carbon productivities of the manufacturing sectors, whereas the impacts of capital deepening and energy consumption structure are significantly negative.
Originality/value
This paper measures the carbon productivities of the manufacturing subsectors by applying SBM-DDF and GML index, so as to improve the accuracy. It provides an insight into the convergence of carbon productivity across the manufacturing sectors.