Lan Yang
Fudan University
12 Papers
Lan Yang is an academic researcher from Fudan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Supply chain. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Environmental-social-economic footprints of consumption and trade in the Asia-Pacific region
Lan Yang,Yutao Wang,Ranran Wang,Jiří Jaromír Klemeš,Cecília M.V.B. Almeida,Mingzhou Jin,Xinzhu Zheng,Yuanbo Qiao +7 more
TL;DR: Owing to the intra-regional trade of goods and services, APAC economies grew increasingly interdependent in each other’s water and energy use, greenhouse gas and PM2.5 emissions, and labor and economic productivity, while the environmental and economic disparity widened within the region.
Extended water-energy nexus contribution to environmentally-related sustainable development goals
TL;DR: A review of water-energy extended nexuses (e.g., food, greenhouse gases, waste, pollution, land and others) from the perspective of relationship and practicability in relieving the challenges towards environmentally-related sustainable development goals is presented in this paper.
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A hybrid multi-regional input-output model of China: Integrating the physical agricultural biomass and food system into the monetary supply chain
Quanliang Ye,Quanliang Ye,Martin Bruckner,Ranran Wang,Joep F. Schyns,La Zhuo,Lan Yang,Han Su,Maarten S. Krol +8 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors developed a symmetric inter-provincial multiregional input-output model that hybridizes the physical food and agricultural biomass system with the monetary supply chain of China.
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Cleaner production indicator system of petroleum refining industry:From life cycle perspective
TL;DR: The Cleaner Production audit as discussed by the authors is a comprehensive method that aims to realize Cleaner production throughout the life cycle industrial process of petroleum refining, which simultaneously measures the environmental impacts of the refinery, its upstream and downstream organizations and related auxiliary activities.
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Can an island economy be more sustainable? A comparative study of Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines
TL;DR: In this article, an emergy-based framework was built to assess the sustainability of three islands states in a time series (2000, 2005, 2010, and 2015), and the results showed that renewable resource fractions in total emergy are all steadily declining over the investigated time, whereas Indonesia experienced the largest decreasing rate but became increasingly dependent on nonrenewable resources (N), Meanwhile, Malaysia and Philippines relied more on imported inputs (F).
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