Краткое изложение:
Energy consumption during production processes in the industry is a main source of carbon dioxide emissions. Therefore,
for China’s dual-carbon goals, industrial enterprises need to focus on reducing energy waste to achieve energy-efficient production,
thereby effectively reducing carbon emissions in industrial production. In recent years, with the continuous development and
popularization of digital technology, digital energy management systems have played a crucial role in energy saving by visualizing
invisible energy in the industry. In this context, this study first analyses the current status of digital energy management system
applications in the UK, the US, Germany, and Sweden, summarizes their characteristics and conditions, and compares the differences
between China’s energy management system development and other countries’. Furthermore, this study explores the challenges faced
by the government, technology, and enterprises in promoting the deployment of energy management systems in Chinese industrial
enterprises. Next, the study proposes to analyse energy consumption from the perspective of product rather than factory, production
lines, or machines. The concept of “unit product energy consumption label based on production steps” is defined, and a methodological
framework for digital energy consumption data analysis based on this label is constructed. This study further discusses the roles of the
major stakeholders, including governments, enterprises, digital energy management system technology providers, certification bodies,
etc., in achieving standardization and unified analysis of energy consumption labels and puts forward suggestions for the government
to develop digital energy management systems in the industry to reduce carbon emissions. The suggestions include: continuing to
promote the construction of energy management systems in enterprises; continuously supporting the cooperative development among
various stakeholders; gradually determining energy consumption benchmarks by product and production steps; and actively leading
enterprises to benchmark industry best practices.