The low-carbon transformation of the manufacturing industry is a key path to balance climate goals and industrial competitiveness. This systematic review critically analyzes 145 studies from 2012 to 2025 to explore the low-carbon transformation. Findings show that low-carbon city pilots reduce manufacturing carbon intensity via fiscal and tech expenditures; industrial internet and additive manufacturing reshape low-carbon production, with digital and green process innovations driving emission reduction. Yet, bottlenecks exist: SMEs face digital adaptation and green financing constraints; excessive digitalization causes energy rebound; high-carbon industries’ deep decarbonization is hindered by unproven large-scale economic feasibility of low-carbon tech, alongside policy-technological disconnection, and green finance structural contradictions. This study proposes core solutions: dynamic policy adjustment mechanisms, multi-dimensional SME support systems, and technology–economy coupling evaluation models. It establishes research coordinates for academia, designs policy tools for decision-makers, and provides a technological framework for industrial deep decarbonization, offering global references for balancing climate goals and manufacturing competitiveness.
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Liang Xiao
Nanjing University of Science and Technology
Fagang Hu
Huiying Mao
Sustainability
China University of Mining and Technology
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Xiao et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d4a00eb33cc4c35a228732 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073526