4.7 Article

Do public-private partnerships in energy and renewable energy consumption matter for consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions in India?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 23, Pages 30139-30152

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-12692-5

Keywords

Consumption-based carbon emissions; Public-private partnership in energy; Renewable energy consumption; Technological innovation

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The study found that renewable energy consumption helps to reduce consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions in India, while public-private partnership investment in the energy sector makes a positive contribution to these emissions. Therefore, it is recommended that policymakers in India take measures to encourage the use of renewable energy and increase investment in renewable energy to achieve cleaner production processes.
The present study explores the effect of renewable energy consumption and public-private partnership investment in energy on consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions for India from 1990Q1 and 2015Q4 whilst controlling technology innovation and economic growth. The study employs the Maki cointegration, Bayer-Hanck cointegration, fully modified ordinary least squares, dynamic ordinary least squares, and frequency-domain causality tests to explore these dynamics. The outcomes of the present study reveal that (i) there is a long-run cointegration equation between consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions and its possible determinants; (ii) whilst renewable energy consumption is beneficial for lowering consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions, public-private partnership investment in energy makes a positive contribution to consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions in the long-run; and (iii) public-private partnership investment in energy and renewable energy consumption also significantly causes consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions at different frequency levels in India. The present study recommends that policymakers in India should apply a series of policies to discourage the use of non-renewable energy and raise the share of renewable energy in order to reduce consumption-based carbon dioxide emissions in the country. The present study also recommends that public-private partnership investment in renewable energy should increase to achieve cleaner production processes.

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