4.7 Article

Trade openness and CO2 emanations: a heterogeneous analysis on the developing eight (D8) countries

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 32, Pages 44200-44215

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-13816-7

Keywords

Trade openness; CO2 emanations; Economic growth; Energy consumption; Foreign direct investments; Financial development; Developing eight (D8) countries

Funding

  1. Nature Fund 2020 [71973054]

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The study found that trade openness increased CO2 emissions in the D8 countries, while economic growth, energy consumption, and financial development promoted CO2 emissions, but foreign direct investment helped reduce CO2 emissions. There was a bidirectional causality between trade openness and CO2 emissions, and a one-way causal relationship from energy consumption, foreign direct investment, and financial development to CO2 emissions was identified.
The focus of this exploration was to examine the linkage between trade openness and CO2 effusions in the developing eight (D8) countries. An unbalanced panel dataset spanning the period 1990 to 2016 was employed for the study's analysis. From the results, the studied panel was heterogeneous and cross-sectionally correlated. Also, all the series gained stationarity after first difference and were materially cointegrated in the long run. The elastic effects of the input variables on the output variable were explored through the DCCEMG estimator, with the support of the AMG and the CCEMG estimators. From the results, trade openness increased CO2 emanations in the D8. Also, economic growth, energy consumption, and financial development promoted CO2 secretions in the nations; however, foreign direct investments mitigated the excretion of CO2 in the countries. On the causal connections amid the series, there was a bidirectional causality between trade openness and CO2 emanations. Also, a one-way causal movement from energy consumption, foreign direct investments, and financial development to CO2 effluents was discovered. Based on the findings, it was recommended among others that effective trade policies that could enhance the transfer of cleaner technologies to the countries should be formulated.

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