4.7 Article

Associating drivers of economic development with environmental degradation: Fresh evidence from Western Asia and North African region

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 126, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.107638

Keywords

Environment Kuznets Curve (EKC); Ecological footprint; Carbon emission; Energy intensity; Biomass energy consumption

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The study examines the validity of the Environment Kuznets curve with two different environment proxies, finding that it holds for ecological footprint but not for carbon emissions. Environmentally friendly indicators include energy intensity and financial development, while biomass energy consumption has a negative impact on environmental degradation. Causality findings reveal bidirectional links between economic development and emission, biomass energy consumption, and financial development, emphasizing the need to focus on policy options to improve energy efficiency for a cleaner environment.
This study quantifies the Environment Kuznets curve?s validity against two different environment proxies, the ecological footprint and carbon emissions for selected seventeen Western Asia and North African countries over the period 1980 to 2017. The study employs the Interactive Fixed Effect (IFE) and Dynamic Common Correlated Effect (D-CCE) to quantify the long-run association among variables in a multiplicative framework. The empirical outcomes indicate that the inverted U-shaped hypothesis is not valid for carbon emission; however, it holds for ecological footprint. The results show that energy intensity and financial development are environment-friendly indicators. Likewise, biomass energy consumption exposes a negative and statistically significant influence on proxies of environmental degradation. Causality findings reveal bidirectional causal links between economic development and its square to emission, biomass energy consumption, and financial development; also, bidirectional causality has been observed from energy intensity to biomass energy in the first model. Moreover, for the second model, causality has been seen from biomass energy consumption, economic development, and its square to ecological footprint, keeping the same two-way relationship among explanatory variables as in the first model. Policymakers should focus on the policy options to increase energy efficiency to get a clean environment.

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