4.7 Article

The non-linear relationship between carbon dioxide emissions, financial development and energy consumption in developing European and Central Asian economies

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 28, Issue 44, Pages 63330-63345

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-15225-2

Keywords

Carbon dioxide emissions; Economic prosperity; European and Central Asian developing economies; Fossil fuel energy consumption; Renewable energy consumption

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The study reveals a complex impact of financial development on carbon dioxide emissions, both increasing and decreasing it. Renewable energy and financial development contribute to environmental preservation and ecological sustainability.
A sizeable amount of scholarly work has been done on different aspects of financial, economic, and environmental factors. In the present study, the nonlinearity is determined between financial development and carbon dioxide emissions in the long-run and short-run periods. According to the finding, the continued financial development initially increases the carbon dioxide emissions in the short and long run. Simultaneously, the square term of financial development reduces carbon dioxide emissions and proves the inverted U-shaped hypothesis in the short and long periods. The consumption of fossil fuels produces carbon dioxide emissions, leading to environmental pollution. In contrast, renewable energy sources have fostered ecological sustainability by reducing CO2 emissions in the long and short term. At the same time, a positive response from labor productivity to carbon dioxide emissions causes environmental pollution, while capital formation is not acknowledged as a significant contributor to CO2 emissions. The Error Correction term has ascertained the reduction in error and convergence of the model from short to long term with a speed of 8% per annum. The study suggested that renewable energy and financial development should be indorsed for environmental preservation in developing European and Central Asian economies. Financial development in favor of low-cost renewables, advancing cleaner production methods, solar paneling, and electrification are a few possible remedies to achieve environmental sustainability in the short-run as well as long-run time frame.

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