4.7 Article

Do renewable energy and national patents impact the environmental sustainability of Tunisia?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 17, Pages 25248-25262

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-17628-7

Keywords

CO2 emissions; Renewable energy; Foreign direct investment; Tunisian Patents; ARDL model

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The study analyzed the linkage between CO2 emissions, renewable energy consumption, foreign direct investment, national patents, exports, imports, and GDP in Tunisia from 1980 to 2017. Findings from the elasticity long-run test showed that RE consumption, exports, and GDP have a positive impact on CO2 emissions, while FDI has a negative impact. Additionally, the study suggests that Tunisia should encourage FDI as it seems to play a role in mitigating CO2 emissions.
This study is focused on analyzing the linkage between carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, renewable energy consumption (RE), foreign direct investment (FDI), national patents (NP), exports (X), imports (M), and gross domestic product (GDP) in Tunisia by using the time series data from 1980 to 2017. A unit root test and an autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model were applied to avoid bias caused by data mismatch and autocorrelation of time series data. Elasticity long-run test shows that renewable energy consumption, exports, and gross domestic product have a positive impact on CO2 emissions, while foreign direct investment acts negatively on CO2 emissions. Depending on the error correction term test, there is a long-run causality: from CO2 emissions, renewable energy, foreign direct investment, exports, and gross domestic product to home patent. Findings of the short-run causality show that there is a unidirectional causality running from exports to CO2 emissions and from exports to gross domestic product. Our results also show that Tunisia should encourage foreign direct investment because it seems to be an important factor in the mitigation of CO2 emissions.

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