4.7 Article

Is there a relationship between natural gas consumption and the environmental Kuznets curve? Empirical evidence from Bangladesh

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 34, Pages 51778-51792

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-19207-w

Keywords

Natural gas consumption; ARDL; EKC; Granger causality; Bangladesh

Funding

  1. National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [NSFC 72064024, NSFC-71972011]

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The study reveals a significant and positive impact of economic growth, urbanization, and natural gas consumption on CO2 emissions in Bangladesh, confirming the Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis. In the short run, there is bidirectional response between economic development and urbanization, while natural gas consumption and CO2 emissions show only one-way causality.
Bangladesh has significant natural gas reserves, and total demand has climbed substantially in recent years. The study uses the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model for cointegration and the vector autoregressive(VAR) Granger causality model to analyze a long-run link between natural gas (NG) consumption, economic development, urbanization, and CO2 emissions. The objective is to investigate the relationship between the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) and Bangladesh's NG consumption using data from the years 1990 to 2018. According to the ARDL model, economic growth, urbanization, and NG consumption, all have a positive and significant influence on CO2 emissions. Despite having a negative coefficient, the square of economic development has a significant impact on CO2 emissions. In the long run, it verifies the EKC hypothesis in Bangladesh. Both linear and nonlinear economic development determinants display statistically significant positive and negative signals in the short run. From Bangladesh's perspective, this also demonstrates the presence of an EKC. The impact of NG consumption in the short run is insignificant; nevertheless, urbanization has a significant effect. The VAR Granger causality demonstrates that economic development and urbanization have a bidirectional response; however, NG consumption and CO2 emissions have just one-way causality. The key policy implication of the study is that NG use is expected to raise emissions. Increasing the share of clean energy in the energy utilization system, such as nuclear power and renewable energy, is a plausible policy choice.

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