4.7 Article

Role of institutional quality and renewable energy consumption in achieving carbon neutrality: Case study of G-7 economies

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 814, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.152797

Keywords

Institutional quality; Renewable energy consumption; G-7 countries; International trade; Zero carbon emission

Funding

  1. Research on the effectiveness evaluation, risk control and system construction of the agricultural credit guarantee policy National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [71873100]
  2. Research on major practical and policy issues of agricultural and rural modernization in Shaanxi Province in the new era, Shaanxi Agricultural Collaborative Innovation and Promotion Alliance, 2018 Major Science and Technology Projects [LMZD201804, LMZD202006]
  3. Research on major practical and policy issues of agricultural and rural modernization in Shaanxi Province in the new era, Shaanxi Agricultural Collaborative Innovation and Promotion Alliance, 2020 Major Science and Technology Projects [LMZD201804, LMZD202006]
  4. Study on the rural financial deepening, industrial integration and rural revitalization strategy, Major Cultivation Project of Humanities and Social Sciences of Fundamental Research Foundation by Northwest AF University [2452019155]

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This research emphasizes the importance of institutional quality and renewable energy consumption in achieving the goal of zero carbon emissions. The study finds that improving institutional quality and increasing renewable energy consumption can reduce carbon emissions, while imports and GDP contribute to an increase in emissions.
This research emphasized the significance of institutional quality and renewable energy consumption in achieving the desired objective of zero carbon emissions. Following the COP21 (Paris Conference), many countries have fixed their national level objectives for achieving the carbon neutrality and to tackle the problem of global warming. Many researchers have focused their efforts on the aspects that contribute to environmental degradation. Meanwhile, there is a scarcity of appropriate research that highlights the environmental implications of institutional quality and renewable energy consumption. Therefore, the current study examines the influence of these significant determinants on CCO2 emissions in the G-7 countries from 1990 to 2018. The long run relationship between institutional quality, renewable energy consumption, GDP, exports, imports, and CCO2 emissions is approved, based on the assessed results of cointegration test. Besides that, the estimated results have endorsed a considerable decrease and increase in carbon emission both in the short and long run, i.e., institutional quality, renewable energy consumption, and exports reduce emissions, while imports and GDP raise emissions. The Dumitrescu and Hurlin causality test results show that policies aiming at improving institutional quality, renewable energy consumption, GDP, exports, and imports have a significant effect on CO2 emissions. As a result of these findings which recommends that G-7 countries' policymakers should emphasize institutional quality and renewable energy consumption in order to improve environmental quality by reducing carbon emissions and to achieve carbon neutrality.

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