4.7 Article

Carbon neutrality target in Turkey: Measuring the impact of technological innovation and structural change

Journal

GONDWANA RESEARCH
Volume 109, Issue -, Pages 429-441

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gr.2022.04.015

Keywords

Carbon emissions; Technological innovation; Structural change; Economic growth; Turkey

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Climate change and environmental degradation have become global concerns that require urgent attention. This study examines the impact of technological innovation, economic growth, structural change, and nonrenewable energy use on CO2 emissions in Turkey. The results indicate that economic growth and nonrenewable energy use contribute to environmental degradation, while technological innovation improves environmental quality. The findings suggest that the Turkish government should restructure its energy sector, promote eco-friendly technologies in production, and transition to a more services-based economy.
Climate change and environmental degradation have become the most complex and contentious global concerns in recent decades, despite growing worldwide accords demanding that these serious issues must be addressed urgently. Thus, we assessed the effect of technological innovation, economic growth, structural change, and nonrenewable energy use on CO2 emissions in Turkey using a yearly dataset spanning between 1980 and 2019. The current paper utilized the ARDL bounds test, dynamic ARDL, and Breitung Candelon causality tests to assess these interrelationships. The outcomes of both the ARDL bounds and Bayer and Hanck cointegration tests affirmed evidence of cointegration among the variables. Furthermore, the outcomes of the dynamic ARDL disclosed that economic growth and nonrenewable energy use contribute to the degradation of the environment, while technological innovation stimulates the quality of the environment. Using the approach suggested by Itkonen (2012), the current paper does not confirm the EKC hypothesis. Lastly, the outcomes of the Breitung Candelon causality revealed a feedback causality association between nonrenewable and CO2 emissions, while a unidirectional causality exists from technological innovation, economic growth, and structural change to CO2 emissions. Based on the above findings, we propose that the government of Turkey should restructure its energy sector to address both carbon emissions and production losses by boosting the use of eco-friendly and efficient technologies in the process of production, while also shifting to a more services-based economy. (C) 2022 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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