4.7 Article

Decarbonization blueprints for developing countries: The role of energy productivity, renewable energy, and financial development in environmental improvement

Journal

RESOURCES POLICY
Volume 83, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resourpol.2023.103674

Keywords

Decarbonization; CO2 emissions; Energy productivity; Renewable energy; Financial development; Developing countries

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As the International Energy Agency predicts that developing countries will become pollution hubs in the future, designing decarbonization blueprints has become crucial for concerned governments. This study aims to identify factors that can help developing nations control their carbon dioxide emissions. It finds that using energy productively and increasing the share of renewable energy in national energy consumption profiles can reduce carbon emissions. Urbanization has a boosting impact on emissions, while the effects of financial development and international trade are inconclusive. The study also reveals different outcomes based on income group, with energy productivity only decarbonizing middle-income countries, and renewable energy adoption having a decarbonizing effect regardless of income group.
As the International Energy Agency expects forecasts developing countries to become pollution hubs in the future, designing decarbonization blueprints has become critically important for the concerned governments. Hence, this study aims to identify the factors that can help developing nations in controlling their atmospheric discharges of carbon dioxide. Based on the rigorous econometric analysis, utilizing data from selected low-and middle-income nations, it is found that using energy productively and enhancing the share of renewable energy in the national energy consumption profiles can reduce carbon emissions. By contrast, urbanization exerts emission-boosting impacts while the corresponding impacts of financial development and international trade are inconclusive. Besides, the income group-specific analysis reveals heterogeneous outcomes as energy productivity improvement is found to decarbonize only the selected middle-income countries. However, the adoption of renewable energy exerts decarbonizing effects irrespective of the income group classification of the concerned developing nations. On the other hand, financial development hampers and promotes the decarbonization ob-jectives of lower-middle-income and upper-middle-income countries, respectively. In addition, higher exports boost the emissions figures of low-income countries, in particular. Furthermore, urbanization is identified as a decarbonization-restricting factor for developing economies irrespective of their income group classifications. On the other hand, the outcomes from the regional and country-specific analyses also exhibit heterogeneity in the majority of the aspects. Considering these major findings, several decarbonization strategies are recommended.

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