4.5 Article

Analyzing the contribution of renewable energy and natural resources for sustainability in G-20 countries: How gross capital formation impacts ecological footprints

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e18882

Keywords

Sustainability; Renewable energy; Natural resources; Ecological footprints

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Sustainability ensures well-being for people and communities worldwide and helps shape the world's present and future. A global transformation is required by adopting renewable energy sources to achieve sustainability. This study examines sustainability trends in G20 countries from 1992 to 2018 using indicators such as ecological footprints, natural resources, renewable energy, and non-renewable energy. The results show that the use of renewable energy positively impacts environmental sustainability in the long run, while non-renewable energy and natural resources contribute to the negative shift in sustainable development. Therefore, G20 countries should promote renewable energy to support the United Nations' agenda for sustainable development.
Sustainability ensures well-being for people and communities worldwide and helps shape the world's present and future. A global transformation is required by adopting renewable energy sources to achieve sustainability. Sustainability trends have been examined using this study for the period 1992-2018 for G20 countries. The study uses indicators like ecological footprints, natural resources, renewable energy (RE), and non-renewable energy (NRE), along with gross domestic product (GDP) and capital formation. A cross-sectional-ARDL approach has been used to examine short- and long-term relationships. The presence of stationarity property, cross-sectional dependence, panel cointegration, and slope heterogeneity have been confirmed during initial testing. The empirical result confirms that using renewable energy impacts environmental sustainability in the long run and causes a decrease in ecological footprints.On the contrary, non-renewable energy and natural resources contribute to the negative shift in sustainable development. The consistency of results has also been confirmed using robustness checks under the AMG and FMOLS approaches. The study concludes that G20 countries should promote renewable energy to empower the United Nations' agenda for sustainable development.

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