4.6 Article

The Impact of Socio-economic and Environmental Sustainability on CO2 Emissions: A Novel Framework for Thirty IEA Countries

Journal

SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH
Volume 155, Issue 3, Pages 1045-1076

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11205-021-02629-3

Keywords

Environmental sustainability; Socio-economic sustainability; CO2 emissions; Economic growth; IEA countries

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This study examines the impact of socio-economic factors and environmental sustainability on household CO2 emissions using panel data and advanced econometric techniques. The findings suggest that environmental sustainability decreases CO2 emissions in the short run, while socio-economic sustainability increases emissions.
The extent to which socio-economic factors other than income and household size are associated with household CO2 emissions and whether associations vary across emission domains remains contested in the literature. We explore the impact of socio-economic and environmental sustainability indicators on CO2 emissions in the presence of combustible renewables, and the economic growth of thirty International Energy Agency (IEA) member countries. We develop a comprehensive empirical analysis using panel data and apply advanced econometric techniques for the period from 1995 to 2018. The panel co-integration analysis indicates long-run relationships among the variables. In addition, augmented mean group analysis and common correlated effects mean group analyses explain that environmental sustainability reduces CO2 emissions in the short run. Findings of fully modified least square estimates and long-run dynamic least squares estimates confirm that socio-economic sustainability increases CO2 emissions and environmental sustainability decreases them. The results of Dumitrescu and Hurlin Granger causality analysis reveal that combustible renewables, environmental sustainability, and economic growth bidirectionally Granger cause CO2 emissions, but socio-economic sustainability unidirectional Granger causes environmental quality. Policymakers in the IEA economies are encouraged to establish policies that promote a sustained lifestyle, ecological awareness, clean technological innovations, limit CO2 emissions, ecological trade-offs, and CO2 emissions ceilings to avoid rebound effects and limit environmental degradation. The study's limitations are discussed, and useful directions for future research in the area are proposed.

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