4.5 Article

Renewable and nonrenewable energy consumption, trade and CO2emissions in high emitter countries: does the income level matter?

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 64, Issue 7, Pages 1227-1251

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09640568.2020.1816532

Keywords

renewable energy; nonrenewable energy; CO(2)emissions; trade; leading emitter countries; panel data

Funding

  1. Major Program of the National Social Science Fund of China [16ZDA088]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71503001, 71974001]
  3. Provincial Natural Science Research Project in Anhui Province [KJ2019A0649]

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This study examines the effects of increased income and renewable energy on environmental quality, finding that increased income moderates the ratio of consumption of renewable energy to CO(2) emissions and can negatively affect the link between renewable energy and CO(2) emissions beyond a critical threshold. Empirical outcomes suggest that increased income contributes more to nonrenewable energy consumption and environmental pollution.
This study analyzes the effects of increased income and renewable energy on environmental quality, which has been ignored in the existing literature. An important contribution of this study is to analyze the role of renewable and nonrenewable energy in relation to the rising level of carbon emissions in the leading emitting countries. This research further examines the heterogeneous impacts of rising income levels and EKC investigation for CO(2)emissions. The Kao cointegration, generalized method of moments (GMM), random effects, fixed effect (FE) regression models, and panel causality techniques are employed for panel data estimations. The empirical outcomes mention that an increase in income moderates the ratio of consumption of renewable energy to CO(2)emissions. Increased income contributes more to the energy mix, which contributes to environmental pollution, through nonrenewable energy. This research reports policy-relevant critical masses beyond which an increase in income negatively affects the link between renewable energy and CO(2)emissions.

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