4.7 Article

CO2 emissions, energy consumption and economic growth in BRIC countries

Journal

ENERGY POLICY
Volume 38, Issue 12, Pages 7850-7860

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enpol.2010.08.045

Keywords

Carbon dioxide emission; Error correction model; BRIC

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This paper examines dynamic causal relationships between pollutant emissions, energy consumption and output for a panel of BRIC countries over the period 1971-2005, except for Russia (1990-2005) In long-run equilibrium energy consumption has a positive and statistically significant impact on emissions, while real output exhibits the inverted U-shape pattern associated with the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis with the threshold income of 5 393 (in logarithms). In the short term, changes in emissions are driven mostly by the error correction term and short term energy consumption shocks, as opposed to short term output shocks for each country. Short-term deviations from the long term equilibrium take from 0 770 years (Russia) to 5.848 years (Brazil) to correct The panel causality results indicate there are energy consumption-emissions bidirectional strong causality and energy consumption-output bidirectional long-run causality, along with unidirectional both strong and short-run causalities from emissions and energy consumption, respectively, to output Overall, in order to reduce emissions and not to adversely affect economic growth, increasing both energy supply investment and energy efficiency, and stepping up energy conservation policies to reduce unnecessary wastage of energy can be initiated for energy-dependent BRIC countries (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.

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