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Disaggregating the environmental effects of renewable and non-renewable energy consumption in South Africa: fresh evidence from the novel dynamic ARDL simulations approach

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This article is published in Economics of Planning.The article was published on 2021-11-24 and is currently open access. It has received 35 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Renewable energy & Consumption (economics).

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Investigating the moderating role of economic policy uncertainty in environmental Kuznets curve for South Africa: Evidence from the novel dynamic ARDL simulations approach

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explored the moderating influence of economic policy uncertainty in the environmental Kuznets curve for South Africa from 1960 to 2020, and found that economic uncertainty accelerates environmental degradation in both the short and long run.
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Dynamic ARDL Simulations Effects of Fiscal Decentralization, Green Technological Innovation, Trade Openness, and Institutional Quality on Environmental Sustainability: Evidence from South Africa

TL;DR: In this article , the effect of green technological innovation (GI), trade openness (OPEN), population size (POP), per capita GDP (GDP), per-capable GDP squared, institutional quality (INS), and energy consumption (EC) on carbon emissions (CO2) in South Africa is investigated.
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Exploring the moderating role of financial development in environmental Kuznets curve for South Africa: fresh evidence from the novel dynamic ARDL simulations approach

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigate the relationship between financial development and ecological sustainability and demonstrate that financial development boosts ecological integrity and environmental sustainability over the long and short terms. But, their empirical analysis is based on the novel dynamic autoregressive distributed lag simulations approach for South Africa between 1960 and 2020.
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Striving towards environmental sustainability in the BRICS economies: the combined influence of fiscal decentralization and environmental innovation

TL;DR: In this article , the authors evaluate the combined influence of environmental innovation, and fiscal decentralization in order to achieve the environmental sustainability goals of the BRICS economies from 1970 to 2020.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Consumption-based carbon emissions and International trade in G7 countries: The role of Environmental innovation and Renewable energy

TL;DR: To explore the unidentified determinants of CO2 emissions in G7 countries from 1990 to 2017, this study uses second-generation panel co-integration methodologies and confirms a stable long-run relationship amongCO2 emissions, trade, income, environmental innovation and renewable energy consumption.
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Renewable energy, nuclear energy, and environmental pollution: Accounting for political institutional quality in South Africa

TL;DR: Evidence from the study reveals that political institutional quality plays a huge role in the social, governance and economic readiness to mitigate climate change and its impact, and structural adjustment in disaggregate and aggregate energy consumption, economic growth, and political institutionalquality play a critical role in environmental quality.
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Energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth nexus in Bangladesh: Cointegration and dynamic causality analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the possible existence of dynamic causality between energy consumption, electricity consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth in Bangladesh and found that energy consumption can be considered as an important factor for the economic growth.
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Fossil & renewable energy consumption, GHGs (greenhouse gases) and economic growth: Evidence from a panel of EU (European Union) countries

TL;DR: In this paper, the EKC hypothesis was investigated with regards to the relationship between carbon emissions, income and energy consumption in 16 EU (European Union) countries, and the results showed that the inverted U-shape relationship does not hold for carbon emissions in the 16 EU countries.
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Green growth and low carbon emission in G7 countries: How critical the network of environmental taxes, renewable energy and human capital is?

TL;DR: The outcomes of theoretical and empirical findings indicate that both linear and non-linear term for green growth reduces CO2 emissions, which supports the theoretical notion that green growth sustains environment quality.