scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of urbanization, energy consumption, and foreign direct investment on the carbon dioxide emission in the SSEA (South and Southeast Asian) region

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between urbanization, energy consumption, foreign direct investment (FDI), and carbon dioxide (CO2) emission of 17 countries in the South and Southeast Asian (SSEA) region during the period 1980-2012.
Abstract
This study examines the relationship between urbanization, energy consumption, foreign direct investment (FDI), and carbon dioxide (CO2) emission of 17 countries in the South and Southeast Asian (SSEA) region during the period 1980–2012. In order to find out the intensity of CO2 emission in 17 countries, we classify the total sample countries into three sub-groups, namely high, middle, and low-income countries. These three sub-panels are constructed based on their gross national income per capita of countries. Pedroni cointegration result shows that urbanization; primary energy consumption, FDI, and CO2 emission are cointegrated in all sub-groups of countries, regardless of their levels of national income per capita. Furthermore, while incorporating the fossil fuel energy consumption in place of primary energy consumption in the alternative specification of regression, the result suggests a cointegrating relationship between fossil fuel energy consumption, FDI, urbanization, and CO2 emission in middle-income countries. Nevertheless, Westerlund cointegration results are more or less in the line of Pedroni results. Furthermore, the results reveal that primary energy consumption, fossil fuel energy consumption, and FDI are substantially affecting the CO2 emission in the SSEA region. Moreover, the empirical findings suggest that in middle-income countries, both primary and fossil fuel energy consumption are considerably increasing the CO2 emission, and leading to greenhouse gas problem in the SSEA region.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The drivers of declining CO2 emissions trends in developed nations using an extended STIRPAT model: A historical and prospective analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a decomposition analysis on CO2 emissions with six contributing factors using an extended STIRPAT model and estimated the future trend of their emissions from both historical and prospective perspectives.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between CO2 emissions, renewable and non-renewable energy consumption, economic growth, and urbanisation in the Southern Common Market

TL;DR: The causalities between carbon dioxide emissions, renewable and non-renewable energy consumption, economic growth, and urbanization were examined for the panel of five countries (Argentina, Brazil,... as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the remittances-environment led hypothesis: Empirical evidence from BRICS economies

TL;DR: The panel causality test confirms the bidirectional linkage between remittances and CO 2 emissions and that the FDI inflows to this region increase the CO 2 emission, hence obeying the pollution haven hypothesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contribution of renewable energy towards environmental quality: The role of education to achieve sustainable development goals in G11 countries

TL;DR: In this article, the impacts of renewable energy on CO2 emissions by including other factors like, education, GDP, natural resources and foreign direct investment for G11 economies over the time period of 1990-2019 were investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the multidimensional linkages among renewable energy, pollution, economic growth and urbanization in contemporary economies: Quantitative assessments across different income countries’ groups

TL;DR: In this article, a series of statistical techniques that allow us to study the cointegration between variables, impulse response function to follows the effect of a shock that occurred, and not least, investigated the types of causality that are established through the Granger causality test.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparative Study of Unit Root Tests with Panel Data and a New Simple Test

TL;DR: The Im-Pesaran-Shin (IPS) test as discussed by the authors relaxes the restrictive assumption of the LL test and is best viewed as a test for summarizing the evidence from independent tests of the sample hypothesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Simple Panel Unit Root Test in the Presence of Cross Section Dependence

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple alternative test where the standard unit root regressions are augmented with the cross section averages of lagged levels and first-differences of the individual series is also considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

A simple panel unit root test in the presence of cross-section dependence

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple alternative where the standard ADF regressions are augmented with the cross section averages of lagged levels and first-differences of the individual series is proposed, and it is shown that the individual CADF statistics are asymptotically similar and do not depend on the factor loadings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Change and the Ecology of Cities

TL;DR: Urban ecology integrates natural and social sciences to study these radically altered local environments and their regional and global effects of an increasingly urbanized world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Panel cointegration: asymptotic and finite sample properties of pooled time series tests with an application to the ppp hypothesis

TL;DR: This paper examined properties of residual-based tests for the null of no cointegration for dynamic panels in which both the short-run dynamics and the long-run slope coefficients are permitted to be heterogeneous across individual members of the panel.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
Which country produces the greatest amount of co2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion?

Furthermore, the results reveal that primary energy consumption, fossil fuel energy consumption, and FDI are substantially affecting the CO2 emission in the SSEA region.