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1.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 30(9): 23764-23780, 2023 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36327073

RESUMEN

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has recently declared its vision of turning carbon neutral by 2060. This declaration has motivated policymakers in this Arab nation to design policies that can green economic activities in Saudi Arabia so that environmentally sustainable growth can be ensured. Against this backdrop, this study models the independent and joint effects of financial development, globalization, and energy efficiency rates on green growth of the Saudi Arabian economy. In this regard, green growth in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is proxied by the difference between the nation's annual per capita growth rates of gross domestic product and carbon dioxide emission. Utilizing data from 1972 to 2018 and controlling for structural break-induced problems found in the data, the findings from the regression and causality analyses confirm the green growth-inhibiting impacts of financial development and trade globalization. In contrast, greater financial globalization is evidenced to drive green growth in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Furthermore, more efficient uses of energy resources are found to not only directly boost green growth but also partially neutralize the long-run green growth-dampening impacts associated with the development of the financial sector. In addition, financial development and trade globalization are observed to jointly inhibit green growth attainment both in the short and long run. In line with these important findings, it is recommended that the government of Saudi Arabia conceptualizes new green growth policies so that the nation's annual per capita economic growth rate outpaces its annual per capita growth rate of carbon dioxide emissions.


Asunto(s)
Dióxido de Carbono , Desarrollo Económico , Arabia Saudita , Dióxido de Carbono/análisis , Producto Interno Bruto , Internacionalidad , Energía Renovable
2.
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ; 29(23): 34055-34074, 2022 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35034299

RESUMEN

Recently, the Japanese government has announced the national objective of turning the economy of Japan carbon-neutral by 2050. This declaration has therefore enhanced the imperativeness of replacing the use of unclean energy with cleaner alternatives so that the carbon-neutrality agenda can be attained in due course. Against this backdrop, this study aims to assess whether enhancing government investments in research and development for developing clean energy can help Japan curb its carbon dioxide emission figures. In addition, the analysis also controls for the environmental effects of clean electricity output, economic growth, international trade, financial globalization, and urbanization on Japan's carbon dioxide emission figures. The cointegration test results confirm long-run relationships between all these variables. Besides, the regression results showed that scaling-up research and development-related investments for clean energy development reduces carbon dioxide emissions only in the long run. Similar emission-inhibiting impacts are also evidenced to be associated with greater output of clean energy-fired electricity. Moreover, it is also observed that higher clean energy development-related investments play a mediating role in amplifying the carbon dioxide emission-reducing effects of clean electricity generation in the long run. In addition, economic growth is seen to dampen environmental quality by triggering higher emissions of carbon dioxide both in the short and long run. Simultaneously, enhancing openness to international trade and greater urbanization is found to boost the carbon dioxide emission figures of Japan. However, an influx of foreign direct investments is not observed to influence carbon dioxide emissions in Japan, neither in the short run nor in the long run. Accordingly, concerning the achievement of carbon neutrality goal by 2050, these findings emphasize the importance of boosting clean energy development-related investments, increasing clean electricity output, greening economic activities, reducing the trade of unclean commodities, adopting environmentally sustainable urbanization policies, and facilitating the influx of clean foreign direct investments within the Japanese economy.


Asunto(s)
Dióxido de Carbono , Energía Renovable , Comercio , Desarrollo Económico , Internacionalidad , Inversiones en Salud
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