Welcome to Scholar Publishing Group

International Journal of Social Sciences and Economic Management, 2023, 4(1); doi: 10.38007/IJSSEM.2023.040109.

Review on Economic on Carbon Emission

Author(s)

Lili Wang, Jiemin Huang

Corresponding Author:
Jiemin Huang
Affiliation(s)

Shenzhen Institute of Information Technology, Longgang, Shenzhen, China

Abstract

Many scholars believe that human and economic factors have impact on carbon emission. This paper provides a review of the research in this area. There are mainly the following aspects: first, the influence of economic indicators on CO2 has been widely studied by scholar; second, the EKC for CO 2 emissions, which is currently of great importance, is decreasing as institutional quality increases; Third, trade and tourism can also affect carbon emissions.

Keywords

Economic Factors, Carbon Emissions, Review

Cite This Paper

Lili Wang, Jiemin Huang. Review on Economic on Carbon Emission. International Journal of Social Sciences and Economic Management (2023), Vol. 4, Issue 1: 84-87. https://doi.org/10.38007/IJSSEM.2023.040109.

References

[1]Grossman, G.M., Krueger, A.B., 1991. Environmental impacts of a North American free trade agreement. 

[2]Muhammad, B., 2019. Energy consumption, CO2 emissions and economic growth in developed, emerging and Middle East and North Africa countries. Energy 179, 232–245.

[3]Hanif, I., Raza, S.M.F., Gago-de-Santos, P., Abbas, Q., 2019. Fossil fuels, foreign direct investment, and economic growth have triggered CO2 emissions in emerging Asian economies: some empirical evidence. Energy 171, 493–501.

[4]Hanif, I., Raza, S.M.F., Gago-de-Santos, P., Abbas, Q., 2019. Fossil fuels, foreign direct investment, and economic growth have triggered CO2 emissions in emerging Asian economies: some empirical evidence. Energy 171, 493–501.

[5]Essandoh, O.K., Islam, M., Kakinaka, M., 2020. Linking international trade and foreign direct investment to CO2 emissions: any differences between developed and developing countries? Sci. Total Environ. 712, 136437.

[6]Wang, Q., Zhang, F., 2020. The effects of trade openness on decoupling carbon emissions from economic growth–Evidence from 182 countries. J. Clean. Prod. 279, 123838.

[7]Leal, P.H., Marques, A.C., Shahbaz, M., 2020. The role of globalisation, de jure and de facto, on environmental performance: evidence from developing and developed countries. Environ. Dev. Sustain. 1–20.

[8]Dogan, E., Tzeremes, P., Altinoz, B., 2020. Revisiting the nexus among carbon emissions, energy consumption and total factor productivity in African countries: new evidence from nonparametric quantile causality approach. Heliyon 6 (3), e03566.

[9]Su, C.-W., Yuan, X., Tao, R., Umar, M., 2021c. Can new energy vehicles help to achieve carbon neutrality targets? J. Environ. Manag. 297, 113348. https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113348.

[10]Umar, M., Ji, X., Mirza, N., Naqvi, B., 2021. Carbon neutrality, bank lending, and credit risk: Evidence from the Eurozone. J. Environ. Manag. 296, 113156. https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113156.

[11]Ali, S., Dogan, E., Chen, F., Khan, Z., 2020. International Trade and Environmental Performance in Top Ten-emitters Countries: the Role of Eco-innovation and Renewable Energy Consumption. Sustainable Development.

[12]Dong, K., Dong, X., Jiang, Q., 2020. How renewable energy consumption lower global CO2 emissions? Evidence from countries with different income levels. World Econ. 43 (6), 1665–1698.

[13]Essandoh, O.K., Islam, M., Kakinaka, M., 2020. Linking international trade and foreign direct investment to CO2 emissions: any differences between developed and developing countries? Sci. Total Environ. 712, 136437.

[14]Xie, Q., Wang, X., Cong, X., 2020. How does foreign direct investment affect CO2 emissions in emerging countries? New findings from a nonlinear panel analysis. J. Clean. Prod. 249, 119422.

[15]Hanif, I., Raza, S.M.F., Gago-de-Santos, P., Abbas, Q., 2019. Fossil fuels, foreign direct investment, and economic growth have triggered CO2 emissions in emerging Asian economies: some empirical evidence. Energy 171, 493–501.

[16]Kirikkaleli, D., 2020. New insights into an old issue: exploring the nexus between economic growth and CO 2 emissions in China. Environ. Sci. Pollut. Control Ser. 27 (32), 40777–40786.

[17]Ganda, F., 2019. The impact of innovation and technology investments on carbon emissions in selected organisation for economic Co-operation and development countries. J. Clean. Prod. 217, 469–483.

[18]Su, C.-W., Qin, M., Tao, R., Umar, M., 2020. Financial implications of fourth industrial revolution: Can bitcoin improve prospects of energy investment? Technol. Forecast. Soc. Change 158, 120178. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2020.120178. 

[19]Su, C.-W., Song, Y., Umar, M., 2021a. Financial aspects of marine economic growth: From the perspective of coastal provinces and regions in China. Ocean Coast Manag 204, 105550. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2021.105550.

[20] Su, C.-W., Umar, M., Khan, Z., 2021b. Does fiscal decentralization and eco-innovation promote renewable energy consumption? Analyzing the role of political risk. Sci. Total Environ. 751, 142220. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142220. 

[21]Su, C.-W., Yuan, X., Tao, R., Umar, M., 2021c. Can new energy vehicles help to achieve carbon neutrality targets? J. Environ. Manag. 297, 113348. https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113348.

[22]Umar, M., Ji, X., Kirikkaleli, D., Shahbaz, M., Zhou, X., 2020. Environmental cost of natural resources utilization and economic growth: Can China shift some burden through globalization for sustainable development? Sustain. Dev. 28, 1678–1688. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.2116.