Do Natural Disasters, Fossil Fuels, and Renewable Energy Affect CO2 Emissions and the Ecological Footprint? DOI
Ghalieb Mutig Idroes,

Iin Shabrina Hilal,

Iffah Hafizah

et al.

Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 3(1), P. 47 - 63

Published: April 27, 2025

Climate change is a global concern driven by increasing pollution through rising CO2 emissions and growing ecological footprint from human activities. This research investigates how environmental quality (proxied footprint) in Indonesia affected multiple factors, including natural disasters, fossil fuels, renewable energy consumption, economic growth, capital formation 1965 to 2022. The analysis employs the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) model, with robustness ensured using Dynamic Ordinary Least Squares (DOLS), followed Granger causality tests examine dynamic relationships between variables. findings show that fuel growth contribute long run, while consumption helps reduce them. Natural disasters exhibit negative but insignificant impact on footprint. Economic increases footprint, whereas it run. In short fuels are found increase emissions, reduces Additionally, test confirms unidirectional relationship both quality. study recommends implement integrated strategies focused accelerating green adoption enhancing disaster resilience achieve

Language: Английский

Synthesizing Eco-efficiency within EU’s Inclusive Finance: Do Environmental Policy Stringency and Renewable Energy Make a Difference? DOI Creative Commons
Elma Šatrović, Stephen Taiwo Onifade, Ilham Haouas

et al.

Energy, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: unknown, P. 136045 - 136045

Published: April 1, 2025

Language: Английский

Citations

0

Do Natural Disasters, Fossil Fuels, and Renewable Energy Affect CO2 Emissions and the Ecological Footprint? DOI
Ghalieb Mutig Idroes,

Iin Shabrina Hilal,

Iffah Hafizah

et al.

Ekonomikalia Journal of Economics, Journal Year: 2025, Volume and Issue: 3(1), P. 47 - 63

Published: April 27, 2025

Climate change is a global concern driven by increasing pollution through rising CO2 emissions and growing ecological footprint from human activities. This research investigates how environmental quality (proxied footprint) in Indonesia affected multiple factors, including natural disasters, fossil fuels, renewable energy consumption, economic growth, capital formation 1965 to 2022. The analysis employs the Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) model, with robustness ensured using Dynamic Ordinary Least Squares (DOLS), followed Granger causality tests examine dynamic relationships between variables. findings show that fuel growth contribute long run, while consumption helps reduce them. Natural disasters exhibit negative but insignificant impact on footprint. Economic increases footprint, whereas it run. In short fuels are found increase emissions, reduces Additionally, test confirms unidirectional relationship both quality. study recommends implement integrated strategies focused accelerating green adoption enhancing disaster resilience achieve

Language: Английский

Citations

0