The transition to renewable energies in Tunisia: The asymmetric impacts of technological innovation, government stability, and democracy DOI
Haifa Saadaoui, Emna Omri,

Nouri Chtourou

et al.

Energy, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 293, P. 130686 - 130686

Published: Feb. 15, 2024

Language: Английский

Revisiting the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) Hypothesis of Carbon Emissions: Exploring the Impact of Geopolitical Risks, Natural Resource Rents, Corrupt Governance, and Energy Intensity DOI
Rongrong Li,

Qiang Wang,

Jiale Guo

et al.

Journal of Environmental Management, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 351, P. 119663 - 119663

Published: Dec. 7, 2023

Language: Английский

Citations

133

Europe's energy crisis: Are geopolitical risks in source countries of fossil fuels accelerating the transition to renewable energy? DOI
Erik Hille

Energy Economics, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 127, P. 107061 - 107061

Published: Sept. 21, 2023

Language: Английский

Citations

65

Geopolitical risk and renewable energy consumption: Evidence from a spatial convergence perspective DOI
Xiaohang Ren, Wanping Yang, Yi Jin

et al.

Energy Economics, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 131, P. 107384 - 107384

Published: Feb. 8, 2024

Language: Английский

Citations

48

Winner or loser? The bidirectional impact between geopolitical risk and energy transition from the renewable energy perspective DOI

Fangying Liu,

Chi‐Wei Su, Meng Qin

et al.

Energy, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 283, P. 129174 - 129174

Published: Sept. 23, 2023

Language: Английский

Citations

46

The impact of geopolitical risk on CO2 emissions inequality: Evidence from 38 developed and developing economies DOI Creative Commons
Limei Chen, Giray Gözgör, Chi Keung Marco Lau

et al.

Journal of Environmental Management, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 349, P. 119345 - 119345

Published: Nov. 9, 2023

This paper analyses the impact of geopolitical risk on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions inequality in panel dataset 38 developed and developing economies from 1990 to 2019. At this juncture, empirical models control for effects globalisation, capital-labour ratio, per capita income CO2 inequality. The cointegration tests show a significant long-run relationship among related variables models. data regression estimations indicate that risk, increase However, globalisation negatively affects countries. pairwise heterogeneous causality test results align with these benchmark no reverse issue. Potential policy implications are also discussed.

Language: Английский

Citations

46

Strategy towards sustainable energy transition: The effect of environmental governance, economic complexity and geopolitics DOI Creative Commons
Satar Bakhsh, Wei Zhang, Kishwar Ali

et al.

Energy Strategy Reviews, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 52, P. 101330 - 101330

Published: Feb. 28, 2024

The Paris Agreement and COP27 have been actively working towards a transition to clean energy (SDG-7) the restoration of green environment (SDG-13). Therefore, this study was situated within comprehensive policy framework. This aims investigate effects environmental governance economic complexity on in 20 OECD countries selected for analysis from 1990 2021. employs novel MMQR model account slope heterogeneity cross-sectional dependency. Additionally, an asymmetric conducted examine mediating moderating roles geopolitical risk relationship between governance, complexity, transition. primary findings indicate that (1) stimulating effect at different levels quantiles. Strict policies played critical role energy. Furthermore, interaction factors negatively impacts various quantiles; (2) demonstrates positive association with transition, as high possess necessary resources, capabilities, resilience effectively address challenges seize opportunities associated transitioning cleaner more sustainable sources. However, geopolitics transforms influence into negative nonparametric panel Granger causality test establishes significant causal relationship, revealing can support by creating favorable adoption, fostering innovation, facilitating effective planning implementation, enhancing resilience, promoting international collaboration.

Language: Английский

Citations

46

More attention and better volatility forecast accuracy: How does war attention affect stock volatility predictability? DOI
Chao Liang, Lu Wang, Duy Duong

et al.

Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Journal Year: 2023, Volume and Issue: 218, P. 1 - 19

Published: Dec. 13, 2023

Language: Английский

Citations

43

Does FDI affect energy consumption in the belt and road initiative economies? The role of green technologies DOI Creative Commons
Riazullah Shinwari, Yangjie Wang, Giray Gözgör

et al.

Energy Economics, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 132, P. 107409 - 107409

Published: Feb. 22, 2024

This paper examines how foreign direct investments (FDI) affect energy consumption in the panel data of 29 Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) economies from 2000 to 2021. The runs several techniques, which concurrently accommodate dataset's cross-sectional dependency, slope heterogeneity, structural break concerns cointegration. results show that global FDI positively affects consumption. China's dominance also has a favorable effect on In addition, green technologies increase These emphasise significance policies regarding promoting demand BRI economies.

Language: Английский

Citations

41

Impact of different geopolitical factors on the energy transition: The role of geopolitical threats, geopolitical acts, and geopolitical risks DOI

Qiang Wang,

Chen Zhang, Rongrong Li

et al.

Journal of Environmental Management, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 352, P. 119962 - 119962

Published: Jan. 5, 2024

Language: Английский

Citations

37

Rethinking the environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis across 214 countries: the impacts of 12 economic, institutional, technological, resource, and social factors DOI Creative Commons

Qiang Wang,

Yuanfan Li,

Rongrong Li

et al.

Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, Journal Year: 2024, Volume and Issue: 11(1)

Published: Feb. 21, 2024

Abstract Research over the past three decades has provided rich empirical evidence for inverted U-shaped EKC theory, but current problems facing advancing climate mitigation actions require us to re-examine shape of global rigorously. This paper examined N-shaped in a panel 214 countries with 12 traditional and emerging variables, including institutions risks, information communication technology (ICT), artificial intelligence(AI), resource energy use, selected social factors. The two-dimensional Tapio decoupling model based on group homogeneous is developed explore inter-group heterogeneous carbon emission effects each variable. Global research results show that linear cubic terms GDP per capita are significantly positive, while quadratic term negative, regardless whether additional variables added. means robust existence an EKC. Geopolitical risk, ICT, food security confirmed positively impact emissions, composite institutional quality, digital economy, transition, population aging negative. AI, natural rents, trade openness, income inequality insignificant. inflection points considering all 45.08 73.44 thousand US dollars, respectively. Combining turning calculated coefficients, categorized into six groups model. subsequent regression heterogeneity direction magnitude impacts most variables. Finally, differentiated reduction strategies stages proposed.

Language: Английский

Citations

36