Pathways to reduce CO2 emissions as countries proceed through stages of economic development

We propose a new approach to identify pathways for countries to reduce carbon dioxide emissions (CO2) per capita through possible changes in their energy consumption portfolio. Utilizing data from the last half century (1965–2017) for 79 countries, we investigate how changes in the composition of pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy policy 2019-06, Vol.129, p.268-278
Hauptverfasser: Valadkhani, Abbas, Nguyen, Jeremy, Bowden, Mark
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container_title Energy policy
container_volume 129
creator Valadkhani, Abbas
Nguyen, Jeremy
Bowden, Mark
description We propose a new approach to identify pathways for countries to reduce carbon dioxide emissions (CO2) per capita through possible changes in their energy consumption portfolio. Utilizing data from the last half century (1965–2017) for 79 countries, we investigate how changes in the composition of primary energy consumption (i.e. oil, coal, gas and renewables) can contribute to changes in per capita CO2 emissions, depending on the time-varying level of individual countries’ real per capita income. To this end, threshold panel regressions (with common and fixed effects) are estimated to endogenously determine an unknown number of possible pathways (delineated by break points) to reduce emissions. This study provides important policy insights into the effects of switching from one source of primary energy consumption to another on per capita emissions, as nations progress through stages of economic development. Such relative costs can be compared and contrasted (a) across country groupings, (b) through time, as real per capita income changes, and (c) with those of other country groupings that fall within similar per capita income brackets. •We examine the effects of oil, coal, gas and renewable consumption on CO2 emission.•We use panel data for 79 countries during the last half century (1965–2017).•We examine the effects of different types of energy sources on CO2 emissions.•Renewables reduce CO2 emissions when economies reach a certain income threshold.•As real per capita income rises, countries can use oil and coal more efficiently.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.enpol.2019.02.024
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source PAIS Index; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Brackets
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide emissions
CO2 emissions
Coal
Economic development
Emissions
Energy consumption
Energy policy
Fossil fuels
Income
Per capita
Petroleum
Primary energy consumption
Renewables
Threshold regression
title Pathways to reduce CO2 emissions as countries proceed through stages of economic development
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