Toward sustainable use of natural resources: Nexus between resource rents, affluence, energy intensity and carbon emissions in developing and transition economies

Author:

Nwani Chinazaekpere1ORCID,Bekun Festus V.23ORCID,Gyamfi Bright A.4,Effiong Ekpeno L.5ORCID,Alola Andrew A.67ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics and Development Studies Alex Ekwueme Federal University Ndufu‐Alike Nigeria

2. Faculty of Economics Administrative and Social sciences Istanbul Gelisim University Istanbul Turkey

3. Adnan Kassar School of Business, Department of Economics Lebanese American University Beirut Lebanon

4. School of management Sir Padampat Singhania University Bhatewar‐ Udaipur India

5. Department of Economics University of Uyo Uyo Nigeria

6. CREDS‐Centre for Research on Digitalization and Sustainability Inland Norway University of Applied Science Elverum Norway

7. Faculty of Economics, Administrative and Social Sciences Nisantasi University Istanbul Turkey

Abstract

AbstractSustainable use of natural resources would entail ensuring that derived economic benefits today do not undermine the welfare of generations to come. On this basis, this study examines the nexus between natural resource rents and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions disaggregated into production and consumption‐based (i.e., trade‐adjusted) CO2 emissions for a selected panel of 45 developing and transition economies over the period 1995–2017. The empirical model also incorporates the impacts of population, affluence, and energy intensity. The results show that affluence increases production‐based CO2 emissions by 1.407%, with the EKC's predicted inverted U‐shaped curve only explaining consumption‐based CO2 emissions. Economic reliance on natural resource rents and energy intensification contribute 0.022% and 0.766%, respectively, to CO2 emissions embedded in territorial production inventories and 0.035% and 0.583%, respectively, to CO2 emissions embedded in consumption inventories. The bootstrap non‐causality test shows that historical data on each variable has significant predictive power for future CO2 emissions from both sources. The historical information about natural resource rents has significant predictive power over the future levels of affluence and energy intensity. Clearly, the results show that the environmental impact of natural resource rents is stronger when CO2 emissions are adjusted for trade and varies among the countries, with Bangladesh, Guinea, India, Malaysia, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, and Zimbabwe among the most affected countries. Overall, this study provides motivation for policies to keep the use of natural resources within sustainable limits.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,General Medicine

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