How are electricity generation effective on carbon neutrality in the global south? Evidence from sectoral CO2 emissions by daily data
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Date
2024
Authors
Mustafa Tevfik Kartal
Ugur Korkut Pata
Dilvin Taşkın
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
In light of the efforts to ensure carbon neutrality by combating climate-related problems the study investigates the effectiveness of electricity generation (EG) from the main renewable sources (hydro-HEG solar-SEG and wind-WEG). In this context the study examines the countries of the Global South (i.e. Brazil China and India) considers EG at a disaggregated level and sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions applies nonlinear methods and uses daily data between January 2 2019 and December 31 2022. The results demonstrate that (i) disaggregated EG sources have a stronger (weaker) time and frequency dependency on sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions in China (Brazil and India), (ii) HEG has a stimulating impact on sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions in all countries, (iii) SEG has an increasing impact on sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions in Brazil and China while it provides a decrease in sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions in India, (iv) WEG upsurges sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions in China while it achieves a CO<inf>2</inf> reduction in Brazil and India, (v) disaggregated level EG has a causal impact on sectoral CO<inf>2</inf> emissions across all quantiles except some lower middle and higher quantiles. The study adds scientific value to existing knowledge by analyzing for the first time which EG sources are effective in reducing daily CO<inf>2</inf> emissions in the Global South. Based on the outcomes the study demonstrates that WEG is the best EG source for Brazil that SEG and WEG are optimal EG sources for India and that China cannot benefit from the EG sources considered. In this way the study provides fresh insights for the countries of the Global South and underlines the crucial role of renewable EG in ensuring carbon neutrality. © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Description
Keywords
Electricity Generation, Global South, Nonlinear Methods, Sectoral Co2 Emissions, Carbon Dioxide, Power Generation, Carbon Neutralities, China And India, Co 2 Emission, Daily Datum, Electricity-generation, Global South, Non-linear Methods, Renewable Sources, Sectoral Co2 Emission, Time And Frequencies, Carbon, Alternative Energy, Carbon Emission, Climate Effect, Electricity Generation, Article, Attribution (psychology), Carbon Dioxide Emission, Carbon Neutrality, Climate Change, Clinical Outcome, Conceptual Framework, Correlation Analysis, Econometric Model, Electricity, Empiricism, Fourier Transform, Global South, Human, Nonlinear System, Quantitative Analysis, Regression Analysis, Stimulation, Tight Junction, Wavelet Transform, Article, Brazil, Controlled Study, Epidemiology, Wind, India, Carbon dioxide, Power generation, Carbon neutralities, China and India, CO 2 emission, Daily datum, Electricity-generation, Global south, Non-linear methods, Renewable sources, Sectoral CO2 emission, Time and frequencies, Carbon, alternative energy, carbon emission, climate effect, electricity generation, Article, attribution (psychology), carbon dioxide emission, carbon neutrality, climate change, clinical outcome, conceptual framework, correlation analysis, econometric model, electricity, empiricism, Fourier transform, global south, human, nonlinear system, quantitative analysis, regression analysis, stimulation, tight junction, wavelet transform, article, Brazil, controlled study, epidemiology, wind, India, Sectoral CO2 Emissions, Sectoral CO 2 Emissions, Nonlinear Methods, Electricity Generation, Global South, Electricity generation, Nonlinear methods, Sectoral CO 2 emissions, Global south
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q

OpenCitations Citation Count
4
Source
Science of The Total Environment
Volume
926
Issue
Start Page
171911
End Page
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Citations
CrossRef : 3
Scopus : 4
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 12
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