The impact of economic growth, energy consumption, trade openness, and financial development on carbon emissions: empirical evidence from Malaysia

Environ Sci Pollut Res Int. 2021 Nov;28(42):60195-60208. doi: 10.1007/s11356-021-14930-2. Epub 2021 Jun 21.

Abstract

Globally, the rising concentration of anthropogenic greenhouse gases emission in the atmosphere is extremely detrimental to the environment. The high concentration among all greenhouse gases is carbon dioxide emission. Therefore, this study explores the linkages between energy consumption, trade openness, globalization, urbanization, and carbon dioxide emission for Malaysia over the spans from 1978 to 2018. ARDL bound testing model was employed to investigate involvement in the elevation of carbon dioxide emissions in the economy. The study illustrates that a 1% growth in energy consumption, trade openness, and urbanization will deteriorate the environment by 0.18%, 0.03%, and 2.51% respectively. Further, variance decomposition analysis predicts that all the determinants in the study have significantly caused carbon dioxide emission in Malaysia. The paper presents scientific support for further studies and argues for the use of innovation shocks as a policy instrument for a prosperous future by formulating more successful environmental policies.

Keywords: Autoregressive distributed lag model; Economic growth; Energy consumption; Environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis; Environmental management; Globalization.

MeSH terms

  • Carbon Dioxide / analysis
  • Economic Development*
  • Greenhouse Gases*
  • Malaysia
  • Urbanization

Substances

  • Greenhouse Gases
  • Carbon Dioxide