A CIRCULAR ECONOMY POLICIES IN ITALY AND POLAND
CIRCULAR ECONOMY POLICIES IN ITALY AND POLAND
Özet Görüntüleme: 74 / PDF İndirme: 20
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12565546Anahtar Kelimeler:
Energy, Sustainable Development, RenewableÖzet
ABSTRACT
CIRCULAR ECONOMY POLICIES IN ITALY AND POLAND
Hamza KORKMAZ
Political Economics 2024, 44 pages
The world economy rises in the energy sector; with its strategic leadership in economic growth. While global development and population increase continues, the demand and need for energy scale up. This is the end of the “below average growth” era. With the impact of developing technology, renewable energy cost goes down and the transformation process is sped up by government incentives for environmentalist energy production. But; it seems that for long years, still, fossil fuels system will continue. Developments in fossil fuel-possessing countries, especially oil, have a direct impact on energy prices. As a result; the global trend for energy demand is towards clean (green) energy sources. The fight against CO2 release and climate change will become more important. Although in the predictable future, the supremacy of fossil fuels will continue; government policies and incentives will be shaped in support of works to minimize their negative impacts on nature. Demand for energy and natural resources has been increasing due to economic and population growth. Over recent years, the country has experienced the fastest surge in energy demand among OECD countries, and according to the International Energy Agency (IEA) forecasts is set to double its energy use over the next decade. will provide value to literature by increasing the importance of renewable energy sources for nature, humans, and the world. The study aims to reveal whether there is a bidirectional interaction between the renewable energy production of countries in Italy and Poland and their gross domestic product. In this study, the relationship between renewable energy production and gross domestic product was investigated bidirectionally.
Keywords: Energy, Sustainable Development, Renewable Energy, Natural Resource Economics
Jel Codes: F53 International Agreements and Observance . International Organizations, G18 Government Policy and Regulation, O1 Economic Development, Q2 Natural Resources including Energy, Natural Resources Renewable, Z13 Economic Sociology . Economic and Social Stratification,
Referanslar
Altinay, G., & Karagol, E. (2005). Electricity consumption and economic growth: evidence from Turkey. Energy economics, 27(6), 849-856.
Chien, T., & Hu, J. L. (2007). Renewable energy and macroeconomic efficiency of OECD and non-OECD economies. Energy Policy, 35(7), 3606-3615.
Chontanawat, J., Hunt, L. C., & Pierse, R. (2008). Does energy consumption cause economic growth?: Evidence from a systematic study of over 100 countries. Journal of policy modeling, 30(2), 209-220.
Apergis, N., & Payne, J. E. (2010). Renewable energy consumption and growth in Eurasia. Energy economics, 32(6), 1392-1397.
Menyah, K., & Wolde-Rufael, Y. (2010). Energy consumption, pollutant emissions and economic growth in South Africa. Energy economics, 32(6), 1374-1382.
Bayraktutan, Y., Yılgör, M., & Uçak, S. (2011). Renewable electricity generation and economic growth: Panel-data analysis for OECD members.
Menegaki, A. N. (2011). Growth and renewable energy in Europe: A random effect model with evidence for neutrality hypothesis. Energy economics, 33(2), 257-263.
Al-Mulali, U., Fereidouni, H. G., Lee, J. Y., & Sab, C. N. B. C. (2013). Examining the bi-directional long run relationship between renewable energy consumption and GDP growth. Renewable and sustainable energy reviews, 22, 209-222.
Pempetzoglou, M. (2014). Electricity consumption and economic growth: A linear and nonlinear causality investigation for Turkey. International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy, 4(2), 263-273.
Sebri, M. (2015). Use renewables to be cleaner: Meta-analysis of the renewable energy consumption–economic growth nexus. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 42, 657-665.
Shahbaz, M., Loganathan, N., Zeshan, M., & Zaman, K. (2015). Does renewable energy consumption add in economic growth? An application of auto-regressive distributed lag model in Pakistan. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 44, 576-585.
Alper, A., & Oguz, O. (2016). The role of renewable energy consumption in economic growth: Evidence from asymmetric causality. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 60, 953-959.
Dai, H., Xie, X., Xie, Y., Liu, J., & Masui, T. (2016). Green growth: The economic impacts of large-scale renewable energy development in China. Applied energy, 162, 435-449.
Zaman, K., bin Abdullah, A., Khan, A., bin Mohd Nasir, M. R., Hamzah, T. A. A. T., & Hussain, S. (2016). Dynamic linkages among energy consumption, environment, health and wealth in BRICS countries: green growth key to sustainable development. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 56, 1263-1271.
Koçak, E., & Şarkgüneşi, A. (2017). The renewable energy and economic growth nexus in Black Sea and Balkan countries. Energy Policy, 100, 51-57.
Rafindadi, A. A., & Ozturk, I. (2017). Impacts of renewable energy consumption on the German economic growth: Evidence from combined cointegration test. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 75, 1130-1141.
Halicioglu, F., & Ketenci, N. (2018). Output, renewable and non-renewable energy production, and international trade: Evidence from EU-15 countries. Energy, 159, 995-1002.
Ohlan, R. (2018). The relationship between electricity consumption, trade openness and economic growth in India. OPEC Energy Review, 42(4), 331-354.
Sohag, K., Taşkın, F. D., & Malik, M. N. (2019). Green economic growth, cleaner energy and militarization: Evidence from Turkey. Resources Policy, 63, 101407.
Dogan, E., Altinoz, B., Madaleno, M., & Taskin, D. (2020). The impact of renewable energy consumption to economic growth: a replication and extension of. Energy Economics, 90, 104866.
Munir, Q., Lean, H. H., & Smyth, R. (2020). CO2 emissions, energy consumption and economic growth in the ASEAN-5 countries: a cross-sectional dependence approach. Energy Economics, 85, 104571.
Okumus, I., Guzel, A. E., & Destek, M. A. (2021). Renewable, non-renewable energy consumption and economic growth nexus in G7: fresh evidence from CS-ARDL. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 28(40), 56595-56605.
Salari, M., Kelly, I., Doytch, N., & Javid, R. J. (2021). Economic growth and renewable and non-renewable energy consumption: Evidence from the US states. Renewable Energy, 178, 50-65.
İndir
Yayınlanmış
Nasıl Atıf Yapılır
Sayı
Bölüm
Lisans
Telif Hakkı (c) 2024 ARCENG (INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURE AND ENGINEERING) ISSN: 2822-6895
Bu çalışma Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License ile lisanslanmıştır.