Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?

Energy efficiency has established as a trending topic in scholarly research in the last four decades. Lately, the purpose of that research strand has broadened so to tackle the increase of greenhouse gas emissions and the issues related to climate change. Human beings and their mass production and c...

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Main Authors: Sergio Copiello, Carlo Grillenzoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-11-01
Series:Energy Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352484720312749
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spelling doaj-9920c6bb74974f62b00c81513d964bf92020-11-29T04:17:06ZengElsevierEnergy Reports2352-48472020-11-0164959Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?Sergio Copiello0Carlo Grillenzoni1Corresponding author.; IUAV University of Venice, Dorsoduro 2206, 30123 Venice, ItalyIUAV University of Venice, Dorsoduro 2206, 30123 Venice, ItalyEnergy efficiency has established as a trending topic in scholarly research in the last four decades. Lately, the purpose of that research strand has broadened so to tackle the increase of greenhouse gas emissions and the issues related to climate change. Human beings and their mass production and consumption activities are thought to be a primary source of climate-altering emissions. However, that assumption has been seldom tested. Here we aim to provide a methodological and empirical framework to check for the causal nexus that allegedly ties together demographic growth, economic development, and climate change. The analysis is based on the historically reconstructed series of several variables that span over the last centuries. Besides, it is based on the class of ARIMAX-ARCH models. The results show evidence for bidirectional causation between human growth and climate change. In particular, we find that solar irradiance and gross domestic product are significant predictors of temperature anomalies. Furthermore, temperature anomalies and solar irradiance are found to exert a positive feedback effect on the growth rate of gross domestic product. As regards the causality measures, despite the strength of the univariate component, the contribution of the exogenous factors is strongly significant in all the estimated models. The analysis we carry out suggests framing climate change within a set of long-run trends.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352484720312749Demographic growthEconomic developmentClimate changeCausalityTime series
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sergio Copiello
Carlo Grillenzoni
spellingShingle Sergio Copiello
Carlo Grillenzoni
Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?
Energy Reports
Demographic growth
Economic development
Climate change
Causality
Time series
author_facet Sergio Copiello
Carlo Grillenzoni
author_sort Sergio Copiello
title Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?
title_short Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?
title_full Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?
title_fullStr Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?
title_full_unstemmed Economic development and climate change. Which is the cause and which the effect?
title_sort economic development and climate change. which is the cause and which the effect?
publisher Elsevier
series Energy Reports
issn 2352-4847
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Energy efficiency has established as a trending topic in scholarly research in the last four decades. Lately, the purpose of that research strand has broadened so to tackle the increase of greenhouse gas emissions and the issues related to climate change. Human beings and their mass production and consumption activities are thought to be a primary source of climate-altering emissions. However, that assumption has been seldom tested. Here we aim to provide a methodological and empirical framework to check for the causal nexus that allegedly ties together demographic growth, economic development, and climate change. The analysis is based on the historically reconstructed series of several variables that span over the last centuries. Besides, it is based on the class of ARIMAX-ARCH models. The results show evidence for bidirectional causation between human growth and climate change. In particular, we find that solar irradiance and gross domestic product are significant predictors of temperature anomalies. Furthermore, temperature anomalies and solar irradiance are found to exert a positive feedback effect on the growth rate of gross domestic product. As regards the causality measures, despite the strength of the univariate component, the contribution of the exogenous factors is strongly significant in all the estimated models. The analysis we carry out suggests framing climate change within a set of long-run trends.
topic Demographic growth
Economic development
Climate change
Causality
Time series
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352484720312749
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