Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries

This study examines factors affecting the changes in the net exports of the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions embodied in global trade, conducting seemingly unrelated regression-based generalized least square method. The study uses balanced panel data sets of 34 OECD and 7 major non-OECD countries in t...

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Main Author: Mehmet Demiral
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EconJournals 2016-06-01
Series:International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijeeep/issue/31917/351080?publisher=http-www-cag-edu-tr-ilhan-ozturk
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spelling doaj-cc826c2feb064438a0714a7726abf8582020-11-25T02:58:04ZengEconJournalsInternational Journal of Energy Economics and Policy2146-45532016-06-01622582651032Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter CountriesMehmet DemiralThis study examines factors affecting the changes in the net exports of the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions embodied in global trade, conducting seemingly unrelated regression-based generalized least square method. The study uses balanced panel data sets of 34 OECD and 7 major non-OECD countries in the G-20 and the period of 1996-2011. Along with various explanatory variables, we also add interaction terms between structural changes and income variables for crosschecking. Results reveal that trade openness leads to increase in emission exports, while GDP per capita has a slight negative effect. Net oil export per capita is the most important factor raising the emission export. The finding that structural changes also affect emission density affirms the importance of technological progress. Considering international trade pattern, overall results underline that nobody is responsible for global emission individually since countries emit for others. For trade mechanism of emission reduction, ‘ideal’ and ‘global’ green trade implications seem to be appropriate policy initiativeshttps://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijeeep/issue/31917/351080?publisher=http-www-cag-edu-tr-ilhan-ozturkco2 emission emission export kuznets curve sur model structural change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mehmet Demiral
spellingShingle Mehmet Demiral
Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries
International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy
co2 emission
emission export
kuznets curve
sur model
structural change
author_facet Mehmet Demiral
author_sort Mehmet Demiral
title Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries
title_short Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries
title_full Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries
title_fullStr Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries
title_full_unstemmed Examining Trade Mechanism of International Carbon Dioxide Emission: Evidence from Major Emitter Countries
title_sort examining trade mechanism of international carbon dioxide emission: evidence from major emitter countries
publisher EconJournals
series International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy
issn 2146-4553
publishDate 2016-06-01
description This study examines factors affecting the changes in the net exports of the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions embodied in global trade, conducting seemingly unrelated regression-based generalized least square method. The study uses balanced panel data sets of 34 OECD and 7 major non-OECD countries in the G-20 and the period of 1996-2011. Along with various explanatory variables, we also add interaction terms between structural changes and income variables for crosschecking. Results reveal that trade openness leads to increase in emission exports, while GDP per capita has a slight negative effect. Net oil export per capita is the most important factor raising the emission export. The finding that structural changes also affect emission density affirms the importance of technological progress. Considering international trade pattern, overall results underline that nobody is responsible for global emission individually since countries emit for others. For trade mechanism of emission reduction, ‘ideal’ and ‘global’ green trade implications seem to be appropriate policy initiatives
topic co2 emission
emission export
kuznets curve
sur model
structural change
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/ijeeep/issue/31917/351080?publisher=http-www-cag-edu-tr-ilhan-ozturk
work_keys_str_mv AT mehmetdemiral examiningtrademechanismofinternationalcarbondioxideemissionevidencefrommajoremittercountries
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