Abstract

Following the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN-SDGs), which place emphasis on relevant concerns that encompass access to energy (SDG-7) and sustainable development (SDG-8), this research intends to re-examine the relationship between urbanization, CO2 emissions, gross capital formation, energy use, and economic growth in South Korea, which has not yet been assessed using recent econometric techniques, based on data covering the period between 1965 and 2019. The present study utilized the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL), dynamic ordinary least square (DOLS), and fully modified ordinary least squares (FMOLS) methods, while the gradual shift and wavelet coherence techniques are utilized to determine the direction of the causality. The ARDL bounds test reveals a long-run linkage between the variables of interest. Empirical evidence shows that CO2 emissions trigger economic growth. Thus, based on increasing environmental awareness across the globe, it is necessary to change the energy mix in South Korea to renewables to enable the use of sustainable energy sources and establish an environmentally sustainable ecosystem. Moreover, the energy-induced growth hypothesis is validated. This result is supported by the causality analysis, which shows a one-way causality running from energy consumption to GDP in South Korea. This suggests that South Korea cannot embark on conservative energy policies, as such actions will damage economic progress. Additionally, a unidirectional causality is seen from CO2 emissions and energy consumption to economic growth. These findings have far-reaching consequences for GDP growth and macroeconomic indicators in South Korea.

Highlights

  • The threat of global warming has raised the level of awareness throughout the world regarding the need to minimize the critical situation confronting all societies (Hasanov et al 2021)

  • The present paper aims to examine the connection between CO2 emissions (CO2) and economic growth (GDP) as well as the role of urbanization (URB), gross capital formation (GCF), and energy usage (EC) in South Korea between 1965 and 2018

  • The correlation outcomes show that all the variables have a strong correlation with each other with the exemption of GCF with a weak correlation with other indicators

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Summary

Introduction

The threat of global warming has raised the level of awareness throughout the world regarding the need to minimize the critical situation confronting all societies (Hasanov et al 2021). Emissions from diverse energy sources, fossil fuels and other non-renewable sources of energy, are dispersed as pollutants into the air. These are responsible for adversely affecting both the climate and the welfare of the people. Are the pollutants released into the environment but they have connections to bodies of water and wetlands, which can damage or poison marine life (Kirikkaleli & Adebayo2021) The pollution of both water bodies and air has a detrimental impact on society by impacting the populace’s living conditions, health, and nutrition (Zhang et al 2021; Udemba et al 2021)

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