Abstract

ABSTRACT Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from human activities are the principal cause of accelerated global climate change and climate risk. A country faces a coupling of GHG emissions in proportion to increases in the gross domestic product (GDP) in the initial stage of its economic development. In the later period of economic development, the decoupling of GHGs from GDP can be achieved by efficient technology and environmental awareness. What makes some developing countries achieve decoupling? This study analyses the effects of three financial measures–foreign direct investment (FDI), climate change aid and the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)–which influence both GDP and GHGs in developing countries. For the empirical analysis, this study utilizes a panel regression using data from 97 countries between 2000 and 2018. The results suggest that the effectiveness of reducing GHG emissions and decoupling differ among the three previously mentioned financial measures. Climate change aid induces decoupling while coupling follows the CDM. FDI lacks statistical significance. A proportion of renewable energy from the total electricity is associated with strong decoupling. Well-designed climate finance measures that consider developing countries’ socio-economic conditions and renewable energy adoption can induce GHG mitigation as well as economic growth.

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