Abstract

Global warming is the most serious environmental problem due to rising temperatures. Previous studies showed CO2 is the primary greenhouse gas. CO2 emission is caused by the burning of fossil fuels. Humans pursue industrial growth at the expense of releasing CO2 into the atmosphere. Economic development is represented by Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The growth of CO2 emission increases more and more and does not reach the peak. The global temperature is facing a 2˚C crisis. The global emissions and global economy have a strong indication of relative sensitivity. We found out that countries with higher GDP emit more CO2. Individuals who have higher GDP per capita emit more CO2 to the atmosphere. GDP has a positive correlation with global temperature. Climate change is one of the biggest inequalities around the world. Richer countries caused more damage to global warming, but poor countries suffer more from global warming’s damage. GDP per capita has a positive correlation with temperature and CO2 emissions. The development of a country has a trend of increasing CO2 emissions at an early stage and decreasing CO2 emissions at a later stage. Total GDP although cannot positively correlated to CO2 emissions, but multicollinearity tests proved the two variables are related.

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