Industrial Boom Versus Green Transition: Navigating CO 2 Challenges Through Finance, FDI , and Renewable Energy Pathways in Emerging Economies
産業ブーム対グリーン転換:新興経済国における資金、海外直接投資(FDI)、再生可能エネルギー経路を通じたCO2課題への対応 (AI 翻訳)
Tong Yang, N. Grace
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本研究は、新興7か国(E7)のCO2排出と再生可能エネルギー、FDI、金融深度、製造業・産業生産の関係を2000~2022年まで分析。再生可能エネルギーとFDIは排出削減に寄与するが、金融深度は排出を増加させ、製造業と産業生産も排出を促進する。グリーンファイナンスの強化と環境に責任ある投資の促進が必要。
English
This study examines CO2 emissions and drivers in E7 economies (2000-2022) using quantile regression. Renewable energy and FDI reduce emissions, supporting clean energy and pollution halo effects. However, financial depth and manufacturing/industrial output increase emissions. The authors call for green finance frameworks and cleaner industrial practices.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
In the global GX context
This study provides empirical evidence for the pollution halo effect in E7 economies and highlights that financial depth currently supports carbon-intensive activities. It furthers global understanding of how finance and industrial structure shape emission trajectories in emerging markets, relevant for international climate policy and green finance initiatives.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Offers a robust empirical analysis using quantile regression on E7 data, confirming the pollution halo effect and the emission-increasing role of financial depth.
🏢実務担当者:Corporate sustainability teams in emerging economies can use these findings to advocate for green finance and responsible FDI.
🏛政策担当者:Policymakers in emerging economies should note the importance of greening financial systems and attracting clean FDI.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Sustainable growth has become a priority for emerging economies as rapid industrialization, globalization, and rising energy demand continue to intensify environmental pressures. This study examines the relationship between carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions and key drivers such as renewable energy consumption, foreign direct investment, financial depth, manufacturing value added, and industrial output across the emerging seven (E7) economies (Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Russia, and Turkey) from 2000 to 2022. The analysis applies the method of moments quantile regression while accounting for cross‐sectional dependence and slope heterogeneity to capture variations across different emissions levels. The results show that renewable energy consumption reduces CO 2 emissions, underscoring the importance of clean energy transitions. Foreign direct investment is also associated with lower emissions, supporting the pollution halo effect, although its impact weakens in high‐emission contexts where investment remains concentrated in carbon‐intensive sectors. In contrast, financial depth increases emissions, indicating that current financial structures continue to support carbon‐heavy activities rather than sustainable investment. Manufacturing and industrial output also contribute significantly to emissions, highlighting the environmental cost of energy‐intensive production. Robustness tests confirm these findings, and cointegration results indicate a stable long‐term relationship among the variables. The study suggests that policymakers in E7 economies should strengthen green finance frameworks, attract environmentally responsible investment, and incentivize cleaner industrial practices to support a low‐carbon and competitive development trajectory aligned with global sustainability goals.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- semanticscholar https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.70706first seen 2026-05-06 00:43:03
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