Is there an Environmental Kuznets Curve for Energy Use and Carbon Emissions? Amy K. Richmond and...

17
Is there an Environmental Kuznets Curve for Energy Use and Carbon Emissions? Amy K. Richmond and Robert K. Kaufmann US Association for Ecological Economists Saratoga Springs, NY May 22, 2003 http://cybele.bu.edu/people/arr.html
  • date post

    19-Dec-2015
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    215
  • download

    3

Transcript of Is there an Environmental Kuznets Curve for Energy Use and Carbon Emissions? Amy K. Richmond and...

Is there an Environmental Kuznets Curve for Energy Use

and Carbon Emissions?

Amy K. Richmond and Robert K. Kaufmann

US Association for Ecological EconomistsSaratoga Springs, NY

May 22, 2003

http://cybele.bu.edu/people/arr.html

2

Talk Overview

• Omitted variable bias– Energy Mix

• Model specification– Quadratic, Semi-Log, Double-Log

• Tests of predictive accuracy• Questions

– Does the inclusion of energy mix influence turning points?

– Is there a turning point?• Conclusion

– Omission of energy variables effects turning point– Quadratic specification is best

3

Environmental Kuznets Curve

• Reasons for EKC include income driven changes in: – composition of

production and consumption;

– preference for environmental quality;

– institutions that are needed to internalize externalities;

– increasing returns to scale associated with pollution abatement

Income

Natural Resources Use and\ or Emission of Wastes

4

Turning Points

Income

Natural Resources Use and\ or Emission of Wastes

5

Energy Omission

• E/GDP influenced by energy mix

• Different energy types have different CO2 emissions

• Statistical effects of omitted variable bias

6

Methodology: Data• Panel of International Data

– 36 nations• 20 developed countries• 16 developing countries

– 1973-1997• Total Economic activity measured by GDP

in 1996 US dollars, converted using PPP indices

• Carbon emissions (kg/ million BTU)• Total energy use (BTU’s)• Final energy consumption (BTU’s)

7

Basic Model

ittjitit ZXY )ln(

• Yij is a measure of energy per capita (TE/Pop) or carbon emissions per capita (CO2/Pop) by nation i at time t

• X is per capita GDP

• Z is a vector of fuel shares (PCTCOAL, PCTPET, PCTELC)

• µ is the regression error

• α, β, Φ, are regression coefficients

8

Model Specifications

itititit ZXY )ln()ln(

Quadratic Specification:

ititititit ZXXY )ln(221

• EKC if β1 > 0 and β2 < 0• Turning point = –(β1/ 2β2)

Semi Log Specification:

• Diminishing returns

itititit ZXY )ln()ln()ln(Double Log Specification:

• Constant elasticity

1.

3.

2.

9

Omitted Variable Bias: Fuel Share

• Expect coefficient associated with PCTCOAL to be positive and coefficients associated with PCTPET and PCTELC to be negative.

• Diminishing Returns

PCTCOAL = ln(FINCOAL/TE) PCTPET = ln((FINOIL+FINGAS)/ TE) PCTELC = ln((HYRDO+NUCLEAR)/TE)

10

Estimation Techniques

• Regression techniques:– Pooled OLS – Fixed Effects or Random Effects Estimator

– Random Coefficient Model (Swamy, 1970)

• Cointegration (Pedroni, 1999)

itititit ZXY

Yit i Xit Zit it

Yit i iX it iZit it

11

Tests of predictive accuracy (Diebold and Mariano, 1995)

S2a I dt 0.5N

t1

N

0.25N

S3a I dt rank( dt )

N N 1 4t1

N

N N 1 (2N 1)24

I(dt ) 1 if dt 00 otherwise

12

Results

• Variables generally have correct sign and statistically significant

• GDP variables have correct sign, quadratic term not statistically significant

• All variables contain stochastic trend (indicates modeling variables using time trends is not sensible)

• Quadratic specification cointegrates• Energy shares allow diminishing returns

specifications to cointegrate

13

Relation between income and energy consumption

(corrected for changes in energy mix)

Quadratic Model Semi Log Model Double Log Model

14

Relation between income and CO2 emissions

(corrected for changes in energy mix)

Semi Log Model Double Log ModelQuadratic Model

15

Effect of Energy Mix on Turning Points

• Energy use– Turning point without fuel shares: $43,767*– Turning point with fuel shares: $52,296*

• CO2 emissions

– Turning point without fuel shares: $110,600– Turning point with fuel shares: $29,700

* Calculated even though quadratic term not statistically significant

16

Why do Energy Mix Variables Effect Turning Points?

FractionCoal

FractionPetroleum

FractionElectricity

GDP 0.00443(2.89)

-0.031(8.3)

0.00197(8.2)

GDP2 -46.53E-04(1.7)

0.00127(0.8)

--

Turningpoint

$3,390 $12,070 --

Panel ADF -3.14 -5.45 -6.51

Group ADF -4.40 -7.13 -9.12

Sit 1Xit 2Xit2 it

17

Conclusion• Omission of energy variables effects turning

point

• Quadratic specification generates a more accurate out of sample forecast

• Modeling relationship between energy use and income using time trends is not sensible

http://cybele.bu.edu/people/arr.html