Global evidence of time-frequency dependency of temperature and environmental quality from a wavelet coherence approach
Özet
The concern that the global emissions or carbon mitigation plans have not yielded the much desired significant improvement in
health, air and environmental quality especially since the Conference of Paris has further created some ambiguities. This has
further made environmentalists and policymakers wonder if the December 2015 Paris Climate Agreement is “better than no
agreement”. In advancing the studies of global temperature and carbon emission nexus, the current study rather applied the timefrequency dependency of average global mean temperature anomalies and global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fossil
fuels for the annual data from 1851 to 2017. The present study uses the wavelet coherence technique and the Toda and Yamamoto
causality approach that allows the investigation of both the long- and short-term causal relationship between the global average
temperature and global CO2 emissions. The findings of this study indicate that (i) significant vulnerabilities in global average
temperature and global CO2 emissions are observed at different time periods and different frequency levels; (ii) global CO2
emissions have a strong power for explaining global average temperature at different time periods; (iii) between 1880 and 1910,
global average temperature and global CO2 emissions are positively correlated at medium term; and (iv) the outcome of Toda and
Yamamoto causality reveals that global CO2 emissions cause global average temperature and this outcome is in line with the
outcome of wavelet coherence approach.
Cilt
14Sayı
4Bağlantı
https://hdl.handle.net/11363/5648Koleksiyonlar
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