843
Views
11
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

The dynamic causal links between CO2 emissions from transport, real GDP, energy use and international tourism

ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 568-577 | Received 17 Jan 2018, Accepted 22 Jan 2018, Published online: 31 Jan 2018

References

  • Alkhathlan K, Javid M. 2013. Energy consumption, carbon emissions and economic growth in Saudi Arabia: an aggregate and disaggregate analysis. Energy Policy. 62:1525–1532.
  • Al-Mulali U, Fereidouni HG, Mohammed A. 2015. The effect of tourism arrival on CO2 emissions from transportation sector. Anatolia. Int J Tourism Hospitality Res. 26:230–243.
  • Ang JB. 2007. CO2 emissions, energy consumption, and output in France. Energy Policy. 35:4772–4778.
  • Ankomah PK. 1991. Tourism skilled labor: the case of sub-Saharan Africa. Ann Touris Res. 18:433–442.
  • Apergis N, Payne JE. 2012. Renewable and non-renewable energy consumption-growth nexus: evidence from a panel error correction model. Energy Econ. 34:733–738.
  • Becken S. 2005. Harmonising climate change adaptation and mitigation: the case of tourist resorts in Fiji. Global Environ Change. 15:381–393.
  • Belloumi M. 2010. The relationship between tourism receipts, real effective exchange rate and economic growth in Tunisia. Int J Tourism Res. 12:550–560.
  • Ben Jebli M, Ben Youssef S, Apergis N, 2014. The dynamic linkage between CO2 emissions, economic growth, renewable energy consumption, number of tourist arrivals and trade. MPRA Paper 57261, Germany: University Library of Munich.
  • Ben Jebli M, Ben Youssef S, Ozturk I. 2016. Testing Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis: the role of renewable and non-renewable energy consumption and trade in OECD countries. Ecol Indic. 60:824–831.
  • Ben Jebli M, Ben Youssef S. 2015. The environmental kuznets curve, economic growth, renewable and non-renewable energy, and trade in tunisia. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews. 47:173-185.
  • Berrittella M, Bigano A, Roson R, Tol RSJ. 2006. A general equilibrium analysis of climate change impacts on tourism. Tourism Manag. 27:913–924.
  • Breitung J. 2000. The local power of some unit root tests for panel data. In: Baltagi B, editor. Non stationary panels, panel cointegration, and dynamic panels, advances in econometrics (Vol. 15). Amsterdam: JAI Press; p. 161–178.
  • Corrie K, Stoeckl N, Chaiechi T. 2013. Tourism and economic growth in Australia: an empirical investigation of causal links. Tourism Econ. 19:1317–1344.
  • Day J, Cai L. 2012. Environmental and energy-related challenges to sustainable tourism in the United States and China. Int J Sustainable Dev World Ecol. 19:379–388.
  • de Vita G, Katircioglu S, Altinay L, Fethi S, Mercan M. 2015. Revisiting the Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis in a tourism development context. Environ Sci Pollut Res. 22:16652–16663.
  • Dickey DA, Fuller WA. 1979. Distribution of the estimators for autoregressive time series with a unit root. J Am Stat Assoc. 74:427–431.
  • Dogan E. 2015. CO2 emissions, real output, energy consumption, trade, urbanization and financial development: testing the EKC hypothesis for the USA. Environ Sci Pollut Res. 23:1203–1213.
  • Dogan E, Seker F, Bulbul S. 2017. Investigating the impacts of energy consumption, real GDP, tourism and trade on CO2 emissions by accounting for cross-sectional dependence: a panel study of OECD countries. Current Issues Tourism. 20:1–19.
  • Doyle A. 2014. Climate change threatens tourism industry as ski slopes thaw, seas rise. Reuters [Internet].The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
  • Dumitras DE, Pop A. 2009. Perspective on the management of rodna mountains National Park. Bulletin of University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca. Horticulture. 66:164–169.
  • Durbarry R. 2004. Tourism and economic growth: the case of Mauritius. Tourism Econ. 10:389–401.
  • Eastman CM. 1995. Tourism in Kenya and the marginalization of Swahili. Ann Tourism Res. 22:172–185.
  • Engle RF, Granger CWJ. 1987. Co-integration and error correction: representation, estimation, and testing. Econometrica. 55:251–276.
  • Farhani S, Chaibi A, Rault C. 2014. CO2 emissions, output, energy consumption, and trade in Tunisia. Econ Model. 38:426–434.
  • Fayissa B, Nsiah C, Tadasse B. 2008. Impact of tourism on economic growth and development in Africa. Tourism Econ. 14:807–818.
  • Gunduz L, Hatemi-J A. 2005. Is the tourism-led growth hypothesis valid for Turkey? Appl Econ Lett. 12:499–504.
  • Halicioglu F. 2009. An econometric study of CO2 emissions, energy consumption, income and foreign trade in turkey. Energy Policy. 37:1156–1164.
  • Holden A. 2009. The environment-tourism nexus: influence of market ethics. Annuals Tourism Research. 36:373–389.
  • Holzner M. 2011. Tourism and economic development: the beach disease? Tourism Manag. 32:922–933.
  • Hor C, Thaiprasert N. 2015. Analysis of international tourism demand for Cambodia. In: Huynh V-N, Kreinovich V, Sriboonchitta S, Suriya K, editors. Econometrics of risk. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing; p. 415–425.
  • Im KS, Pesaran MH, Shin Y. 2003. Testing for unit roots in heterogeneous panels. J Econom. 115:53–74.
  • Katircioglu ST. 2009a. Revisiting the tourism-led-growth hypothesis for Turkey using the bounds test and Johansen approach for cointegration. Tourism Manag. 30:17–20.
  • Katircioglu ST. 2009b. Trade, tourism and growth: the case of Cyprus. Appl Econ. 41:2741–2750.
  • Katircioglu ST. 2014a. Testing the tourism-induced EKC hypothesis: the case of Singapore. Econ Modeling. 41:383–391.
  • Katircioglu ST. 2014b. International tourism, energy consumption, and environmental pollution: the case of Turkey. Renewable Sustainable Energy Reviews. 36:180–187.
  • Katsuya I. 2016. CO2 emissions, renewable and non-renewable energy consumption, and economic growth: evidence from panel data for developing countries. Economics Bulletin. 36:553-559.
  • Kelly J, Williams PW. 2007. Modelling tourism destination energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions: Whistler, British Columbia, Canada. J Sustain Tourism. 15:67–90.
  • Kivyiro P, Arminen H. 2014. Carbon dioxide emissions, energy consumption, economic growth, and foreign direct investment: causality analysis for sub-Saharan Africa. Energy. 74:595–606.
  • Lee H, Verances JB, Song W. 2009. The tourism-environment causality. Int J Tourism Sci. 9:39–48.
  • Lee JW, Brahmasrene T. 2013. Investigating the influence of tourism on economic growth and carbon emissions: evidence from panel analysis of the European Union. Tourism Manag. 38:69–76.
  • Lee JW, Brahmasrene T. 2016. Tourism effects on the environment and economic sustainability of sub-Saharan Africa. Int J Sustainable Dev World Ecol. 23:221–232.
  • Levin A, Lin CF, Chu CS. 2002. Unit root tests in panel data: asymptotic and finite-sample properties. J Econom. 108:1–24.
  • Maddala GS, Wu SA. 1999. Comparative study of unit root tests with panel data and a new simple test. Oxf Bull Econ Stat. 108:1–24.
  • Magazzino C. 2014. The relationship between CO2 emissions, energy consumption and economic growth in Italy. Int J Sustainable Energy. doi:10.1080/14786451.2014.953160
  • Nepal SK. 2008. Tourism-induced rural energy consumption in the Annapurna region of Nepal. Tourism Manag. 29:89–100.
  • Ng TH, Lye CT, Lim YS. 2015. A decomposition analysis of CO2 emissions: evidence from Malaysia’s tourism industry. Int J Sustainable Dev World Ecol. 23:266–277.
  • Novelli M, Morgan N, Nibigira C. 2012. Tourism in a postconflict situation of fragility. Ann Tourism Res. 39:1446–1469.
  • Oh CO. 2005. The contribution of tourism development to economic growth in the Korean economy. Tourism Manag. 26:39–44.
  • Ozturk I. 2010. A literature survey on energy–growth nexus. Energy Policy. 38:340–349.
  • Ozturk I. 2015. The relationships among tourism development, energy demand, and growth factors in developed and developing countries. Int J Sustainable Dev World Ecol. doi:10.1080/13504509.2015.1092000
  • Ozturk I, Acaravci A. 2009. On the causality between tourism growth and economic growth: empirical evidence from Turkey. Transylvanian Rev Administrative Sci. 25:73–81.
  • Ozturk I, Al-Mulali U, Saboori B. 2015. Investigating the Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis: the role of tourism and ecological footprint. Environ Sci Pollut Res. doi:10.1007/s11356-015-5447-x
  • Pao HT, Tsai CM. 2011. Multivariate Granger causality between CO2 emissions, energy consumption, FDI (foreign direct investment) and GDP (gross domestic product): evidence from a panel of BRIC (Brazil, Russian Federation, India, and China) countries. Energy. 36:685–693.
  • Pedroni P. 2001. Purchasing power parity tests in cointegrated panels. Rev Econ Stat. 83:727–731.
  • Pedroni P. 2004. Panel cointegration: asymptotic and finite sample properties of pooled time series tests with an application to the PPP hypothesis. Econ Theory. 20:597–625.
  • Peeters P, Dubois G. 2010. Tourism travel under climate change mitigation constraints. J Transp Geogr. 18:447–457.
  • Pesaran M. 2004. General diagnostic tests for cross section dependence in panels. Cambridge 445 Working Papers in Economics 435, and CESifo Working Paper Series 1229.
  • Phillips PCB, Perron P. 1988. Testing for a unit root in time series regressions. Biometrika. 75:335–346.
  • Ruhanen L, Shakeela A. 2013. Responding to climate change: Australian tourism industry perspectives on current challenges and future directions. Asia Pac J Tourism Res. 18:35–51.
  • Saarienen J. 2006. Traditions of sustainability in tourism studies. Annals Of Tourism Research. 33(1121-11:40).
  • Sahli M, Nowak JJ. 2007. Does inbound tourism benefit developing countries? A trade theoretic approach. J Travel Res. 45:426–434.
  • Salazar NB. 2006. Touristifying Tanzania: local guides, global discourse. Ann Tourism Res. 33:833–852.
  • Scott D, Peeters P, Gössling S. 2010. Can tourism deliver its “aspirational” greenhouse gas emission reduction targets? J Sustain Tourism. 18:393–408.
  • Sequeira TN, Nunes PM. 2008. Does tourism influence economic growth? A dynamic panel data approach. Appl Econ. 40:2431–2441.
  • Shahbaz M, Solarin SA, Mahmood H, Arouri M. 2013. Does financial development reduce CO2 emissions in Malaysian economy? A time series analysis. Econ Modeling. 35:145–152.
  • Solarin SA. 2014. Tourist arrivals and macroeconomic determinants of CO2 emissions in Malaysia. Anatolia. Int J Tourism Hospitality Res. 25:228–241.
  • Tang CF, Abosedra S. 2014. The impacts of tourism, energy consumption and political instability on economic growth in the MENA countries. Energy Policy. 68(C):458-464 .
  • Tang CF, Tan EC. 2015. Does tourism effectively stimulate malaysia's economic growth?. Tourism Management. 46:158-163.
  • Tang CHH, Jang S. 2009. The tourism–economy causality in the united states: a sub-industry level examination. Tourism Management. 30(4):553-558.
  • Wang SS, Zhou DQ, Zhou P, Wang QW. 2011. CO2 emissions, energy consumption and economic growth in China: a panel data analyses. Energy Policy. 39:4870–4875.
  • Wang YS. 2014. Effects of budgetary constraints on international tourism expenditures. Tourism Manag. 41:9–18.
  • WHO. 2015. World health statistics 2015. WHO Press, World Health Organization, 20 Avenue Appia 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland. [accessed 2016 Jan]. http://www.who.int.
  • World Bank. 2016. World development indicators. [accessed 2016 Jan]. http://www.worldbank.org/data/onlinedatabases/onlinedatabases.html.
  • WTO. 2015. UNWTO tourism highlights. [accessed 2016 Jan]. http://www.unwto.org/.
  • Zaman K, Khan MM, Ahmad M. 2011. Exploring the relationship between tourism development indicators and carbon emissions: a case study of Pakistan. World Appl Sci J. 15:690–701.
  • Zaman K, Shahbaz M, Loganathan N, Raza SA. 2016. Tourism development, energy consumption and Environmental Kuznets Curve: trivariate analysis in the panel of developed and developing countries. Tourism Manag. 54:275–283.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.