The role of financial credits, economic growth, and sustainable energy on the environmental condition in Iraq

Abstract

Due to enormous commercial and financial operations that demand new literature and the experience of regulators, environmental degradation has become an important issue. Consequently, this study investigates the effect of financial credits, economic growth (EG), renewable energy (RE) output, and energy import on Iraq's environmental condition (carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. The paper also utilized a control variable, such as industrialization, to predict Iraq's environmental circumstances. From 1991 through 2020, secondary statistics were gathered from the World Development Indicators (WDI). Dynamic Auto-regressive Distributed Lags (DARDL) were used to examine the variables' relationship. Financial credits, economic growth, RE output, energy import, and industrialization were found to have a negative relationship with CO2 emissions in Iraq. The research advises policymakers on preventing environmental deterioration through effective financial credits, economic growth, and renewable energy.Mona Abdel Sakban Fahd (University of Babylon, College of Administration and Economics), Mahdi Khaleel Shadeed Al-Mamoori (University of Babylon, College of Administration and Economics), Hussein Abbas Al-Shammari (University of Babylon, College of Administration and Economics)Includes bibliographical references

    Similar works