2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.apenergy.2017.07.077
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The nexus of renewable energy-agriculture-environment in BRICS

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Cited by 205 publications
(93 citation statements)
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“…As per the data from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 21% of global GHG emissions are caused by agriculture. These emissions are caused mainly by fertilizers, the agro‐based industry and burning of biomass . As agriculture is the backbone of Pakistan's economy, 19.8% of GDP comes from agriculture and livestock and this sector also hosts 42.4% of the country's labor force .…”
Section: Overview Of Sectorial Ghg Emissions In Pakistanmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As per the data from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 21% of global GHG emissions are caused by agriculture. These emissions are caused mainly by fertilizers, the agro‐based industry and burning of biomass . As agriculture is the backbone of Pakistan's economy, 19.8% of GDP comes from agriculture and livestock and this sector also hosts 42.4% of the country's labor force .…”
Section: Overview Of Sectorial Ghg Emissions In Pakistanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These emissions are caused mainly by fertilizers, the agro-based industry and burning of biomass. 77 As agriculture is the backbone of Pakistan's economy, 19.8% of GDP comes from agriculture and livestock and this sector also hosts 42.4% of the country's labor force. 78 As the economy of most developing countries is dependent on agriculture, multiplied CO 2 emissions reduce the yield of croplands, which affects socioeconomic growth.…”
Section: Ghg Emission From Agriculture and Livestockmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A first strand of the literature focuses on the relationship between energy and agriculture commodities, addressing the price co-movements and volatility spillovers. In terms of price comovements, early studies use linear cointegration techniques (Avalos, 2014;Baumeister and Kilian, 2014;Nazlioglu and Soytas, 2012;Saghaian, 2010;Rezitis, 2015;Liu et al, 2017) or multivariate linear regressions (Hassouneh et al, 2012) and document the existence of long-run co-movements or volatility spillovers (Du et al, 2011;Fasanya and Akinbowale, 2019;Ji and Fan, 2012;Serra, 2011;Nazioglu et al, 2013;Mensi et al, 2014;Zhang and Qu, 2015). Studies that are more recent focus on the non-linearity characterising this relationship (Chen et al, 2010;De Nicola et al, 2016;Lucotte, 2016;Natanelov et al, 2011;Pal and Mitra, 2017;Su et al, 2019) and document increased co-movements between energy and agricultural commodity prices, following the recent food crisis and the rise of environmental concerns.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A nivel mundial, el rápido crecimiento en nuevas instalaciones solares fotovoltaicas y parques de generación eólica, están incrementando la capacidad instalada de tecnologías que usan recursos energéticos renovables, superando ya el 20% de recurso renovable utilizado para generación de electricidad [10], [11] y [12]. En tal virtud, ese 20% de la matriz energética mundial ha dejado de ser fósil por integrarse a la red con fuentes limpias, renovables y muchas de ellas recursos locales, mejorando la seguridad energética de muchas regiones.…”
Section: Fuentes No Convencionales De Energía Renovable a Nivel Naciounclassified