Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries

Promoting green growth, especially across underdeveloped countries, is a well-acknowledged agenda that has prime relevance for making the global economic growth processes more ecologically sustainable over time. Hence, taking this critically important issue into cognizance, this current study consid...

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Main Author: Muntasir Murshed
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-01-01
Series:Environmental Challenges
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010024000106
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author Muntasir Murshed
author_facet Muntasir Murshed
author_sort Muntasir Murshed
collection DOAJ
description Promoting green growth, especially across underdeveloped countries, is a well-acknowledged agenda that has prime relevance for making the global economic growth processes more ecologically sustainable over time. Hence, taking this critically important issue into cognizance, this current study considers a sample of 80 underdeveloped nations from different regional locations for retrospecting how technological financial provisions, natural resource dependency, urbanization, international trade, foreign direct investment, and corruption control have affected their annual carbon emission growth figures during the 2000-2021 time frame. In a nutshell, the analytical findings for the concerned underdeveloped countries as a whole show that scaling financial grant provisions for investing in technological innovation programs helps to reduce environmental challenges by independently plunging the yearly emission growth rates, while jointly mitigating the emission growth figures further alongside more consumption of natural resources. Besides, the results also confirm the emission growth rate-surging impacts exerted by rising levels of natural resource dependency and international trade openness. By contrast, controlling the spread of corruption is identified as an effective emission growth rate-inhibiting mechanism while urbanization and influx of foreign direct investment are found to not bother the annual carbon emission growth figures of the concerned underdeveloped nations. More importantly, these abovementioned findings are observed to be heterogeneous for underdeveloped countries having different national income levels, regional locations, pollution intensities, natural resource dependency levels, and technological innovation-related financial provisions. Therefore, in light of the analytical findings, it is recommended that the underdeveloped nations boost the output productivity and carbon-intensity levels of their respective natural resource industries, scale funding levels for technological innovation programs, promote clean energy consumption while raising energy efficiency levels across urban areas, make trade baskets less embodied with carbon, attract clean foreign direct investment, and enforce stringent corruption controlling laws.
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spelling doaj.art-026d2c8aa0f8459a936f9bae80a64f932024-02-28T05:14:27ZengElsevierEnvironmental Challenges2667-01002024-01-0114100844Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countriesMuntasir Murshed0Department of Economics, School of Business and Economics, North South University, Dhaka 1229, Bangladesh; Department of Journalism, Media and Communications, Daffodil International University, Dhaka, Bangladesh; Corresponding author: Department of Economics, School of Business and Economics, North South University, Dhaka 1229, Bangladesh.Promoting green growth, especially across underdeveloped countries, is a well-acknowledged agenda that has prime relevance for making the global economic growth processes more ecologically sustainable over time. Hence, taking this critically important issue into cognizance, this current study considers a sample of 80 underdeveloped nations from different regional locations for retrospecting how technological financial provisions, natural resource dependency, urbanization, international trade, foreign direct investment, and corruption control have affected their annual carbon emission growth figures during the 2000-2021 time frame. In a nutshell, the analytical findings for the concerned underdeveloped countries as a whole show that scaling financial grant provisions for investing in technological innovation programs helps to reduce environmental challenges by independently plunging the yearly emission growth rates, while jointly mitigating the emission growth figures further alongside more consumption of natural resources. Besides, the results also confirm the emission growth rate-surging impacts exerted by rising levels of natural resource dependency and international trade openness. By contrast, controlling the spread of corruption is identified as an effective emission growth rate-inhibiting mechanism while urbanization and influx of foreign direct investment are found to not bother the annual carbon emission growth figures of the concerned underdeveloped nations. More importantly, these abovementioned findings are observed to be heterogeneous for underdeveloped countries having different national income levels, regional locations, pollution intensities, natural resource dependency levels, and technological innovation-related financial provisions. Therefore, in light of the analytical findings, it is recommended that the underdeveloped nations boost the output productivity and carbon-intensity levels of their respective natural resource industries, scale funding levels for technological innovation programs, promote clean energy consumption while raising energy efficiency levels across urban areas, make trade baskets less embodied with carbon, attract clean foreign direct investment, and enforce stringent corruption controlling laws.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010024000106Natural resourcesTechnological innovation financingEnvironmental challengesSustainable environmentCarbon dioxide
spellingShingle Muntasir Murshed
Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries
Environmental Challenges
Natural resources
Technological innovation financing
Environmental challenges
Sustainable environment
Carbon dioxide
title Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries
title_full Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries
title_fullStr Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries
title_short Exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption-related environmental challenges in developing countries
title_sort exploring the relevance of investing in technological innovation programs for tackling natural resource consumption related environmental challenges in developing countries
topic Natural resources
Technological innovation financing
Environmental challenges
Sustainable environment
Carbon dioxide
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667010024000106
work_keys_str_mv AT muntasirmurshed exploringtherelevanceofinvestingintechnologicalinnovationprogramsfortacklingnaturalresourceconsumptionrelatedenvironmentalchallengesindevelopingcountries