The Influence of Biomass Energy Consumption on CO2 Emissions: A Wavelet Coherence Approach

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Date

2016

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Heidelberg

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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Abstract

In terms of today, one may argue, throughout observations from energy literature papers, that (i) one of the main contributors of the global warming is carbon dioxide emissions, (ii) the fossil fuel energy usage greatly contributes to the carbon dioxide emissions, and (iii) the simulations from energy models attract the attention of policy makers to renewable energy as alternative energy source to mitigate the carbon dioxide emissions. Although there appears to be intensive renewable energy works in the related literature regarding renewables' efficiency/impact on environmental quality, a researcher might still need to follow further studies to review the significance of renewables in the environment since (i) the existing seminal papers employ time series models and/or panel data models or some other statistical observation to detect the role of renewables in the environment and (ii) existing papers consider mostly aggregated renewable energy source rather than examining the major component(s) of aggregated renewables. This paper attempted to examine clearly the impact of biomass on carbon dioxide emissions in detail through time series and frequency analyses. Hence, the paper follows wavelet coherence analyses. The data covers the US monthly observations ranging from 1984:1 to 2015 for the variables of total energy carbon dioxide emissions, biomass energy consumption, coal consumption, petroleum consumption, and natural gas consumption. The paper thus, throughout wavelet coherence and wavelet partial coherence analyses, observes frequency properties as well as time series properties of relevant variables to reveal the possible significant influence of biomass usage on the emissions in the USA in both the short-term and the long-term cycles. The paper also reveals, finally, that the biomass consumption mitigates CO2 emissions in the long run cycles after the year 2005 in the USA.

Description

Baglitas, Hayriye Hilal/0000-0002-3031-6271; Kocak, Emrah/0000-0002-5889-3126; Ozturk, Ilhan/0000-0002-6521-0901; Bulut, Umit/0000-0002-8964-0332; Bilgili, Faik/0000-0003-4138-6897; Mugaloglu, Erhan/0000-0001-5362-6259;

Keywords

Biomass Energy, Fossil Energy, CO2 Emissions, Wavelet Coherence, Signal Processing, Energy Consumption, Signal processing, Fossil Fuels, Wavelet coherence, Wavelet Analysis, Biomass energy, Carbon Dioxide, CO2 emissions, Global Warming, Energy consumption, Fossil energy, Biomass, Renewable Energy, Energy Consumption, Wavelet Coherence, Fossil Energy, Biomass Energy, Signal Processing, CO2 Emissions

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

02 engineering and technology, 0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering

Citation

WoS Q

N/A

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
130

Source

Environmental Science and Pollution Research

Volume

23

Issue

19

Start Page

19043

End Page

19061
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Citations

CrossRef : 37

Scopus : 132

PubMed : 13

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 75

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8

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