Relationships between Renewable Energy Consumption, Social Factors, and Health: A Panel Vector Auto Regression Analysis of a Cluster of 12 EU Countries
Published 2020 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Relationships between Renewable Energy Consumption, Social Factors, and Health: A Panel Vector Auto Regression Analysis of a Cluster of 12 EU Countries
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
Sustainability
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages 2915
Publisher
MDPI AG
Online
2020-04-07
DOI
10.3390/su12072915
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Application of Threshold Regression Analysis to Study the Impact of Clean Energy Development on China’s Carbon Productivity
- (2020) Dongri Han et al. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
- Sustainable Economic Development and Greenhouse Gas Emissions: The Dynamic Impact of Renewable Energy Consumption, GDP, and Corruption
- (2019) Vasylieva et al. Energies
- A Structured Literature Review on Obsolete Electric Vehicles Management Practices
- (2019) Idiano D’Adamo et al. Sustainability
- Who Drives the Transition to a Renewable-Energy Economy? Multi-Actor Perspective on Social Innovation
- (2018) Bongsuk Sung et al. Sustainability
- The role of life cycle assessment in the sustainable transition to a decarbonised gas network through green gas production
- (2018) Alessandro Singlitico et al. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
- A bibliometric and network analysis of Lean and Clean(er) production research (1990/2017)
- (2018) Raffaella Taddeo et al. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
- Parametric Functional Analysis of Variance for Fish Biodiversity Assessment
- (2016) T. Di Battista et al. Journal of Environmental Informatics
- Challenges in Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Management: A Profitability Assessment in Three European Countries
- (2016) Idiano D’Adamo et al. Sustainability
- On the determinants of renewable energy consumption: International evidence
- (2014) Anis Omri et al. ENERGY
- Human health impacts in the life cycle of future European electricity generation
- (2014) Karin Treyer et al. ENERGY POLICY
- Renewable energy consumption – Economic growth nexus for China
- (2014) Boqiang Lin et al. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
- On the causal dynamics between economic growth, renewable energy consumption, CO 2 emissions and trade openness: Fresh evidence from BRICS countries
- (2014) Maamar Sebri et al. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
- The impact of clean energy investments on the Greek economy: An input–output analysis (2010–2020)
- (2013) M. Markaki et al. ENERGY POLICY
- Energy consumption, human well-being and economic development in central and eastern European nations: A cautionary tale of sustainability
- (2013) Andrew K. Jorgenson et al. ENERGY POLICY
- Renewable energy consumption–economic growth nexus in Turkey
- (2013) Oguz Ocal et al. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
- Does increasing energy or electricity consumption improve quality of life in industrial nations?
- (2011) Allan Mazur ENERGY POLICY
- The renewable energy consumption–growth nexus in Central America
- (2010) Nicholas Apergis et al. APPLIED ENERGY
- CO2 emissions, nuclear energy, renewable energy and economic growth in the US
- (2010) Kojo Menyah et al. ENERGY POLICY
- A Human Health Perspective on Climate Change: A Report Outlining Research Needs on the Human Health Effects of Climate Change
- (2010) Christopher Portier et al. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
- Renewable energy consumption and income in emerging economies
- (2009) Perry Sadorsky ENERGY POLICY
- Global public health: a scorecard
- (2008) Robert Beaglehole et al. LANCET
Find Funding. Review Successful Grants.
Explore over 25,000 new funding opportunities and over 6,000,000 successful grants.
ExploreBecome a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get Started