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A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 February 2026

Vusal Gasimli
Affiliation:
Academy of Public Administration under the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan Center for Analysis of Economic Reforms and Communication, Azerbaijan
Gunay Guliyeva
Affiliation:
Azerbaijan State University of Economics, Azerbaijan
Rashad Baghirov*
Affiliation:
Azerbaijan Tourism and Management University, Azerbaijan
*
Corresponding author: Rashad Baghirov; Email: rashad.baghirov@hotmail.com
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Abstract

This study examines the effectiveness of economic instruments in reducing carbon dioxide emissions in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. The focus is on renewable energy consumption and environmental taxation. Previous studies often report that both instruments reduce emissions. However, much of the literature relies on single econometric methods. This may overlook cross-country heterogeneity, cross-sectional dependence and dynamic adjustment effects. To address these limitations, this study applies a multi-model panel econometric framework using balanced OECD data from 2000 to 2022. Fixed effects, mean group, pooled mean group and common correlated effects estimators are employed. These methods allow the identification of both short-run and long-run relationships while accounting for unobserved common factors. The results show that renewable energy consumption consistently and significantly reduces carbon dioxide emissions across all model specifications. The effect is stronger in the long run. In contrast, environmental tax revenue shows weak and unstable effects that depend on model choice. Economic growth does not have a significant long-run impact on emissions. This suggests that efficiency gains and technological progress dominate scale effects in advanced economies. The findings highlight the importance of methodological robustness and support prioritizing renewable energy expansion over environmental taxation alone.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2026. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Table 1. Variable definitions and sources

Figure 1

Table 2. Descriptive statistics

Figure 2

Table 3. Correlation matrix

Figure 3

Table 4. Null and alternative hypotheses for key variables

Figure 4

Table 5. Panel unit root test results

Figure 5

Table 6. Error correction terms by country

Figure 6

Figure 1. Error correction term (ECT) coefficients by country, with color-coding indicating the statistical significance and reliability of automatic correction mechanisms.

Figure 7

Table 7. Error correction terms by country – EKC specification

Figure 8

Table 8. Main regression results – four-model framework

Figure 9

Figure 2. Comparison of estimated coefficients across the FD-FE, MG, PMG and CCEMG models, demonstrating the robustness of key relationships.

Figure 10

Table 9. Main regression results – EKC specification (Four-model framework)

Figure 11

Figure 3. Policy-relevant effects: renewable energy versus environmental tax (focus on variables amenable to policy intervention).

Figure 12

Table 10. Endogeneity test results

Figure 13

Table 11. System GMM robustness checks

Figure 14

Table 12. Panel diagnostic tests

Figure 15

Table 13. Short-run versus long-run elasticity comparison

Figure 16

Figure 4. Short-run versus long-run effects on CO₂ emissions: comparison of immediate and equilibrium impacts across key variables.

Figure 17

Figure 5. Impulse response functions showing the comparative effects of a 10% shock in each variable on CO2 emissions over 25 years.

Figure 18

Table 14. Impulse response function summary (selected horizons)

Figure 19

Figure 6. Country-level policy performance: annual renewable energy growth (%) plotted against annual CO₂ emissions change (%), identifying leaders and laggards.

Figure 20

Table 15. Policy effectiveness leaders and laggards

Figure 21

Figure A1. CO2 emissions trend by country.

Figure 22

Figure A2. Levelized cost of electricity by technology (2023 USD/kWh) – percent change in 2010 and 2023.

Figure 23

Figure A3. Global mean temperature anomalies and trends (1850–2024).

Figure 24

Figure A4. Correlation heatmap of all log-transformed variables used in the empirical analysis.

Figure 25

Figure A5. Country-specific speed of adjustment to long-run equilibrium, measured by the error correction term (ECT) coefficient.

Figure 26

Figure A6. Ranking of countries from strongest to weakest error correction mechanism based on ECT coefficient magnitude.

Figure 27

Figure A7. Error correction term coefficients by country, color-coded by statistical significance level.

Figure 28

Figure A8. Stability of short-run and long-run coefficient estimates across multiple model specifications.

Figure 29

Figure A9. Comparison of policy-relevant coefficient estimates across different time horizons and estimation methods.

Figure 30

Figure A10. Distribution of residuals from the four primary econometric models.

Figure 31

Figure A11. Normal Q–Q plot of residuals from the first-difference fixed effects model.

Figure 32

Figure A12. Normal Q–Q plot of residuals from the mean group model.

Figure 33

Figure A13. Normal Q–Q plot of residuals from the pooled mean group model.

Figure 34

Figure A14. Residuals plotted against fitted values for the first-difference fixed effects model.

Figure 35

Figure A15. Residuals plotted against fitted values for the mean group model.

Figure 36

Figure A16. Residuals plotted against fitted values for the pooled mean group model.

Figure 37

Figure A17. Residuals from the first-difference fixed effects model plotted over the time series.

Figure 38

Figure A18. Cross-sectional correlation of residuals from the first-difference fixed effects model.

Figure 39

Figure A19. Percentage change in coefficient magnitude from short-run (FD-FE) to long-run (MG) estimates.

Figure 40

Figure A20. Impulse response functions for the effect of a 10% shock in each variable on CO2 emissions over 25 years.

Figure 41

Figure A21. Cumulative effects on CO2 emissions over 25 years following a one-time 10% shock in each variable.

Figure 42

Figure A22. Policy mix effectiveness: renewable growth versus environmental taxation.

Figure 43

Figure A23. Environmental tax effectiveness with econometric context.

Figure 44

Figure A24. Renewable energy growth versus CO2 emission change.

Figure 45

Figure A25. Average residuals by year across all estimated models.

Author comment: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Editors,

I am pleased to submit our manuscript entitled “Assessing the Impact of Environmental Tax Revenue and Renewable Energy on Carbon Dioxide Emissions: A Panel Data Analysis” for consideration in Cambridge Prisms: Energy Transitions.

This paper examines how environmental tax revenue and renewable energy consumption jointly affect CO₂ emissions in seven advanced OECD countries—Australia, Denmark, France, Germany, Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom—over 2000–2022. Using panel data analysis with fixed and random effects models, we find that both higher environmental tax revenues and greater renewable energy use significantly reduce CO₂ emissions. Renewable energy is a particularly strong and consistent driver, while environmental taxes have a more modest but still meaningful effect. These results highlight the complementary roles of fiscal and clean energy policies in advancing decarbonization and sustainable growth.

The manuscript is original, has not been published elsewhere, and is not under review by any other journal.

Thank you for considering our submission.

Sincerely,

Rashad Baghirov (Corresponding Author)

Azerbaijan Tourism and Management University, Azerbaijan

Email: rashad.baghirov@hotmail.com

Co-authors:

Prof. Dr. Vusal Gasimli

Academy of Public Administration under the President of Azerbaijan,

Center for Analysis of Economic Reforms and Communication,

qasimlivusal@yahoo.com

Assoc. Prof. PhD Gunay Guliyeva

Center for Analysis of Economic Reforms and Communication,

Azerbaijan State University of Economics (UNEC), Business Management

ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6782-0770

gunayguliyeva@unec.edu.az

Review: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R0/PR2

Comments

I have reviewed the manuscript and according to my view the researchers have explored an interesting topic with great scientific value. However, the manuscript is still in need of significant upgrades. I recommend minor revision and would be willing to reconsider my opinion if authors comply with following instructions:

I would encourage to modify title as it needs to be concise and more accurate.

How does policy recommendation by current study differs from published research? There is need to shed more light in this direction.

The methodology section needs to provide more details with particular focus on how theoretical foundations for current study were laid and how authors have used such information to arrive at sampled dataset.

Conclusion section to my liking remains to be appealing. The revised version must be more focus oriented and illustrate the scientific values.

Please highlight what distinguishes this study from earlier ones in this field and what are its benefits and drawbacks?

Specify the limitations of the study.

Some fresh papers can be added, eg:

https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.70359

https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.70220

https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.3464

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ribaf.2025.102837

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.renene.2022.01.077

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2021.111735

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2020.111146

https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.2125

Review: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R0/PR3

Conflict of interest statement

Review of: Assessing the Impact of Environmental Tax Revenue and Renewable Energy on Carbon Dioxide Emissions: A Panel Data AnalysisSuggestions for Improvement: 1. Figures and Visual Aids: ◦ Figure 1: Recommend relocating to the Appendix. The vertical axes should use consistent scales to enable meaningful comparisons, as the current configuration hinders interpretability. ◦ Figure 2: Suggest moving to the Appendix. The inclusion of multiple figures disrupts the text’s flow. Additionally, as these charts are not authored by the researchers, they could be removed or relegated to the Appendix. ◦ Figure 3: Similarly, consider moving to the Appendix to streamline the main text. ◦ Diagnostic Charts: All diagnostic-related figures should be consolidated in the Appendix to maintain focus on the core narrative. 2. Hypothesis Formulation: ◦ The hypothesis should be reframed as a null hypothesis, given that OLS assumes a coefficient of zero. The results, which reject the null, should be clearly articulated to align with this framework. 3. Methodology: ◦ While the methodology is theoretically sound, its application to the time series data appears flawed. The analysis does not adequately account for the properties of the data, particularly potential non-stationarity. Primary Concerns: 1. Data Relevance: ◦ The dataset may be outdated. More recent data, if available, should be incorporated to enhance the study’s relevance, though this is a secondary concern. 2. Non-Stationarity and Spurious Results (Primary Concern): ◦ The presence of non-stationary series (e.g., CO2 emissions) raises significant concerns. If the variables are integrated of order one [I(1)] and not cointegrated, the demeaned series may remain non-stationary, leading to unreliable inferences. ◦ The results risk being spurious due to these issues. To address this, the authors should: ▪ Test for cointegration among the variables. ▪ Employ an Error Correction Term (ECT) methodology or, at minimum, use first-difference fixed effects to ensure robust inference. Recommendation:Given the critical issue of potential spurious results due to non-stationarity and the lack of cointegration testing, we recommend REJECTION of the manuscript in its current form. The authors should revise the study by incorporating cointegration tests and adopting an appropriate methodology (e.g., ECT or first-difference fixed effects) to ensure the validity of the findings.

Comments

Review of: Assessing the Impact of Environmental Tax Revenue and Renewable Energy on Carbon Dioxide Emissions: A Panel Data Analysis

Suggestions for Improvement:

1. Figures and Visual Aids:

◦ Figure 1: Recommend relocating to the Appendix. The vertical axes should use consistent scales to enable meaningful comparisons, as the current configuration hinders interpretability.

◦ Figure 2: Suggest moving to the Appendix. The inclusion of multiple figures disrupts the text’s flow. Additionally, as these charts are not authored by the researchers, they could be removed or relegated to the Appendix.

◦ Figure 3: Similarly, consider moving to the Appendix to streamline the main text.

◦ Diagnostic Charts: All diagnostic-related figures should be consolidated in the Appendix to maintain focus on the core narrative.

2. Hypothesis Formulation:

◦ The hypothesis should be reframed as a null hypothesis, given that OLS assumes a coefficient of zero. The results, which reject the null, should be clearly articulated to align with this framework.

3. Methodology:

◦ While the methodology is theoretically sound, its application to the time series data appears flawed. The analysis does not adequately account for the properties of the data, particularly potential non-stationarity.

Primary Concerns:

1. Data Relevance:

◦ The dataset may be outdated. More recent data, if available, should be incorporated to enhance the study’s relevance, though this is a secondary concern.

2. Non-Stationarity and Spurious Results (Primary Concern):

◦ The presence of non-stationary series (e.g., CO2 emissions) raises significant concerns. If the variables are integrated of order one [I(1)] and not cointegrated, the demeaned series may remain non-stationary, leading to unreliable inferences.

◦ The results risk being spurious due to these issues. To address this, the authors should:

▪ Test for cointegration among the variables.

▪ Employ an Error Correction Term (ECT) methodology or, at minimum, use first-difference fixed effects to ensure robust inference.

Recommendation:

Given the critical issue of potential spurious results due to non-stationarity and the lack of cointegration testing, we recommend REJECTION of the manuscript in its current form. The authors should revise the study by incorporating cointegration tests and adopting an appropriate methodology (e.g., ECT or first-difference fixed effects) to ensure the validity of the findings.

Recommendation: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R0/PR4

Comments

Dear Authors,

The reviews for your manuscript have been delivered. Based on these reviews, I have reached a decision of “Major Revision” before having another look at the manuscript. You will see that the reviewers see merit in the article while expressing major concerns, most notably about the relevance of the dataset, the connections between the theoretical framework and methodology section, and the potential for non-stationarity and spurious results in the data analysis.

Please be sure to take all comments into account when revising your manuscript and to provide a detailed response to the reviewers.

Sincerely,

Chad M. Baum

Decision: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Review: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R1/PR7

Conflict of interest statement

thanks

Comments

I have some suggestion about your paper.

1. Highlight and abstract is poorly written, serious structure issue.

2. Introduction is not convincing it has no substantive content that can justify your study importance. the current introduction is just narration of irrelevant inconsistent sentence that lacks originality.

3. There is significant contribution of the study in the contemporary literature. literature review is too lengthy and fails to provide motivation for this study.

4. Data section is poor structured, the authors should follow some standard format for the data presentation

5. Results have no content to justify the results and have no relationship with the theoretical framework

6. Policy implication is mere narration statement.

7. Authors need to thoroughly improve the language of the study.

8. Some fresh papers can be added, eg:

https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.70422

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.renene.2022.01.077

Review: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R1/PR8

Conflict of interest statement

No competing interests.

Comments

Dear Authors!

It’s indeed a very vital and rigorous work on accessing the consequences of economic instruments on the environmental quality in the context of OECD economies. I truly appreciate your efforts in conducting the significant work. However, here are few questions and suggestions related to this work.

1. The underpinning theory in the study is missing. In the prevailing literature on this topic, researchers have employed the Environmental Kuznets Curve hypothesis (EKC hypothesis) and a quadratic term of GDP per capita is also used in the model. By doing this the impacts of economic growth on the environmental quality are accessed efficiently and are considered reliable for the policy purpose. However, in your study, the quadratic term of GDP per capita is not included. This may obscure the true outcomes of the economic growth on environmental quality in the OECD countries due to omitted variable bias. As you see the discussion section of your study, it is mentioned that the economic growth has not been found asserting substantial influence on the carbon dioxide emissions. Further, you have stated that this is due to the “technique effect”. This technique effect is actually a part or stage of the EKC hypothesis. Therefore, you are suggested to include the quadratic term of GDP per capita in your study or you need to provide valid justification for not including the quadratic term of GDP per capita in the econometric model.

2. Further, equation numbers are also not assigned.

3. Likewise, figure numbers and titles are missing.

4. You are also suggested to improve the Communication quality of the manuscript.

Wish you Good Luck!

Recommendation: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R1/PR9

Comments

Dear Authors,

Thanks for your patience and bearing with me while I gather the reviews. You will see that the reviewers are positive about the revised manuscript, while still highlight a few particular areas for further attention. These include an important comment about the theoretical model, recommendations to re-formulate the introduction and literature review, and more general comments related to formatting and overall language quality.

The manuscript can therefore be reconsidered after these revisions are taken into account. Please be sure to provide a document enumerating how all the comments from the reviewers have been addressed.

Decision: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R1/PR10

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R2/PR11

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Review: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R2/PR12

Comments

Acceptable

Review: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R2/PR13

Conflict of interest statement

No competing interests.

Comments

Dear Authors!

I appreciate that you tried to improve the manuscript quality. However, there is a question that the results of the EKC in your research are novel and contrary to the economic growth and pollution relationship as predicted by the EKC hypotheses. What could be the plausible reasons for this unique outcome in your research? I suggest you to please discuss the plausible reasons in your study in the discussion section.

Wish you Good Luck !

Recommendation: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R2/PR14

Comments

Dear Authors,

Thanks for your hard work on the manuscript. You will see that the reviewers are positive about the progress so far, with one specific recommendation to consider and expound upon the relationship between the EKC and pollution in more detail for the discussion.

Thanks and best

Chad M. Baum

Decision: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R2/PR15

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R3/PR16

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Recommendation: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R3/PR17

Comments

Dear Authors,

Thanks for the new section - and for satisfactorily handling all the Reviewer comments. We are nearly to the end of the process. Before being able to accept, please be sure to engage with the literature, particularly in the discussion. Having read the new section, it became clear that citations would be useful here - as well as throughout the discussion section (if not elsewhere).

I therefore recommend what should be one final round of minor revisions: please take a final look and make judicious use of citations to help strengthen and provide context to your findings and arguments.

Warm regards

Chad M. Baum

Decision: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R3/PR18

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R4/PR19

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Recommendation: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R4/PR20

Comments

Thanks to the authors for their hard work on the revisions. I am pleased to be able to accept the manuscript. Congratulations!

Decision: A multi-model analysis of the short-run and long-run effects of environmental taxes and renewable energy on decarbonization — R4/PR21

Comments

No accompanying comment.