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The impact of geopolitical risk and policy uncertainty on CO₂ emissions: A CS-ARDL analysis of G7 economies

Nuriddin ShanyazovM.Sc., Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Mamun University, UzbekistanSanaatbek K. SalayevDSc., Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Mamun University, UzbekistanSamariddin MakhmudovPh.D., Department of Finance and Tourism, Faculty of Economics, Termez University of Economics and Service; Department of Finance, Faculty of Economics, Alfraganus University, UzbekistanIkhtiyor SharipovPh.D., Department of Business Management, Faculty of Economics, Mamun University, UzbekistanSanabar MatkuliyevaM.Sc., Department of Accounting, Faculty of Economics, Mamun University, UzbekistanJavohir BabajanovPh.D., Department of Business Administration and Management, Faculty of Economics, Urgench State University, UzbekistanDilshodbek SaidovPh.D., Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Urgench Ranch University of Technology, Uzbekistan
Environmental Economicsjournal2026en
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Abstract

Type of the article: Research ArticleAbstractThis study aims to empirically examine the dynamic effects of geopolitical risk, economic policy uncertainty, and climate policy uncertainty on CO₂ emissions in G7 economies, utilizing annual data from 1990 to 2022. To account for cross-sectional dependence and parameter heterogeneity, the analysis employs a cross-sectional autoregressive distributed lag (CS-ARDL) model. Diagnostic tests confirm significant cross-sectional dependence and slope heterogeneity among the variables. All variables are integrated of order one, I (1), confirmed by unit root tests. In contrast, the cointegration test provides a strong indication of a stable long-run relationship among geopolitical risk, policy uncertainty measures, and CO₂ emissions. The outcomes show that a 1% rise in the geopolitical risk index leads to a statistically significant long-run rise of 0.042% in per capita CO₂ emissions. In addition, a 1% increase in economic policy uncertainty and climate policy uncertainty is associated with long-run increases of 0.028% and 0.015%, respectively. These results remain robust across alternative estimators. Overall, the evidence suggests that heightened geopolitical risk and policy-related uncertainties significantly exacerbate environmental degradation in G7 economies, highlighting the necessity for strategies that improve stability, reduce uncertainty, and encourage renewable energy adoption as part of a long-term environmental strategy.

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