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Article

CO2 Emissions in Indonesia: The Role of Urbanization and Economic Activities towards Net Zero Carbon

1
Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Sebelas Maret, Surakarta 57126, Indonesia
2
Faculty of Economics, Universitas Negeri Semarang, Semarang 50229, Indonesia
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Economies 2022, 10(4), 72; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies10040072
Submission received: 2 February 2022 / Revised: 2 March 2022 / Accepted: 16 March 2022 / Published: 23 March 2022

Abstract

:
This study aims to analyze the nexus between CO2 emissions, urbanization, and economic activity, as well as identify whether the pollution haven hypothesis is proven in Indonesia. It utilized time series data of Indonesia during the 1971–2019 period. Furthermore, the vector error correction model (VECM) was used to determine the long-run and short-run interplay using cointegration and Granger causality approaches. The empirical results showed the pollution haven hypothesis occurred in Indonesia. A long-term relationship with CO2 emissions was observed from the model. In addition, unidirectional causality occurred from urbanization, economic growth, exports, and foreign direct investment to CO2 emissions in the short term. It was concluded that the achievement of the Paris Agreement will be successful when the committed countries are courageous in transforming their economy. However, major adjustments are needed, where all parties need to have the same vision towards net zero carbon.

1. Introduction

The 2021 UN climate change conference (COP26) was held in Glasgow, Scotland, on 31 October–12 November 2021. This event is an extension of the Paris Agreement and serves as a reminder that a big agenda needs to be immediately carried out to address climate change due to human activities. Several countries are challenged with the trade-off between economic growth and environmental degradation. The environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) hypothesis explains an inverted U-shaped relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation. This means environmental pressure increases in the early stages of economic growth due to the increased release of pollutants as well as extensive and intensive exploitation of natural resources associated with greater use of production (Grossman and Krueger 1991; Özokcu and Özdemir 2017; Shahbaz et al. 2019; Rahman et al. 2020).
Also, it is found that the efforts to reach a turning point are challenging in terms of improving environmental quality. CO2 emissions are increased when economic development activities are high. This indicates that the quicker the regional economic growth, the worse the air pollution (Hossain 2011; Ben Abdallah et al. 2013; Hasanov et al. 2018).
Before the pandemic, Indonesia was ranked as one of the world’s emerging markets at the end of 2019. In fact, the economic growth has been reasonably consistent at about 5.1% in 2019 due to the strong trust of foreign investors. However, in 2015, Indonesia became the fourth-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, which is a major source of concern. According to the World Bank Indicators released in 2020, there was an increase in CO2 emissions of 4.4%/year on average between 2001 and 2018. The highest increase and lowest decrease in the emissions occurred in 2011 and 2013 at 14.8% and 7.5%, respectively. Furthermore, the economic performance increased by 0.1–0.28 points, but the air quality decreased by more than 10%, a condition that will be a threat to Indonesia. According to the World Bank, about 220 million Indonesians will live in cities and towns by 2045. Consequently, the high population density will lead to accelerated economic activity in the region. This is in line with Liang et al. (2019), who stated that rapid urbanization will promote social and economic development but raise some environmental pollution problems (Camagni et al. 1998). This implies that environmental quality will deteriorate as more resources are used to promote economic activity.
COP26 provides momentum for the nation to prepare risk mitigation in international trade with the application of levies on carbon emissions. Empirical studies related to the influence of international trade in Indonesia showed different results. Bhattacharya et al. (2017) found that there was no significant effect between trade openness and CO2 emissions. Meanwhile, Nathaniel (2020) stated that Indonesian trade can reduce natural CO2 emissions in the short-term but exacerbate environmental degradation in the long-term. The open economic system has contributed to CO2 emissions (Chen et al. 2021a); therefore, this study focused more specifically on the relationship between exports and imports of CO2 emissions due to the carbon emission tax policy on international trade. In addition, it harbors suspicion about the two responses that are different from CO2 emissions; hence, separate identification is needed to determine the final policy. Studies of exports and imports have provided different results. Exports promote an increase in emissions (Salehnia et al. 2020) and also improve environmental quality (Hasanov et al. 2018; Pié et al. 2018). The result of import activities showed that imports cause environmental degradation (Hasanov et al. 2018; Pié et al. 2018; Salehnia et al. 2020), while Aljawareen and Saddam (2017) stated that it is a stimulus for improving air quality.
In advance, the existence of the pollution haven hypothesis needs to be tested. Salahuddin et al. (2019) used the link between trade openness induced by globalization to prove the pollution haven hypothesis. Meanwhile, this study examines whether foreign direct investment results in increased CO2 emissions. The reinforcing reason is that Indonesia has great potential for foreign investment. According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), Indonesia is among the top 20 developing countries that were the destination for FDI globally in 2017 and 2018. Hence, the relationship between investment and the environment in these countries can be examined to prove the pollution haven hypothesis. Based on previous studies, there is a two-way relationship between FDI and CO2 emissions (Tang and Tan 2015; Omri et al. 2014). The connection between CO2 emissions and FDI will be beneficial to the environment when the pollution haven hypothesis is not discovered (Chen et al. 2021b). Meanwhile, Omri et al. (2014) stated that FDI had a unidirectional relationship and a positive effect on CO2 emissions in Qatar. Kizilkaya (2017) discovered that foreign direct investment was ineffective on CO2 emissions in Turkey. Therefore, this study aims to analyze the interplay of urbanization, economic growth, exports, imports, foreign direct investment, and CO2 emissions. It also proves whether the pollution halo or haven hypotheses existed in Indonesia from 1971 to 2019. It is of prominent importance to developing countries or those highly dependent on international trade, related to the global commitment to reducing carbon emissions and the transition process toward a low-carbon country.
The theoretical basis and previous empirical studies are presented after the background of the study to comprehend the relationship between urbanization, economic growth, export, import, foreign direct investment, and CO2 emissions. Afterward, the methods section provides an overview of the variables used, and the stages carried out. The next section presents the results, which are subsequently deepened by the discussion, as well as the conclusions and policy implications.

2. Literature Review

The relationship between urbanization and environmental quality is founded on the concept of an urban area in which demand-driven activities center on cost reduction. This is due to its closeness to other regions with similar proximity, endowment resources, and high population density. In addition, because of this association, people are able to rationally relocate to urban areas. Urbanization is formed through socio-economic development. According to Pernia et al. (1983), population growth is often higher in rural areas than urban areas. This indicates that there is a direct demographic effect, which involves reducing the proportion of urban areas. It was also stated that population growth hampers economic development. This indicates that urbanization is either influenced directly or indirectly by socio-economic development, through population growth. Meanwhile, Firebaugh (1979) stated that it is influenced directly and indirectly by the deterioration of rural conditions and economic development, as well as previous urbanization, respectively. Hence, urbanization theory should consider the conditions in rural and urban areas because it is applied to both developed and developing countries.
The migration of people to urban areas is carried out through different phases of the urbanization process as follows (Sarungu 2001). Firstly, there is agrarian urbanization, which entails innovation in agricultural technology application and leads to an increase in assertive productivity. Secondly, there is urbanization in industrialized metropolitan areas. It is characterized by an increasing concentration of population and economic activity in the vicinity of major cities, as well as substantial infrastructure investment to facilitate efficient export and import operations (Turok and McGranahan 2013). Thirdly, in a growing metropolitan area, there is a postindustrial non-metropolitan counter urbanization, which is characterized by a reduction in the population’s physical and socioeconomic capacity.
The findings of empirical studies showed different results. Urbanization and pollution have bidirectional causality (Santillán-Salgado et al. 2020; Nosheen et al. 2020; Salahuddin et al. 2019; Amin et al. 2020; Abbasi et al. 2020;), while there is a one-way causality between urbanization and CO2 (Ponce and Alvarado 2019; Bashir et al. 2021). Specifically, several empirical studies were conducted to determine the process that occurs in post-industrial non-metropolitan counter-urbanization. Urban regions, road area per capita, and GDP were found to have negative effects on CO2 emissions (Qiu et al. 2019). Therefore, it needs to be controlled with careful planning and mitigation of CO2 emissions (Yang et al. 2015; Hassan et al. 2020) because emissions and urbanization have a relationship (Santillán-Salgado et al. 2020).
Previous studies showed an inverted U-shaped relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation which is in line with the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) hypothesis (Borhan et al. 2012; Lin and Zhu 2018; Hanif 2018; Tang and Tan 2015; dan C. H. Wang et al. 2019). An initial study by Grossman and Krueger (1991) and Tanger et al. (2011) reported the inverse relationship between CO2 emissions and economic growth. The interesting outcome was presented by Hossain (2011) and Hossain (2012), which stated that several literatures had failed to establish an inverse U relationship with the real-life data. Particularly in developed and developing countries, the studies that examined the causal relationship between energy consumption and growth produced three different results. Other studies reportedly discovered two-way causation, as well as unidirectional causes and causality direction from output growth to energy consumption.
Economists also conducted studies on the relationship between FDI and economic growth. Externalities were transferred from industrialized to developing countries, based on the assumption that FDI is an important asset to boost greater development. According to developing countries, the investment served as a means of transferring factors, due to the accelerating pace of general purpose technologies (GPT), while introducing advanced technology and science. This means the countries exploited these factors as assets to increase economic growth. Furthermore, FDI defines economic openness from a financial standpoint, which has been proven to promote economic growth, although this has not been shown in the United States (Omri et al. 2015). The consequence of this openness is the emergence of negative externalities. The pollution haven hypothesis was developed from the studies of Copeland and Taylor (1994) and Chen et al. (2021a). Based on this hypothesis, three dimensions (Aliyu 2005) were observed. Firstly, heavily polluting enterprises relocated from industrialized to developing countries, where strict environmental regulations were not enforced. Global free trade, on the other hand, has increased industrial and polluting activities by relocating to nations with weak environmental policies. Secondly, the transfer of hazardous waste from developed to developing countries (industrial production and nuclear energy). This issue was also the subject of the Basle Convention on hazardous waste. Thirdly, multinational companies involved in the production of petroleum and its products, as well as lumber and other forest resources, including the extraction of non-renewable natural resources in developing countries without control. These factors are related to conscious environmental policy decisions and how they impact the environment, production, and future trade. However, the pollution haven hypothesis has two empirical consequences, namely (1) FDI outflows in developed countries are positively correlated with environmental policy tightening, and (2) Pollution in developing countries is positively correlated with the inflows of FDI. The existence of foreign investment brings technological efficiency compared to those within the country (Balogh and Jámbor 2017; Adams et al. 2020; dan Salehnia et al. 2020). In addition, Aljawareen and Saddam (2017) showed that FDI had a positive interplay with CO2 emissions in Qatar. The selected studies about the pattern of CO2 emissions, urbanization, and economic activities are summarized in Table 1.

3. Methodology

This study was conducted using a descriptive quantitative method. The data were obtained from the International Energy Agency in 2021 and the World Development Indicators (WDI) that were published by the World Bank in 2021. Furthermore, time series data were obtained from 1971 to 2019. This period was selected based on the consideration that the first UN Environmental Conference was conducted in Stockholm in 1971. The variables description is presented in Table 2.
Besides urbanization and foreign direct investment, which is taken as the proportion of total GDP, all variables are expressed in the form of logarithms to minimize the effect of heteroscedasticity (Maparu and Mazumder 2017). Table 3 shows a summary of the descriptive statistics of variables.
In this study, the analysis was conducted in different stages (Figure 1).
The first step is to use a preliminary statistical test to verify stationarities for all variables. This is conducted through the usual unit root method, which is known as the augmented Dickey–Fuller test (ADF). This step is important for two reasons: (1) The causality test is highly sensitive to serial stationarity, and (2) most of the time-series data for macroeconomic indicators are non-stationary. The ADF test is very popular for testing sequence integration of variables. Empirically, Equation (1) is represented as follows:
Δ y t = x t b + δ y t 1 + i = 1 m a 1 Δ y t 1 + ε t
where y t = time series to be tested, x t = the selected exogenous regressor that contained constants and trends, a and b = the parameters that should be estimated, ε t = the white noise error terms, m = the maximum lag length determined using Schwarz information and Akaike information criteria (SIC and AIC), and Δ = delta. According to the second step, when both series were integrated from the same order, the lag length was determined through the AIC and SIC, with the presence of cointegration also checked. Furthermore, the null hypothesis (H0: δ = 0) was tested against the alternative (Ha: δ < 0). When the null hypothesis is true, the existence of a unit root is confirmed, with the series observed as non-stationary. However, when the null hypothesis is rejected, stationary series are indicated.
Based on this study, the cointegration test was carried out through the Johansen method by focusing on the statistical value of the trace and maximum Eigen analysis value. The vector error correction model (VECM) is used when variables are co-integrated. However, when not co-integrated, the vector auto regression (VAR) model is used. Therefore, the general model for the regression is shown as follows (Maparu and Mazumder 2017):
y t = i = 1 p β i y t i + γ x t + u t
where, y t = the vector of the non-stationary variable k I (1), x t = the vector of the deterministic variable, β i and γ = the parameters to be calculated, u t = the innovation vector, and p = the VAR sequence.
According to the Granger causality test for equation (2), a variable (x) was stated to be a Granger causal to the other (y). This was observed when the lagging value of x increased the predictability of y, provided that other data were present. Moreover, the bivariate causality was divided into 3 categories, as follows: (1) Unidirectional: This causality was direct from x to y, when the coefficient on lagged xt was significantly different from zero as a group. It was also directed from x to y, when yt is the dependent variable and the coefficient on lagged yt does not differ significantly from zero. The causality was also directed from x to y when xt is the dependent variable. (2) Bidirectional: This indicated a relationship between x and y when the coefficient on the lagged xt significantly differed from zero as a group. Moreover, it indicated a relationship, when yt is the dependent variable. The coefficient on lagged yt was significantly different from zero, when xt is the dependent variable. (3) Independence: The causality occurred when the coefficients on xt and yt lagged were significantly different from zero in both equations.
If the variables are cointegrated, the vector error correction model (VECM) can be used instead of VAR. Equation (3) shows the general model for VECM.
Δ y t = i = 1 q β i y t i + x t + γ E C T t + u t
where, Δ is the first difference operator, β i and = the parameters to be calculated, u t = the white noise error terms, and q = the maximum lag length.
The vector error correction model (VECM) can be used for testing Granger causality between the variables of CO2 emissions, urbanization, economic growth, exports, imports, and foreign direct investment. The empirical equation of VECM is presented as follow:
[ Δ LCO 2 t Δ UD t Δ LEG t Δ LX t Δ LM t Δ FDI t ] = [ α 1 α 2 α 3 α 4 α 5 α 6 ] + j = 1 L [ β 11 j β 21 j β 31 j β 41 j β 51 j β 61 j     β 12 j β 22 j β 32 j β 42 j β 52 j β 62 j     β 13 j β 23 j β 33 j β 43 j β 53 j β 63 j     β 14 j β 24 j β 34 j β 44 j β 54 j β 64 j     β 15 j β 16 j β 25 j β 26 j β 35 j β 36 j β 45 j β 46 j β 55 j β 56 j β 65 j β 66 j ] [ Δ LCO 2 t j Δ UD t j Δ LEG t j Δ LX t j Δ LM t j Δ FDI t j ] + [ γ 1 γ 2 γ 3 γ 4 γ 5 γ 6 ] ECT t 1 + [ ε 1 t ε 2 t ε 3 t ε 4 t ε 5 t ε 6 t ]
where α and γ are the coefficients to be estimated and ECT t 1 is the lagged residual term derived from the long-run relationship. If γ is negative and significantly different from zero, it is a long-term interplay. L is the maximum lag length, Δ is the first difference operator, and ε is the error term.
Recall Equation (4). We can break it down into the following equations:
Δ LCO 2 t = α 1 + j = 1 L β 11 j Δ LCO 2 t j + j = 1 L β 12 j Δ UD t j + j = 1 L β 13 j Δ LEG t j + j = 1 L β 14 j Δ LX t j + j = 1 L β 15 j Δ LM t j + j = 1 L β 16 j Δ FDI t j + γ 1 ECT t 1 + ε 1 t
Δ UD t = α 2 + j = 1 L β 21 j Δ UD t j + j = 1 L β 22 j Δ LCO 2 t j + j = 1 L β 23 j Δ LEG t j +    j = 1 L β 24 j Δ LX t j + j = 1 L β 25 j Δ LM t j + j = 1 L β 26 j Δ FDI t j + γ 2 ECT t 1 + ε 2 t
Δ LEG t = α 3 + j = 1 L β 31 j Δ LEG t j + j = 1 L β 32 j Δ LCO 2 t j + j = 1 L β 33 j Δ UD t j +    j = 1 L β 34 j Δ LX t j + j = 1 L β 35 j Δ LM t j + j = 1 L β 36 j Δ FDI t j + γ 3 ECT t 1 + ε 3 t
Δ LX t = α 4 + j = 1 L β 41 j Δ LX t j + j = 1 L β 42 j Δ LCO 2 t j + j = 1 L β 43 j Δ UD t j + j = 1 L β 44 j Δ LEG t j + j = 1 L β 45 j Δ LM t j + j = 1 L β 46 j Δ FDI t j + γ 4 ECT t 1 + ε 4 t
Δ LM t = α 5 + j = 1 L β 51 j Δ LM t j + j = 1 L β 52 j Δ LCO 2 t j + j = 1 L β 53 j Δ UD t j + j = 1 L β 54 j Δ LEG t j + j = 1 L β 55 j Δ LX t j + j = 1 L β 56 j Δ FDI t j + γ 5 ECT t 1 + ε 5 t
Δ FDI t = α 6 + j = 1 L β 61 j Δ FDI t j + j = 1 L β 62 j Δ LCO 2 t j + j = 1 L β 63 j Δ UD t j + j = 1 L β 64 j Δ LEG t j + j = 1 L β 65 j Δ LX t j + j = 1 L β 66 j Δ LM t j + γ 6 ECT t 1 + ε 6 t
The long-term equilibrium is shown by the negative ECT coefficient. It indicates a correction of the variable movement towards its long-term equilibrium; hence, the coefficient should be negative. This indicates that the closer to zero the coefficient values are, the quicker the adjustment towards long-run equilibrium.

4. Results and Discussion

4.1. Empirical Results

Before examining cointegration between variables, we present an overview related to CO2 emissions in Indonesia during the period 1971–2019. This is necessary to find out its role towards net zero emissions through the vector error correction model.
Figure 2 shows trends in CO2 emissions that have occurred since 1971, tending to increase. It implies that significant growth in emissions has occurred since 1971, accompanied by increasing urbanization and economic growth (Figure 3 and Figure 4). Prior to the economic crisis in 1998, an international agreement did not influence the reduction of CO2 emissions in Indonesia. Carbon emissions constantly rose after the first United Nations Environmental Conference, which was conducted in Stockholm in 1971. Since 1998, a significant increase in economic activities, such as exports and imports (Figure 5 and Figure 6), have led to relatively higher emissions. The Kyoto Protocol, which was signed in 1997, made the trend of carbon emissions fluctuate, as well as the Paris Agreement in 2015. It implies the influence of international agreement diplomacy on economic activities related to the reduction of CO2 emissions. Figure 7 shows the volatility of FDI net inflows. Since the heaviest economic crisis in 1998, foreign direct investment has tended to increase. Global shocks had brought it down in 2008 and 2016, but it rose again at the end of 2019. This confirms that the interest of investors in Indonesia is still high.
The dynamic causal relationship between CO2 emissions, urbanization, economic growth, export, and import activities, as well as foreign direct investment, was assessed through several steps. Firstly, each variable containing the unit root was checked. Secondly, the test to determine whether there was a long-term cointegration relationship between the variables was conducted. Thirdly, the estimation of the VECM to deduce the Granger causal relationship between the variables was carried out. A summary of the results is shown in Table 4 based on the first stage, which is the unit root identification of each variable.
The first stage was the ADF unit root test, which showed that the variables of CO2 emissions, urbanization, economic growth, exports, imports, and foreign investment were not stationary in the level integration analysis (Table 4). Furthermore, the first difference was conducted on all stationary variables I (1), except for the UD. This indicated that there was a difference in the level of stationarity within the UD variable, as the Levin–Lin–Chu (LLC), Im–Pesaran–Shin (IPS), Fisher–ADF, and Fisher–PP tests were carried out, respectively. The summary of the results is shown in Table 5. Based on the use of the Levin–Lin–Chu, Pesaran–Shin, and ADF–PP methods, the first difference root test showed that all results were stationary at I (1), due to the probability which was less than 5%. This also confirmed that the variables of CO2 emissions, urbanization, economic growth, exports, imports, and foreign investment, were tested for cointegration.
The optimal lag length was determined based on the Akaike information criterion (AIC). According to the determination of the most optimal lag, the highest LR and low AIC, HQIC, and SBIC values were observed. The results showed the optimal lag length used was two, through the consideration of the lowest AIC value. Subsequently, a stability test was conducted to determine the usable model (VAR or VECM). The results also showed the variables to be used met the stability criteria, as the modulus values were less than one; hence, the VAR or VECM was used.
After passing the stability analysis, the cointegration test was conducted. Furthermore, the Johansen cointegration test was found to be based on the linear determinism assumption (intercept and trend). A long-term balance was observed when the trace or Max-Eigen values were more than the critical value of 5%. Therefore, the results of the Johansen cointegration test based on Trace and Max-Eigen statistics are summarized in Table 6.
The null hypothesis of Johansen’s test stated that cointegration occurred when at least one analysis was cointegrated. The null hypothesis was accepted based on the results, which showed trace and Max-Eigen test values of two and one cointegrations at the 0.05 level, respectively. This indicated that there was cointegration between variables, as CO2 emissions, urbanization, economic growth, exports, imports, and foreign direct investment, had a long-term relationship within the period of 1971 to 2019 in Indonesia. These variables were also eligible for the VEC framework.
Based on the use of VECM, the causality source was identified from the significance test that was conducted for the coefficient of the independent variable. According to the short-term causality, the Granger causality/block exogeneity Wald tests were used to determine the nullity of the parameters associated with the independent variable in each VECM equation, through the χ2-Wald statistic. However, causality in the long term was tested by the significance of the adjustment speed. The t-statistic of the ECT coefficient that showed a long-term causal effect was also used.
Table 7 shows three out of six vectors had a negative value of ECT-1, but only Equation (5) was statistically significant at a 1% significance degree. This means only CO2 emissions had an equilibrium in the long-term. In addition, unidirectional causality occurs from urbanization, economic growth, exports, and foreign direct investment to CO2 emissions in the short-term. Likewise, imports into urbanization and economic growth had a one-way relationship to exports and imports (Table 7).

4.2. Impulse Response

Impulse response CO2 emissions to urbanization showed that the urban density was included in the counter-urbanization phase in the short-term. This phase is characterized by a decrease in the environmental, physical, and socio-economic carrying capacity of the population in the larger metropolitan area (Sarungu 2001). The high level of urbanization can result in rapid population growth that leads to agglomeration and will be followed by efforts of people to fulfill their needs. Due to the speed and scale of escalation in these cities, they can induce great pressure on the environment and pose environmental degradation or threats to sustainable development (Cohen 2006). This result is in line with Agung PS et al. (2017) and Liang et al. (2019). In the long-term, CO2 emissions will decrease along with the awareness of city dwellers about the importance of health and quality of life. This is consistent with the negative response of CO2 emissions to urban density (Figure 8b). Therefore, urbanization can be directed to reduce CO2 emissions by using the potential spillover of technology and high levels of education. This is consistent with Liu and Liu (2019), Hassan et al. (2020), and Wang et al. (2020).
Assuming FDI changes, the response of CO2 emissions was positive in the short run, but was negative in the third year, reaching its lowest point in the fourth year, and subsequently tends to move steadily (Figure 8f). The positive response of CO2 emissions during the shock in FDI was consistent with the VECM estimation in this study. It also showed an increase in FDI in the long run, leading to environmentally oriented investment. This is in line with Adams et al. (2020), Salehnia et al. (2020), and Chen et al. (2021b). This is a great target that developing countries should build upon in order to realize the halo pollution hypothesis, along with the increasing FDI values every year. The responses of CO2 emissions to export and import economic activities were positive. A shock to exports will increase CO2 emissions sharply until the fourth year, and subsequently the changes tend to be stable in the long term (Figure 8d). The same pattern was shown by imports. Although the response to CO2 emissions was smaller than the shock to exports, it was also positive to changes in imports (Figure 8e). This is a formidable challenge for net-zero carbon. Actually, the policy of goods or commodities received from the rest of the world for Indonesian consumption has led to the procurement of cordial environmental commodities which minimizes the occurrence of CO2 emissions. The Government of Indonesia issued Statute Law Number 32 (UU No 32) in 2009 concerning Environmental Protection and Management (UU PPLH) as well as Statute Law Number 18 (UU No 18) in 2008 concerning Waste Management (UU Waste Management). It was subsequently strengthened by the stipulation of Statute Law Number 7 (UU No 7) in 2014 concerning Trade, specifically Article 50 paragraph (1) and (2) which states that all goods can be exported or imported, except those prohibited, restricted, or otherwise stipulated by law. The newest implementation is regulated in Government Regulation No. 22 (PP No 22) in 2021 concerning the implementation of environmental protection and management. The climate change emergency at COP26 is time-bound, making net zero carbon policy mandatory for companies. Based on the results of variance decomposition (Table 8), the largest contribution to emissions comes from export activities. Therefore, failure to immediately adapt to a net zero carbon policy can lead to loss of global market share.

4.3. Variance Decomposition

Initially, the largest contribution to CO2 emissions in the short term is the variance in the variable itself, but its contribution decreased afterward. The largest contribution was taken over by exports. Initially, it contributed only 34%, but increased continuously to become the largest at the end of the period (Table 8). Economic growth, FDI, urbanization, and imports also showed an increasing trend of contributions.
The biggest contribution from export activities to CO2 emissions should be the main notice related to Indonesia’s commitment to achieving net-zero carbon by 2070. It should also be noted that international agreements to reduce CO2 emissions were more or less efficient, but on the other hand, it has reduced the competitiveness and exports of several countries (C. H. Wang et al. 2019). Some countries in Asia, Europe, and America have implemented climate change mitigation programs to reduce emissions, which influences trading regulations. Requirements are set to the product; hence, it can be accepted globally by fulfilling sustainability requirements. For example, low-emission industrial product companies do not carry out deportations or execute forest conservation policies.
Foreign direct investment contributes to economic growth (Omri et al. 2014). It recognizes that investment, advanced technology, and knowledge can be transferred from industrialized countries to developing countries as an important asset to increase economic growth (Raz et al. 2012). Therefore, FDI can accelerate the speed of general purpose technologies (GPT) as the engine of growth. However, in some countries, the existence of this investment turns out to provide negative externalities to the environment, thereby proving the pollution haven hypothesis (Aliyu 2005; Aljawareen and Saddam 2017). The results showed foreign direct investment contributed significantly to CO2 emissions. Economic agents should anticipate such factors carefully in order to remain competitive in the global economy due to climate change. For example, the European Union makes policies regarding sanitary and phytosanitary goods to protect human and animal health, as well as environmental requirements (sustainable forest certificates and ecolabels, origin of products) for wood commodities. Other requirements, such as health and safety (free of fluorocarbon and formaldehyde emissions) and expensive costs are also not easy to manage. These should be borne by Indonesian entrepreneurs. Similarly, the Japanese government has a standard for wood products (Japan Agricultural Standard, JAS) and other export destination countries. Therefore, the right strategy is needed to synergize between economic growth air quality. Although economic activities should be carried out, it needs to be balanced in order to achieve net zero carbon.

5. Conclusions

This study aims to analyze the pattern of urbanization, economic growth, exports, imports, foreign direct investment, and CO2 emissions. It also proved whether the halo or haven pollution hypotheses existed in Indonesia from 1971 to 2019. According to the results, CO2 emissions had an equilibrium in the long-term. In addition, unidirectional causality occurred from urbanization, economic growth, exports, and foreign direct investment to CO2 emissions in the short term. Likewise, imports into urbanization and economic growth indicated a one-way relationship to exports and imports. This consequently strengthened the IPAL model by Dietz and Rosa (1997), which stated that population, income, and technology are considered as the main drivers of environmental impact.
The pollution haven hypothesis exists in Indonesia, and FDI had a one-way interplay with CO2 emissions. The government should regulate air pollution by conditioning urbanization to be environmentally friendly through building several green open spaces and public transportation that uses accommodative fuel or renewable energy. Gradually, capital should be directed to investments that promote the economy to thrive. Foreign investment is used as a pillar to support the realization of a green urban development model. This is achieved by limiting negative environmental externalities through procurement and physical investment, particularly in power generation, transportation, and manufacturing industries.
Countries that are committed to climate change prevention in the Paris Agreement should compile long-term development plans that are integrated with strategies to reduce the amount of greenhouse gas emissions. In other words, the target for reducing emissions in its implementation needs to be coherent with several existing policies, specifically Indonesia’s ambition to escape from the middle-income trap. The toughest challenge for the country is the use of coal energy sources. The transfer of coal plants to renewable energy in 2040 requires the support of international cooperation, technology, economic feasibility, and international funding to assist the energy transition. Therefore, the formation of a healthy and prosperous state ecosystem can be achieved when there is collaboration from all economic agents.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, D.M.N., I.M., L.H. and S.S.; methodology, D.M.N. and L.H.; software, D.M.N.; validation, I.M., L.H. and S.S.; formal analysis, D.M.N. and L.H.; investigation, D.M.N.; resources, D.M.N. and S.S.; data curation, L.H. and S.S.; writing—original draft preparation, D.M.N.; writing—review and editing, D.M.N., I.M., L.H. and S.S.; visualization, D.M.N.; supervision, I.M., L.H. and S.S.; project administration, D.M.N. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Ethical review and approval were waived for this study due to meet the ethical requirements of international research publication.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The corresponding author [D.M.N] of the present work is available for any information about data availability.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Julianus Johnny Sarungu, MS for providing constructive discussion and the Rector of the Universitas Negeri Semarang for the scholarship of the Doctoral Program in Economics.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

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Figure 1. Test Stages in Granger Causality.
Figure 1. Test Stages in Granger Causality.
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Figure 2. Time trend of CO2 Emissions.
Figure 2. Time trend of CO2 Emissions.
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Figure 3. Time trend of Urbanization.
Figure 3. Time trend of Urbanization.
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Figure 4. Time trend of Economic growth.
Figure 4. Time trend of Economic growth.
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Figure 5. Time trend of Export.
Figure 5. Time trend of Export.
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Figure 6. Time trend of Import.
Figure 6. Time trend of Import.
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Figure 7. Time trend of Foreign Direct Investment.
Figure 7. Time trend of Foreign Direct Investment.
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Figure 8. Impulse response functions.
Figure 8. Impulse response functions.
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Table 1. Literature review of pattern of CO2 emissions, urbanization, and economic activities.
Table 1. Literature review of pattern of CO2 emissions, urbanization, and economic activities.
AuthorsCountry/Region (Periods)Technique AnalysisFindings
Economy Growth and CO2 emissions
Rahman et al. (2020)5 South Asian Countries (1990–2017)Granger causality, VECM
FMOLS, DOLS, generalized method of moments (GMM)
ECO2 + EG
EG ↔ ECO2
Wang et al. (2019)5 Countries: Germany, Italy, India, Taiwan and Japan (1950–2010)Rolling regressionEG ∩ ECO2
Vo et al. (2019)ASEAN 5 (1971–2014)Granger causality, FMOLS, DOLSEG → ECO2
Abbasi et al. (2020)8 Asia Countries (1982–2017)Granger causality. EG ≠ ECO2
Chikaraishi et al. (2015)140 Countries (1980–2008)Laten STIRPAT model EG − ECO2
Batool et al. (2021)ASEAN 5 (1980–2018)Granger causality, VECMEG + ECO2
EG ≠ ECO2 (Ind, Mal)
LR: EG ↔ ECO2 (Ind, Tha)
SR: EG → ECO2 (Phi, Sgp)
Joshua et al. (2020)South AfricaARDLEG + ECO2
EG → ECO2
Phong et al. (2018)Vietnam (1985–2015)ARDLEG + ECO2
Bashir et al. (2019)Indonesia (1985–2017)VECMEG ≠ ECO2
Urbanization and CO2 emissions
Salahuddin et al. (2019)South Africa (1980–2017)Unit root tests (Zivot and Andrews single, dan Bai dan Perron), cointegration, ARDL U ↔ ECO2
Al-Mulali et al. (2013)MENA Countries (1980–2009)Pedroni’s cointegration, panel Granger causalityU ↔ ECO2
U + ECO2
Hanif (2018)34 Countries in Africa (1995–2015)System generalized method of moment (GMM) U + ECO2
Adedoyin and Bekun (2020)7 Countries (1995–2014)Panel VAR approach, FMOLS, pooled mean group–ARDLU ↔ ECO2
Ali et al. (2017)Singapore (1970–2015)ARDLU − ECO2
Ali et al. (2019)Pakistan (1972–2014)ARDL, VECM U + ECO2
U → ECO2
Bekhet and Othman (2017)Malaysia (1971–2015)VECM, Granger causality LR: U ↔ ECO2, Inv. Domestic ↔ E CO2
SR: U → E CO2 U → EG, Inv. Domestic → EG
Martínez-Zarzoso and Maruotti (2011)Developing countries (1975–2003)LSDVC, GMM methodsU ∩ ECO2
Akorede and Afroz (2020)Nigeria (1970–2017)Causality tests, ARDLU − ECO2
Lin and Zhu (2018)282 Cities in China (2012)Bayesian model averageU − ECO2
Ergas et al. (2016)USA (2002–2007)A hybrid panel modelU − ECO2
Borhan et al. (2012)8 East AsiaSimultaneous equationECO2-U
Dong et al. (2019)14 Countries majuTwo fixed-effect panel threshold models SR: U ≠ ECO2
Middle Run : U − ECO2
Economic Activities and CO2 emissions
Kizilkaya (2017)Turkey (1970–2014)ARDLFDI ≠ ECO2
Tang and Tan (2015)Vietnam (1976–2009)Cointegration, Granger causalityFDI ↔ ECO2
Hasanov et al. (2018)Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Venezuela (1995–2013)PDOLS, PFMOLS, PMG methods, panel ECMX − ECO2
M + ECO2
Aljawareen and Saddam (2017)6 GCC Countries (1998–2008)Panel dataFDI + ECO2 (Qatar)
M − ECO2 (KSA)
Omri et al. (2014)54 Countries (1990–2011)Dynamic simultaneous equation method, GMM Arellano and Bond.FDI ↔ ECO2
Amin et al. (2020)13 Asian (1985–2019)Cointegration tests, FMOLS., Panel VECMTO ↔ ECO2
U + ECO2
TO + ECO2
U ↔ ECO2
Anwar et al. (2020)East Asia (1980–2017)Panel dataU + ECO2
TO + ECO2
S. P. Nathaniel (2020)Indonesia (1971–2014)ARDLU + ECO2
LR: TO + ECO2
SR: TO − ECO2
Omri et al. (2015)12 MENA countries (1990–2011)Generalized method of moments (GMM)TO→ ECO2
S. Nathaniel and Khan (2020)ASEAN (1990–2016)Unit root tests, ointegration. EG → TO
Adams et al. (2020)19 Countries Sub-Saharan Africa (1980–2011)Estimator IV-GMM FDI- ECO2
Aljawareen and Saddam (2017)ASEAN 8 (1985–2015)Panel unit root tests, Panel cointegration test, Forecast: Innovative Accounting Approach (IAA)EG → TO
Chandran and Tang (2013)ASEAN 5 (1971–2008)Cointegration, Granger causalityFDI ≠ ECO2
FDI ↔ ECO2 (Tha, Mal)
Pié et al. (2018)30 Countries (1992–2012)Bayesian frameworkX − ECO2
M + ECO2
Akalpler and Hove (2019)India (1971–2014)ARDLECO2 → X
M → ECO2
M → EG (−)
M → EG (+)
Salehnia et al. (2020)14 MENA Countries (2004–2016)Panel quantile regression FDI − ECO2
TO + ECO2
M + ECO2
X + ECO2
Al-Mulali and Sheau-Ting (2014)189 Countries (1990–2011)Panel fully modified OLS (FMOLS) TO + ECO2
Chen et al. (2021a)64 Countries (2001–2019)Panel quantile regressionTO + ECO2
Remark: ECO2: CO2 emissions, U: urbanization, EG: economic growth, X: export, M: import, FDI: foreign direct investment, TO: trade openness. SR are LR are short-run and long-run, respectively. “+” and “−“ indicate positive and negative effect, respectively. “→” “↔” and “≠” indicate unidirectional, bidirectional, and independence relationships, respectively. “∩” indicates shaped U curve.
Table 2. Variables Description.
Table 2. Variables Description.
VariableDescriptionUnitSource
CO2 emissions (CO2)The residual CO2 that is discharged into the environment.Tonnes CO2/TerajouleInternational Energy Agency, 2021
Economic growth (GDPC)Gross Domestic Product per capita.IDR in constant priceWorld Bank
Urbanization (UD)The percentage of people living in urban areas.%World Bank
Export (X)The value of exports made by a country.IDR in constant priceWorld Bank
Import (M)The value of imports of goods to a country.IDR in constant priceWorld Bank
Foreign direct investment (FDI)Net inflow as the proportion of total Gross Domestic Product.%World Bank
Table 3. Descriptive Statistics.
Table 3. Descriptive Statistics.
VariableMaximumMinimumMeanStd. Dev.Observations
LCO21.7621.2351.5490.13649
UD55.98517.33836.17612.58849
LEG7.6076.8647.2470.20949
LX15.35914.25814.8520.32849
LM15.34213.77114.7770.42349
FDI4.241−2.7571.1981.33549
Table 4. Root Test of ADF-PP.
Table 4. Root Test of ADF-PP.
VariableADFPP
t-StatisticProb.t-StatisticProb.
Level
LCO2−1.8025990.3748−2.4546730.1329
UD−1.6974250.42580.1982210.9697
LEG−0.6181920.8566−0.6062770.8593
LX−0.6308700.8536−0.6015720.8603
LM−2.5368890.1135−2.5926320.1016
FDI−3.2968630.0206−3.3485420.0181
First difference
LCO2−5.8067800.0000 *−7.1900280.0000 *
UD−1.5794170.4848−1.6485290.4502
LEG−5.1031620.0001 *−5.0720250.0001 *
LX−8.1075780.0000 *−8.1609330.0000 *
LM−6.0875500.0000 *−6.0875500.0000 *
FDI−9.1231950.0000 *−9.0670420.0000 *
Second difference
UD−6.027110.0000 *−5.9804050.0000 *
Remarks: * significant at the 1% level.
Table 5. Group Unit Root Test.
Table 5. Group Unit Root Test.
MethodLevelFirst Different
StatisticProb.StatisticProb.
Levin, Lin & Chu t *−0.231980.4083−7.512630.0000 *
Im, Pesaran and Shin W-stat−0.502510.3077−12.04910.0000 *
ADF-Fisher Chi-square15.92490.1947133.8660.0000 *
PP-Fisher Chi-square15.49270.2156135.6850.0000 *
Remarks: * significant at the 1% level. Number of observations 276.
Table 6. Johansen Cointegration Test.
Table 6. Johansen Cointegration Test.
HypothesisEigenvalueTrace-TestMax-Eigen Test
Statistic ρ   Value Statistic ρ   Value
None0.731063136.89530.0000 *60.410770.0001 *
At most 10.50407576.484560.0133 **32.261190.0770
At most 20.36112844.223370.105420.610380.3004
At most 30.24255923.612990.217312.779250.4727
At most 40.15996810.833740.22198.0185210.3768
At most 50.0593652.8152170.09342.8152170.0934
Remark: * Significant at the 1% level; ** Significant at the 5% level.
Table 7. Granger Causality/Block Exogeneity Wald Tests.
Table 7. Granger Causality/Block Exogeneity Wald Tests.
Dependent VariableShort RunLong Run
ΔL(CO2)ΔUDΔL(EG)ΔL(X)ΔL(M)ΔFDICoefficientt-Test
ΔL(CO2)-18.72401 (0.0001) *6.126103 (0.0467) **1.802927 (0.406)10.50891 (0.0052) *31.76471 (0.000) *−0.863939−7.31613 *
ΔUD0.885313 (0.6423)-0.894056 (0.6395)1.505821 (0.471)9.9198 (0.007) *0.759596 (0.684)0.621411.15879
ΔL(EG)0.020633 (0.9897)3.397833 (0.1829)-0.255068 (0.8803)0.241267 (0.8864)1.068797 (0.586)−0.126233−0.80081
ΔL(X)2.835755 (0.2422)2.549941 (0.2794)16.40749 (0.0003) *-0.363593 (0.8338)0.042006 (0.9792)0.5183941.31906
ΔL(M)2.0033835 (0.3673)1.69154 (0.4292)30.15772 (0.0000) *2.537506 (0.2812)-0.027722 (0.9862)−0.017462−0.03758
ΔFDI2.94009 (0.2299)4.537871 (0.1034)2.024757 (0.3634)1.783195 (0.4100)3.849635 (0.1459)-11.737531.06675
Remark: * Significant at the 1% level; ** Significant at the 5% level.
Table 8. Variance Decomposition of LCO2.
Table 8. Variance Decomposition of LCO2.
PeriodS.E.Illustrated by Variable (%)
LCO2UDLEGLXLMFDI
10.0112610000000
20.0177860.00860.089910.0091634.45675.398870.03685
30.0227336.72040.055029.2001448.49184.348631.18405
40.0291222.37150.242779.1468453.87695.083079.27894
50.0335217.96720.2070510.165355.68995.4167910.5537
60.0369315.99960.170668.938357.39136.738310.7619
70.0404713.77930.210758.214959.09477.4541911.2462
80.0440911.90950.284578.3499559.33947.8134212.3031
90.0473110.65180.364518.1632160.12717.971912.7215
100.050299.692060.561577.6574660.85238.1122613.1244
110.053248.865690.830627.2128961.27098.1755213.6444
120.055968.222081.107966.8746861.55668.1534814.0852
130.058557.689711.44596.4623661.87158.0984614.4321
140.061087.218431.839616.0684162.08178.0071214.7847
150.063536.808592.249685.7181562.19487.894615.1342
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Nihayah, D.M.; Mafruhah, I.; Hakim, L.; Suryanto, S. CO2 Emissions in Indonesia: The Role of Urbanization and Economic Activities towards Net Zero Carbon. Economies 2022, 10, 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies10040072

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Nihayah DM, Mafruhah I, Hakim L, Suryanto S. CO2 Emissions in Indonesia: The Role of Urbanization and Economic Activities towards Net Zero Carbon. Economies. 2022; 10(4):72. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies10040072

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Nihayah, Dyah Maya, Izza Mafruhah, Lukman Hakim, and Suryanto Suryanto. 2022. "CO2 Emissions in Indonesia: The Role of Urbanization and Economic Activities towards Net Zero Carbon" Economies 10, no. 4: 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies10040072

APA Style

Nihayah, D. M., Mafruhah, I., Hakim, L., & Suryanto, S. (2022). CO2 Emissions in Indonesia: The Role of Urbanization and Economic Activities towards Net Zero Carbon. Economies, 10(4), 72. https://doi.org/10.3390/economies10040072

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