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Festus Victor Bekun

Researcher at South Ural State University

Publications -  216
Citations -  9191

Festus Victor Bekun is an academic researcher from South Ural State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Energy consumption & Cointegration. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 145 publications receiving 3495 citations. Previous affiliations of Festus Victor Bekun include Eastern Mediterranean University & University of Economics, Ho Chi Minh City.

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Toward a sustainable environment: Nexus between CO2 emissions, resource rent, renewable and nonrenewable energy in 16-EU countries

TL;DR: It is affirmed that nonrenewable energy consumption and economic growth increase carbon emission flaring while renewable energy consumption declines CO2 emissions, and effective policy implications could be drawn toward modern and environmentally friendly energy sources, especially in attaining the Sustainable Development Goals.
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Dynamic impact of trade policy, economic growth, fertility rate, renewable and non-renewable energy consumption on ecological footprint in Europe.

TL;DR: The PMG-ARDL analysis confirmed the role of non-renewable energy consumption in depleting environmental quality while renewable energy consumption was found to improve environmental sustainability, and the unexpected long-run fertility-ecological footprint nexus was connected with the divergent fertility rate information of the EU member countries.
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Modelling coal rent, economic growth and CO2 emissions: Does regulatory quality matter in BRICS economies?

TL;DR: The empirical study shows that for BRICS countries, unlike coal consumption, coal rents have a significant but negative impact on CO2 emissions, and for policymakers it is vital to reinforce the use of stringent regulations as these economies opens up to more use of coal energy.
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Another look at the relationship between energy consumption, carbon dioxide emissions, and economic growth in South Africa.

TL;DR: The study found an inverted U-shaped pattern between energy use and economic growth in the long run, suggesting that at a higher level of economic development there is less intensification of energy consumption, hence, signifying a decline in energy intensity while validating energy efficiency in South Africa.
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Modeling the dynamic linkage between financial development, energy innovation, and environmental quality: Does globalization matter?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the nexus between financial development, economic growth, energy innovation, and environmental pollution for the period of 1990-2017 for the panel of Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries.