The Causal Links Among Nuclear And Fossil Fuel Energy Consumptions, Real GDP, And CO2 Emissions In The Top 6 Nuclear-Dependent Countries

碩士 === 國立交通大學 === 管理學院管理科學學程 === 105 === This study explores the dynamic causal relationship among Energy (nuclear and fossil fuel consumption), Economic (real GDP) and Environment (carbon dioxide emissions), which is based on the percentage of nuclear generation in the world in 2015, Six countries...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wang, Yuan-Chih, 王遠智
Other Authors: Pao, Hsiao-Tien
Format: Others
Language:zh-TW
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/r94g96
Description
Summary:碩士 === 國立交通大學 === 管理學院管理科學學程 === 105 === This study explores the dynamic causal relationship among Energy (nuclear and fossil fuel consumption), Economic (real GDP) and Environment (carbon dioxide emissions), which is based on the percentage of nuclear generation in the world in 2015, Six countries with nuclear-dependent countries and excluding communist countries, as well as countries with incomplete data, namely France, Belgium, Finland, Korea, Switzerland and Sweden. Further, this study analyzes Taiwan’s current situation and compare the differences with nuclear-dependent countries. The nuclear-dependent countries are divided into the EU and Asia, the two regions are mainly the same causal relationship between carbon emissions on the long-term causal relationship between nuclear energy, fossil fuels on short-term causal relationship between nuclear energy and two-way long-term causal relationship, the more obvious Carbon and fossil fuels. Nuclear-dependent countries have a causal relationship between alternative energy sources and nuclear and carbon emissions. Taiwan's fossil fuels have long-term consequences for nuclear energy. Substantial GDP has long-term causal effects on nuclear energy. Short-term fossil fuels have significant causal relationships with carbon emissions. In general, Taiwan's energy policy development can promote the establishment of nuclear power plants and increase nuclear energy consumption to promote real GDP growth and reduce carbon dioxide emissions, while controlling the proportion of fossil fuels in the power structure, reducing dependence on fossil fuels, reduce excess emissions from carbon dioxide, and develop relevant alternative energy and nuclear energy technologies.