K32 - Energy, Environmental, Health, and Safety LawReturn
Results 1 to 2 of 2:
Mining-Ecological Footprint Nexus in the Global South: A Panel Data-Driven ApproachAbir Baita, Burak Erkut, Deniz İşçioğluPolitická ekonomie 2025, 73(5) Special Issue II:868-890:868-890 | DOI: 10.18267/j.polek.1479 This research investigates the environmental effects of mining activities in countries in the Global South, specifically focusing on Brazil, China, India, Indonesia and Pakistan, from 1990 to 2020. Utilizing advanced econometric techniques, especially panel data methods, the study identifies considerable variations in how key factors - such as mineral rents, forest areas, GDP per capita and freshwater resources - affect the ecological footprint. The results support the environmental Kuznets curve hypothesis and show that while mineral rents tend to decrease the ecological footprint, increased renewable freshwater resources are associated with a higher footprint (but the effect reverses in higher quantiles). No conclusive evidence can be found regarding the nexus between forest areas and the ecological footprint. By comparing the results with existing environmental standards and management practices, a significant gap between policy and practice is found, which contributes directly to the current environmental challenges and points out the need for country-specific strategies to increase environmental sustainability in the mining sector. |
Globální problémy z pohledu environmentální ekonomieGlobal Problems as Seen by Environmental EconomicsMarek LoužekPolitická ekonomie 2013, 61(3):393-410 | DOI: 10.18267/j.polek.904 The conventional view of the sustainability of social development is based on the works of the Roman Club, particularly the book "The Limits to Growth" by Donella Meadows and her colleagues (1972). In their opinion, the human population and economy are depleting the wealth of the Earth and pollutants and wastes are burdening the environment. However, the concern that mineral resources will be depleted is unsubstantiated. Environmental economics argues that a higher number of people and a higher income make resources scarcer on a short-term basis. For investors and entrepreneurs, higher prices represent an opportunity and an incentive to search for solutions. Many of them will not succeed in this search and they will bear the costs on their own. However, in a free society, the solutions are eventually found. And in the long run, we are better off thanks to the new discoveries than if the original problems had never occurred. |
