Affiliations 

  • 1 School of Public Administration, Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology, Xi'an, 710000, China
  • 2 Dar-ul-Madinah International University, Islamabad, Pakistan
  • 3 Department of Economics, University of Haripur, Haripur, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan
  • 4 Department of Management, College of Business Administration, King Saud University, P.O. Box 71115, Riyadh, 11587, Saudi Arabia
  • 5 Department of Statistics and Operations Research, College of Science, King Saud University, P.O. Box 11451, Riyadh, 11587, Saudi Arabia
  • 6 Department of Economics, University of Haripur, Haripur, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. khalid_zaman786@yahoo.com
  • 7 Centre for Foundation and Continuing Education (PPAL), Universiti Malaysia Terengganu (UMT), 21300, Kuala, Terengganu, Malaysia
  • 8 Primary Teacher Education Department & Research Interest Group in Education Technology, Faculty of Humanities, Bina Nusantara University, Jakarta, 11480, Indonesia
  • 9 Entrepreneurship Department, Podomoro University, Jakarta, 11470, Indonesia
Environ Sci Pollut Res Int, 2022 Jan;29(4):5648-5660.
PMID: 34424465 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-021-15978-w

Abstract

The world faces a high alert of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), leading to a million deaths and could become infected to reach a billion numbers. A sizeable amount of scholarly work has been available on different aspects of social-economic and environmental factors. At the same time, many of these studies found the linear (direct) causation between the stated factors. In many cases, the direct relationship is not apparent. The world is unsure about the possible determining factors of the COVID-19 pandemic, which need to be known through conducting nonlinearity (indirect) relationships, which caused the pandemic crisis. The study examined the nonlinear relationship between COVID-19 cases and carbon damages, managing financial development, renewable energy consumption, and innovative capability in a cross section of 65 countries. The results show that inbound foreign direct investment first increases and later decreases because of the increasing coronavirus cases. Further, the rise and fall in the research and development expenditures and population density exhibits increasing coronavirus cases across countries. The continued economic growth initial decreases later increase by adopting standardized operating procedures to contain coronavirus disease. The inter-temporal relationship shows that green energy source and carbon damages would likely influence the coronavirus cases with a variance of 17.127% and 5.440%, respectively, over a time horizon. The policymakers should be carefully designing sustainable healthcare policies, as the cost of carbon emissions leads to severe healthcare issues, which are likely to get exposed to contagious diseases, including COVID-19. The sustainable policy instruments, including renewable fuels in industrial production, advancement in cleaner production technologies, the imposition of carbon taxes on dirty production, and environmental certifications, are a few possible remedies that achieve healthcare sustainability agenda globally.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.