This paper focusses on the examination of the fishing ground footprint in a group of 89 countries using fractional integration. The fishing ground footprint is one of the components of the ecological footprint. Nevertheless, it has not been investigated very much from an empirical viewpoint. We contribute to the existing literature on fishing ground footprint by using fractional integration techniques to examine the persistence of the series. Our results are very heterogeneous across countries though we find that most of the series are nonstationary and non-mean reverting, with most of the countries belonging to the upper-middle and high income levels. On the other hand, most of the 14.4% of countries that show a stationary pattern belong to lower-middle and low income countries. One of the implications of the study is that policies aimed at reducing fishing grounds footprint are likely to be effective in most of the investigated countries.
This paper deals with the analysis of mean reversion and convergence of the ecological footprint (EF) in the MENA region. Using a long memory model based on fractional integration, we find that the results are very heterogeneous across countries depending on the assumptions made on the error term and the use of original versus logged data. Nevertheless, some conclusions can be obtained. Thus, mean reversion is decisively found in the case of Tunisia, and other countries showing some degree of reversion to the mean include Israel, Syria, Yemen, and Iran. Dealing with the issue of convergence within the MENA countries, similar conclusions hold and only Tunisia reports statistical evidence of convergence for the two types of errors. Additional evidence is found in the case of Syria, Yemen, and Jordan with uncorrelated errors and for Iran with autocorrelation. It is recommended that environmental policies targeted at stabilizing the trends in EF in the MENA region should not be indiscriminately applied in consideration of the heterogeneous nature of the series in the region.
In this article, we have examined the hypothesis of convergence of renewable energy consumption in 27 OECD countries. However, instead of relying on classical techniques, which are based on the dichotomy between stationarity I(0) and nonstationarity I(1), we consider a more flexible approach based on fractional integration. We employ both parametric and semiparametric techniques. Using parametric methods, evidence of convergence is found in the cases of Mexico, Switzerland and Sweden along with the USA, Portugal, the Czech Republic, South Korea and Spain, and employing semiparametric approaches, we found evidence of convergence in all these eight countries along with Australia, France, Japan, Greece, Italy and Poland. For the remaining 13 countries, even though the orders of integration of the series are smaller than one in all cases except Germany, the confidence intervals are so wide that we cannot reject the hypothesis of unit roots thus not finding support for the hypothesis of convergence.
Although there are papers on the persistence of energy series including the persistence of shale gas, the impact of recent developments such as the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia-Ukraine conflict have been rarely explored in the existing literature. This paper examines the structure of shale gas production in the U.S. by looking at the degree of persistence across different areas, with the aim to determine if shocks in the series are permanent or transitory. Using fractional integration methods (which unlike the conventional methods, allow for the determination of the persistence of energy and non-energy series in a robust manner), and different subsamples that include the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war, our results indicate that there is a substantial decrease in the integration order in the total shale gas production in the U.S. as well as in four other plays-Haynesville, Permian, Utica and Eagle Ford. However, no differences are observed with respect to the Russia-Ukraine war. There is another group of four series (Marcellus, Niobrara-Codell, Woodford and Rest of US 'shale') with a very small reduction in the degree of persistence and another group of three series with almost no reduction at all in the order of integration (Barnett, Mississippian and Fayetteville). Several implications in terms of policy are reported at the end of the manuscript.