2021
DOI: 10.1002/ieam.4536
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Investigating the carbon emission aspects of agricultural land utilization in Turkey

Abstract: As a pathway to environmental sustainability, several approaches to sustainable agriculture practices have consistently been echoed through international government agencies such as the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations Development Programme. Given this perspective, this study examines the carbon emission effects of the categories of agricultural land utilization (this includes arable land, permanent cropland, meadows land, and forest land) for Turkey over the period 1988–2019. The study furt… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…At present, the research on industry-related carbon emissions mainly focuses on the following three areas: The first is the research on carbon emission measurement and energy conservation and emission reduction in specific industrial sectors or industries, including the communications and transportation industry [14,15], tourism [16], agriculture [17], services [18], and construction [19], with topics involving carbon emission measurement and prediction methodology, influencing factors, spatio-temporal analysis, and the link between carbon emissions and economic development. The second is the research on the influencing factors of industrial carbon emissions, including the energy structure, industrial structure, economic output, population size, energy intensity, urbanization rate, technological progress, and foreign trade and is mostly based on index decomposition analysis, structural decomposition analysis, IPAT or STIRPAT models, and other econometrics and regression analysis methods [20,21]. The third is the research on industrial carbon transfer, carbon leakage, implied carbon emissions, and the differential responsibility for carbon reduction.…”
Section: Carbon Emissions From Industriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At present, the research on industry-related carbon emissions mainly focuses on the following three areas: The first is the research on carbon emission measurement and energy conservation and emission reduction in specific industrial sectors or industries, including the communications and transportation industry [14,15], tourism [16], agriculture [17], services [18], and construction [19], with topics involving carbon emission measurement and prediction methodology, influencing factors, spatio-temporal analysis, and the link between carbon emissions and economic development. The second is the research on the influencing factors of industrial carbon emissions, including the energy structure, industrial structure, economic output, population size, energy intensity, urbanization rate, technological progress, and foreign trade and is mostly based on index decomposition analysis, structural decomposition analysis, IPAT or STIRPAT models, and other econometrics and regression analysis methods [20,21]. The third is the research on industrial carbon transfer, carbon leakage, implied carbon emissions, and the differential responsibility for carbon reduction.…”
Section: Carbon Emissions From Industriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors recommend some proposals like substituting renewable energy instead of fossil fuels. Kara et al (2022) examined the carbon emission effects of the categories of agricultural land utilization for Turkey over the period 1988-2019. By employing the ARDL approach, the study finds that the use of agricultural land for arable farming and permanent plantation helps to reduce carbon emissions, especially in the long-run, while the impact of meadows is also desirable only in the short-run.…”
Section: Literature Review and Research Gapmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another study we can find is the one prepared by Duman et al [42], which evaluated, in a pioneering way, the impact produced by pomace olive use through LCA. The most recent work [43] investigates the effects of carbon emissions according to different crops, including olive growing, although without using LCA as in the first one mentioned.…”
Section: Figure 1 Main Olive Oil Extraction Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%