Litcius/Paper detail

Decoupling economic growth and CO2 emissions: a geopolitical comparison of the EU and GCC energy transitions

Nurcan Kilinc-Ata, Bibin Xavier, Mohd Abass Bhat

2026Quality & Quantity18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study investigates the differing trajectories of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions decoupling in the European Union (EU) and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries from 1990 to 2023. Using the Decoupling Consistency Index (DCI) in conjunction with the Logarithmic Mean Divisia Index (LMDI) decomposition, we analyze the contributions of CO2, energy intensity, economic growth, and population to emissions changes across distinct periods. The results reveal that the EU has achieved absolute decoupling, driven by sustained reductions in energy and CO₂ that outweigh economic growth pressures. In contrast, the GCC exhibits partial decoupling, with efficiency gains often offset by rapid economic expansion and population growth. Notably, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have made significant progress toward emissions reductions through accelerated renewable investments and energy reforms. At the same time, other GCC countries face challenges from fossil-fuel dependency. The study highlights the importance of tailored, region-specific climate policies and structural reforms to advance sustainable decarbonization. These findings provide critical insights for policymakers aiming to balance economic growth with environmental objectives in fossil-fuel-rich and transition economies.

Topics & Concepts

Divisia indexEconomicsDecoupling (probability)GeopoliticsPopulationIncentiveEuropean unionIndex (typography)SustainabilityNatural resource economicsInternational economicsEfficient energy usePopulation growthRenewable energyEnergy consumptionEnergy policyClimate changeSustainable growth rateMultiplier (economics)Economic systemEnergy intensityMacroeconomicsOffset (computer science)Sustainable developmentGreenhouse gasDevelopment economicsProfit (economics)Environmental Impact and SustainabilityEnergy, Environment, Economic GrowthClimate Change Policy and Economics