
Decoupling Prosperity from Pollution: Lessons from Four Regions
As nations worldwide navigate the delicate balance between economic growth and environmental preservation, understanding how human activities affect natural ecosystems becomes increasingly critical. With the persistent rise of energy consumption and carbon emissions, the challenge of transitioning from resource-driven economic growth to sustainable, green development is a pressing global concern. Researchers (from İstanbul Nişantaşı University) examining the U.S., Turkey, BRICS countries, and India provide valuable insights into how energy use, resource management, and environmental policies can shape sustainable futures.
How Renewables Affect U.S. Growth and Turkey’s Environment
U.S. data from 1980–2017 reveal an inverted U-shaped link between economic growth and environmental degradation: early development increases harm, but beyond a certain income threshold, renewable energy adoption reduces impacts. Effective management of natural resources also mitigates damage [1]. In Turkey, studies find that GDP growth, resource dependence, and energy use strain environmental capacity, while higher unemployment improves it. These insights prompt policymakers to pursue greener production methods and scale up renewables to balance economic expansion with environmental protection [2].
Resource Curse Reversed: Green Innovation in BRICS and India
Evidence from BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) underscores the drawbacks of relying on non-renewable resources: while carbon-intensive energy yields short-term gains, dependency on coal and fossil fuels hampers long-term growth. Limited renewable energy use misses sustainable development opportunities. To escape the resource curse, these economies must diversify and invest in clean-energy technologies [3]. India confirms that sustainable growth depends on green innovation, environmental policies, and project financial support. Resource exploitation alone can undermine progress, highlighting the need for regulation and low-carbon strategies [4].
Collectively, these insights point to a clear path forward: economic growth must be increasingly decoupled from environmental harm through the strategic use of renewable energy, responsible resource management, and supportive policy frameworks. Embracing innovation, diversifying economies, and ensuring sustainable financial practices can guide nations toward lasting prosperity without sacrificing environmental health. The shift from resource dependency to green growth is not just an environmental necessity but a cornerstone of sustainable economic resilience for future generations.
*Notes: This article provides research teasers for each reference to showcase the novelties
References
[1] Caglar, A. E., Yavuz, E., Mert, M., & Kilic, E. (2022). The ecological footprint facing asymmetric natural resources challenges: Evidence from the USA. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 29(7), 10521–10534. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-16406-9
[2] Yavuz, E., Kilic, E., & Caglar, A. E. (2023). A new hypothesis for the unemployment-environment dilemma: Is the environmental Phillips curve valid in the framework of load capacity factor in Turkiye? Environment, Development and Sustainability, 26(11), 29475–29492. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-023-04258-x
[3] Imran, M., Alam, M. S., Jijian, Z., Ozturk, I., Wahab, S., & Doğan, M. (2024). From resource curse to green growth: Exploring the role of energy utilization and natural resource abundance in economic development. Natural Resources Forum. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12461
[4] Manigandan, P., Alam, M. S., Murshed, M., Ozturk, I., Altuntas, S., & Alam, M. M. (2024). Promoting sustainable economic growth through natural resources management, green innovations, environmental policy deployment, and financial development: Fresh evidence from India. Resources Policy, 90, 104681. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resourpol.2024.104681

Decoupling Prosperity from Pollution: Lessons from Four Regions
As nations worldwide navigate the delicate balance between economic growth and environmental preservation, understanding how human activities affect natural ecosystems becomes increasingly critical. With the persistent rise of energy consumption and carbon emissions, the challenge of transitioning from resource-driven economic growth to sustainable, green development is a pressing global concern. Researchers (from İstanbul Nişantaşı University) examining the U.S., Turkey, BRICS countries, and India provide valuable insights into how energy use, resource management, and environmental policies can shape sustainable futures.
How Renewables Affect U.S. Growth and Turkey’s Environment
U.S. data from 1980–2017 reveal an inverted U-shaped link between economic growth and environmental degradation: early development increases harm, but beyond a certain income threshold, renewable energy adoption reduces impacts. Effective management of natural resources also mitigates damage [1]. In Turkey, studies find that GDP growth, resource dependence, and energy use strain environmental capacity, while higher unemployment improves it. These insights prompt policymakers to pursue greener production methods and scale up renewables to balance economic expansion with environmental protection [2].
Resource Curse Reversed: Green Innovation in BRICS and India
Evidence from BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) underscores the drawbacks of relying on non-renewable resources: while carbon-intensive energy yields short-term gains, dependency on coal and fossil fuels hampers long-term growth. Limited renewable energy use misses sustainable development opportunities. To escape the resource curse, these economies must diversify and invest in clean-energy technologies [3]. India confirms that sustainable growth depends on green innovation, environmental policies, and project financial support. Resource exploitation alone can undermine progress, highlighting the need for regulation and low-carbon strategies [4].
Collectively, these insights point to a clear path forward: economic growth must be increasingly decoupled from environmental harm through the strategic use of renewable energy, responsible resource management, and supportive policy frameworks. Embracing innovation, diversifying economies, and ensuring sustainable financial practices can guide nations toward lasting prosperity without sacrificing environmental health. The shift from resource dependency to green growth is not just an environmental necessity but a cornerstone of sustainable economic resilience for future generations.
*Notes: This article provides research teasers for each reference to showcase the novelties
References
[1] Caglar, A. E., Yavuz, E., Mert, M., & Kilic, E. (2022). The ecological footprint facing asymmetric natural resources challenges: Evidence from the USA. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 29(7), 10521–10534. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11356-021-16406-9
[2] Yavuz, E., Kilic, E., & Caglar, A. E. (2023). A new hypothesis for the unemployment-environment dilemma: Is the environmental Phillips curve valid in the framework of load capacity factor in Turkiye? Environment, Development and Sustainability, 26(11), 29475–29492. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10668-023-04258-x
[3] Imran, M., Alam, M. S., Jijian, Z., Ozturk, I., Wahab, S., & Doğan, M. (2024). From resource curse to green growth: Exploring the role of energy utilization and natural resource abundance in economic development. Natural Resources Forum. https://doi.org/10.1111/1477-8947.12461
[4] Manigandan, P., Alam, M. S., Murshed, M., Ozturk, I., Altuntas, S., & Alam, M. M. (2024). Promoting sustainable economic growth through natural resources management, green innovations, environmental policy deployment, and financial development: Fresh evidence from India. Resources Policy, 90, 104681. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resourpol.2024.104681