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During the COVID-19 outbreak, managing energy consumption and CO(2) emission remained a serious problem. The previous literature rarely solved this real-time issue, and there is a lack of public research proposing an effective way forward on it. However, the study examines the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on energy consumption and CO(2) emission. The design of the study is quantitative, and the data is acquired from different online databases. The model of the study is inferred by using panel unit root test and ARDL test. The robustness of study findings was checked through panel quantile regression. The findings highlighted that the COVID-19 outbreak is negatively significant with energy consumption and CO(2) emission. The study suggested revising the energy consumption patterns by developing and implementing the national action plan for energy consumption and environmental protection. The study also contributed in knowledge by suggesting the novel insight into CO(2) emission and energy consumption patterns during COVID-19 pandemic and recommended to consider renewable energy transition methods as an opportunity for the society. For a more effective management of energy consumption and environmental pollution, country-specific measures are suggested to be taken, and the national government should support the concerned public departments, ministries and private organizations on it. To the best of our study, this is one of the pioneer studies studying this novel link and suggesting the way forward on recent topicality.
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?:doi
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10.1007/s11356-020-11462-z
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Environ_Sci_Pollut_Res_Int
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document_parses/pdf_json/d584a23d3a81ebe74ec1421ecbdd62b0057dc2c9.json
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document_parses/pmc_json/PMC7659900.xml.json
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It is time to control the worst: testing COVID-19 outbreak, energy consumption and CO(2) emission
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