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Energy Economics, Finance, and Management in Developing and Emerging Economies [Pehme köide]

Edited by (Professor of Economics, School of Social Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia), Edited by (School of Business, Operations, and Strategy, Greenwich Business School, University of Greenwich, London, United Kingdom)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 380 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x191 mm, kaal: 790 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: Elsevier - Health Sciences Division
  • ISBN-10: 0443247285
  • ISBN-13: 9780443247286
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 154,11 €*
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 380 pages, kõrgus x laius: 235x191 mm, kaal: 790 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: Elsevier - Health Sciences Division
  • ISBN-10: 0443247285
  • ISBN-13: 9780443247286
Energy Economics, Finance, and Management in Developing and Emerging Economies is a guide to the specialised needs of emerging economies in the quest for a successful energy transition. This book begins with a close examination of energy economic policy and its impact on energy security, efficiency, sources, and technology across a range of developing and emerging countries. This includes an analysis of tactics and tools such as the Environmental Kuznats Curve, fuel subsidy reforms, the spatial dynamics model and impact of social capital, and the energy-growth nexus. Part II focuses on opportunities and case studies in the financial industry, including studies on exchanges rates, regulations regarding disclosure, and effects on firm performance. Finally, Part II examines the policy options for energy management from a market and demand-response perspective. Integrating these three critical aspects of the energy transition, Energy Economics, Finance, and Management in Developing and Emerging Economies fills an essential need for financial policy and economic strategy to support emerging economies through a successful and sustainable energy transition.
1.The energy-growth nexus in Malaysia: Does energy security matter?
Dzul Hadzwan Husaini and Hooi Hooi Lean
2.Energy transition, energy efficiency, and green finance in the ASEAN
region
Mita Bhattacharya and Eric Yan
3.Economic policy uncertainties and energy generation dynamics in emerging
economies: A panel data analysis
Shreya Pal and Mantu Kumar Mahalik
4.Income growth and green financing in renewable energy: Mitigating
environmental degradation in emerging Asian countries
Tze-Haw Chan, Abdul Saqib, and Isnaini Nuzula IN Agustin
5.Macroeconomic analysis of fuel subsidy reforms in ASEAN countries
Nam Foo, Hooi Hooi Lean, and Ruhul Salim
6.Moderating role of global value chains between countries ability to adopt
and adapt the frontier technology and renewable energy innovations: Evidence
from selected developing economies
Qaiser Munir, Shamrez Ali, and Kasim Mansur
7.Social capital and its spatial spillover on energy-based carbon emissions
in Indonesia
Windia Urfa Hani, Djoni Hartono, and Putu Angga Widyastaman
8.Beyond profit: An in-depth analysis of ESG factors and financial
performance in the Chinese new energy sector
Irene Wei Kiong Ting, Qian Long Kweh, Chunya Ren, and Jawad Asif
9.How carbon emission affects stock price crash riskEvidence from listed
firms in Taiwan
Yuan Chang
10.Asymmetric relationships between crude oil price, palm oil price, and
exchange rate: The case of Malaysia
Sook-Rei Tan and Xiu Wei Yeap
11.Asymmetric causality relationship between global energy market and ASEAN
stock markets
Jianxu Liu, Yansong Li, Xuefei Kang, Jiande Cui, and Woraphon Yamaka
12.International Energy Agencys approaches to low-carbon energy transitions
and just transitions in emerging economies
Chung-Han Yang
13.Energy efficiency and energy management in developing countries: A way
forward
Qaiser Munir, Shamrez Ali, and Kasim Mansur
14.Prospects for hydrogen energy and its production in India
William J. Nuttall, Bernaurdshaw Neppolian, Madhu Madhavi, and Aswathy Rajan
15.Enhancing sustainable urban mobility: A customer-centered comparative
analysis for seat-based e-scooter sharing services
Sirirat Sae Lim and Han-Wei Chiang
16.Optimal green energy policy supports for rural water facility operation in
Nigeria
Saheed Layiwola Bello
Hooi Hooi Lean is a Professor of Economics in the School of Social Sciences of Universiti Sains Malaysia (Malaysia). Prof. Lean has authored more than 200 scholarly articles and academic book chapters. Her works have been published in many reputed international journals and publications. She was listed as one of the Top 2% scientists in the world by Stanford University and one of the Top 1000 Scientists in the field of Economics and Finance by Research.com. Prof. Lean serves as the Specialty Chief Editor for Energy Economics in Frontiers in Environmental Economics.

Jin Hooi Chan is a Professor of Sustainable Strategy, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship at Greenwich Business School, University of Greenwich, United Kingdom. Prof. Chan has about 30 years of extensive industry and academic experience. He worked in the environmental consulting and renewable energy sectors in Europe and Asia, developing a portfolio of multimillion dollar renewable energy projects for major investors, and providing advisory and research services to many national energy and electricity firms. He is a Chartered Engineer and Chartered Environmentalist, registered in the United Kingdom.

He was trained at the University of Cambridge in sustainable development and energy policy and industrial structure, with full scholarships from Shell-Chevening and the ESRC- Cambridge Commonwealth Trust Dorothy Hodgkin Award. His research in sustainable development and climate change encompasses several subjects (policy analysis, ethical finance and financial innovation, ESG and climate risks and litigation, firm strategies and green transitions, SME and entrepreneurship ecosystem, and social psychology-behavioural change), and ventures into several sectors (renewable energy; fintech, crowdfunding, and e-commerce; tourism and hospitality; eco- and social enterprises; creative industries; and heritage and cultural sector). Prof. Chan is a prolific writer who has published widely in reputable peer-reviewed academic journals and industry outlets, including many top- ranked academic journals, such as Industrial Marketing Management, Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, International Journal

of Hospitality Management, International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Current Issues in Tourism, City, Culture and Society, and Singapore Economics Review. He sits on various editorial boards of highly reputable journals and is a member of the ESRC (UK) Research Councils Peer-Review College, and an external grant reviewer for the British Academy, where he reviews grant proposals.