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The criticality of growth, urbanization, electricity and fossil fuel consumption to environment sustainability in Africa

While most African economies are primarily sandwiched with the seemingly unsurmountable task of attaining consistent economic growth and unhindered energy supply, the enormous threat posed by environmental degradation has further complicated the economic and environmental sustainability drive. In th...

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Published in:The Science of the total environment 2020-04, Vol.712, p.136376-136376, Article 136376
Main Authors: Asongu, Simplice A., Agboola, Mary Oluwatoyin, Alola, Andrew Adewale, Bekun, Festus Victor
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:While most African economies are primarily sandwiched with the seemingly unsurmountable task of attaining consistent economic growth and unhindered energy supply, the enormous threat posed by environmental degradation has further complicated the economic and environmental sustainability drive. In this context, the present study examines the effect of economic growth, urbanization, electricity consumption, fossil fuel energy consumption, and total natural resources rent on pollutant emissions in Africa over the period 1980–2014. By employing selected African countries, the current study relies on the Kao and Pedroni cointegration tests to cointegration analysis, the Pesaran's Panel Pooled Mean Group-Autoregressive distributive lag methodology (ARDL-PMG) for long run regression while Dumitrescu and Hurlin (2012) is employed for the detection of causality direction among the outlined variables. The study traces long run equilibrium relationships between examined indicators. The ARDL-PMG results suggest a statistical positive relationship between pollutant emissions and urbanization, electricity consumption and non-renewable energy consumption. Dumitrescu and Hurlin (2012) Granger causality test lends support to the long-run regression results. A bi-directional causality is observed between pollutant emissions, electricity consumption, economic growth and pollutant emissions while a unidirectional causality is apparent between total natural resources rent and pollutant emission. Based on these results, several policy implications for the African continent were suggested. (a) The need for a paradigm shift from fossil fuel sources to renewables is encouraged in the region (b) The need to embrace carbon storage and capturing techniques to decouple pollutant emissions from economic growth on the continent's growth trajectory. Further policy insights are elucidated. [Display omitted] •Investigation of environmental degradation in selected African countries•Long and short-run pollutant emissions decomposition in Africa•Economic growth-pollutant emission directional causality has a feedback.•Urbanization, electricity consumption and fossil fuel positively impact pollutant emission.•Energy portfolio diversification in Africa is more urgently necessary than ever.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.136376