Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa
Purpose: This study aims to examine the interplay between renewable energy consumption, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth. Design/methodology/approach: It engaged 45 African countries using the generalized method of moments (GMM) approach. Data from the World Develop...
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my.uniten.dspace-369622025-03-03T15:46:09Z Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa Osabohien R. Zogbass� S. Jaaffar A.H. Idowu O.O. Al-Faryan M.A.S. 57201922189 58054739700 58897806500 57224086522 57219595796 Clean energy Energy economics % reductions Design/methodology/approach Dominant negative Economic growths Generalized method of moments Greenhouse gas emissions Natural resource depletion Renewable energies Renewable energy consumption Resource depletion Carbon sequestration Purpose: This study aims to examine the interplay between renewable energy consumption, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth. Design/methodology/approach: It engaged 45 African countries using the generalized method of moments (GMM) approach. Data from the World Development Indicators for the period 2000?2023 are used to analyse the relationships among these variables. Findings: The result indicates a positive and significant effect of greenhouse gas emissions on economic growth in all regions of Africa, except for Southern Africa. Regarding the depletion of natural resources, the authors observe a dominant negative effect on economic growth. Thus, an increase in the depletion of natural resources contributes to the reduction of economic growth in most regions of Africa, notably West Africa, East Africa and sub-Saharan Africa as a whole. Moreover, the depletion of natural resources can also have negative social impacts, such as conflicts over access to remaining resources, which can indirectly influence economic stability and growth. Originality/value: This study contributes to the existing literature by providing empirical evidence of the positive effects of renewable energy consumption on carbon footprints, natural resource depletion and economic growth. By quantifying these relationships, the study offers valuable insights into the potential of renewable energy to address pressing environmental and economic challenges. ? 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited. Article in press 2025-03-03T07:46:09Z 2025-03-03T07:46:09Z 2024 Article 10.1108/IJESM-07-2024-0030 2-s2.0-85210588855 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85210588855&doi=10.1108%2fIJESM-07-2024-0030&partnerID=40&md5=a90a11edb8ccb30ee3bf3b753c39e9c9 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/36962 Emerald Publishing Scopus |
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Clean energy Energy economics % reductions Design/methodology/approach Dominant negative Economic growths Generalized method of moments Greenhouse gas emissions Natural resource depletion Renewable energies Renewable energy consumption Resource depletion Carbon sequestration |
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Clean energy Energy economics % reductions Design/methodology/approach Dominant negative Economic growths Generalized method of moments Greenhouse gas emissions Natural resource depletion Renewable energies Renewable energy consumption Resource depletion Carbon sequestration Osabohien R. Zogbass� S. Jaaffar A.H. Idowu O.O. Al-Faryan M.A.S. Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa |
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Purpose: This study aims to examine the interplay between renewable energy consumption, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth. Design/methodology/approach: It engaged 45 African countries using the generalized method of moments (GMM) approach. Data from the World Development Indicators for the period 2000?2023 are used to analyse the relationships among these variables. Findings: The result indicates a positive and significant effect of greenhouse gas emissions on economic growth in all regions of Africa, except for Southern Africa. Regarding the depletion of natural resources, the authors observe a dominant negative effect on economic growth. Thus, an increase in the depletion of natural resources contributes to the reduction of economic growth in most regions of Africa, notably West Africa, East Africa and sub-Saharan Africa as a whole. Moreover, the depletion of natural resources can also have negative social impacts, such as conflicts over access to remaining resources, which can indirectly influence economic stability and growth. Originality/value: This study contributes to the existing literature by providing empirical evidence of the positive effects of renewable energy consumption on carbon footprints, natural resource depletion and economic growth. By quantifying these relationships, the study offers valuable insights into the potential of renewable energy to address pressing environmental and economic challenges. ? 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited. |
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57201922189 |
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57201922189 Osabohien R. Zogbass� S. Jaaffar A.H. Idowu O.O. Al-Faryan M.A.S. |
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Article |
author |
Osabohien R. Zogbass� S. Jaaffar A.H. Idowu O.O. Al-Faryan M.A.S. |
author_sort |
Osabohien R. |
title |
Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa |
title_short |
Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa |
title_full |
Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa |
title_fullStr |
Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa |
title_full_unstemmed |
Renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in Africa |
title_sort |
renewable energy, carbon footprints, natural resources depletion and economic growth in africa |
publisher |
Emerald Publishing |
publishDate |
2025 |
_version_ |
1825816289941127168 |
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13.244413 |