Agricultural Production, Renewable Energy Consumption, Foreign Direct Investment, and Carbon Emissions: New Evidence from Africa
Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Atmosphere
Abstract
This paper explores the nexus between agricultural production, renewable energy, foreign
direct investment (FDI), and carbon emissions in Africa, where there is limited evidence on the topic.
Relying on panel data covering thirty-one African countries obtained from the World Bank World
Development Indicators and FAOSTAT databases, we answered the question of whether agricultural
production (proxied by livestock production, fertilizer consumption, and land under cereal cultiva tion), the use of renewable energy, and FDI increase or reduce carbon emissions. Using the panel
autoregressive distributed lag model for analysis, our results show that net FDI, fertilizer consump tion, livestock production significantly increased carbon emissions, both in the short run and long
run. Meanwhile, renewable energy use consumption significantly decreased carbon emissions, both
in the short run and long run. Specifically, a 1% increase in net FDI increased total carbon emissions
by 0.003% in the short run and by 0.01% in the long run. Renewable energy consumption significantly
decreased carbon emissions, both in the short run and long run. A 1% increase in renewable energy
consumption decreased total carbon emissions by 0.16% in the short run and by 0.22% in the long
run. Additionally, fertilizer consumption and livestock production significantly increased carbon
emissions in the short run and long run. A 1% increase in fertilizer consumption increased total
carbon emissions by 0.01% in the short run and by 0.04% in the long run, while a 1% increase in
livestock production increased total carbon emissions by 0.20% in the short run and by 0.56% in the
long run. The findings call for investment in renewable energy technologies and consumption while
advocating for large-scale uptake of climate-smart agriculture, and environmentally friendly targeted
foreign direct investments on the continent.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
greenhouse gas emissions, agricultural production, FDI, renewable energy, panel ARDL;, Africa