Determinants of renewable energy consumption in agrarian Sub-Sahara African economies
Abstract
The effect of ecological distortions and climate
change issues have been at the forefront of the minds of
policymakers and energy practitioners in recent decades.
This concern is associated with the vision of the seventh
and thirteenth Sustainable Development Goals that are
centered on access to clean energy sources and mitigating
climate change issues, as detailed in Vision 2030. To this
end, the present study uses Pesaran’s Pooled Mean Group
Auto Regressive Distributed Lag model to investigate the
determinants of clean/non-conventional energy in the case
of Sub-Saharan Africa. The empirical results show that a
1% increase in economic activity increases the level of
renewable energy consumption by 0.128% in the short run.
In the long-run, economic growth dampens the consumption of renewable energy by 0.402% over the investigated
period. The reason for this peculiar result for the SubSaharan African economies could be attributed to the
prevalent demand for conventional energy sources and the
cost-related factor associated with clean energy technologies even when the economy (herein measured by Gross
Domestic Product) is improving. Furthermore, the effect of
energy (electricity from fossil fuel) also shows a statistically significant impact when trying to reduce the clean
energy consumption. This arises from an expected trade-off
effect. Regarding the causality analysis using the heterogeneous panel, the causality results present a one-way
causality running from economic growth to renewable
energy consumption. We also found there to be a feedback
causality relationship between urbanization and renewable energy as well as agricultural value added and economic
growth. Based on these findings, several policy decisions
were prescribed for Sub-Saharan African economies such
as the diversification of Sub-Saharan African economies
energy to more renewable energy sources and the adoption
of clean energy technologies that are reputed to be cleaner
and environmentally friendly.
Volume
7Issue
3Collections
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