Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale

With the rise in global food insecurity, pollution, and wildlife extinction caused by climate change, development policies are now tailored toward addressing this quagmire. However, the unresolved question is, are climate-related development finances effective in greening the environment in developi...

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Main Authors: Sulemana Mumuni, Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2023-12-01
Series:Carbon Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2023.2251934
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author Sulemana Mumuni
Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe
author_facet Sulemana Mumuni
Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe
author_sort Sulemana Mumuni
collection DOAJ
description With the rise in global food insecurity, pollution, and wildlife extinction caused by climate change, development policies are now tailored toward addressing this quagmire. However, the unresolved question is, are climate-related development finances effective in greening the environment in developing countries? In this milieu, this study assessed the effectiveness of climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption on CO2 emissions in Africa by applying the system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimation technique on data from 2000 to 2020 for 41 selected countries. The findings show that the overall climate-related development finances, adaptation-related development finances, and mitigation-related development finances have short-run carbon-enhancing and long-run carbon-reducing effects in Africa. Similarly, renewable energy consumption and the net inflows of foreign direct investment have short-run worsening and long-run carbon-abatement effects in Africa. In contrast, higher GDP per capita, urbanization, and higher energy intensity are effective in reducing CO2 emissions in Africa only in the short run, however, they exacerbate CO2 emissions in Africa over the long run. In this light, the study underscores the need to invest heavily in climate-related development projects, and green technology innovation and production in Africa. The results also suggest the need to upgrade the current energy structure in Africa to renewable energy sources for a greener, cleaner, and brighter Africa. However, these policy perspectives require enough funds for effective implementation. Hence, the study calls on the developed countries (the polluters) to support Africa with the required funds to pay off climate debt by 2030 and build climate-resilient practices.
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spelling doaj.art-8d489a291f4746909da3f938898042122023-09-21T15:09:07ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCarbon Management1758-30041758-30122023-12-0114110.1080/17583004.2023.22519342251934Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African taleSulemana Mumuni0Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe1Institute of Governance, Humanities and Social Sciences, Pan African UniversityInstitute of Governance, Humanities and Social Sciences, Pan African UniversityWith the rise in global food insecurity, pollution, and wildlife extinction caused by climate change, development policies are now tailored toward addressing this quagmire. However, the unresolved question is, are climate-related development finances effective in greening the environment in developing countries? In this milieu, this study assessed the effectiveness of climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption on CO2 emissions in Africa by applying the system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimation technique on data from 2000 to 2020 for 41 selected countries. The findings show that the overall climate-related development finances, adaptation-related development finances, and mitigation-related development finances have short-run carbon-enhancing and long-run carbon-reducing effects in Africa. Similarly, renewable energy consumption and the net inflows of foreign direct investment have short-run worsening and long-run carbon-abatement effects in Africa. In contrast, higher GDP per capita, urbanization, and higher energy intensity are effective in reducing CO2 emissions in Africa only in the short run, however, they exacerbate CO2 emissions in Africa over the long run. In this light, the study underscores the need to invest heavily in climate-related development projects, and green technology innovation and production in Africa. The results also suggest the need to upgrade the current energy structure in Africa to renewable energy sources for a greener, cleaner, and brighter Africa. However, these policy perspectives require enough funds for effective implementation. Hence, the study calls on the developed countries (the polluters) to support Africa with the required funds to pay off climate debt by 2030 and build climate-resilient practices.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2023.2251934climate-related development financeadaptation financemitigation financerenewable energy consumptionsystem gmmand africa
spellingShingle Sulemana Mumuni
Yaya Deome Hamadjoda Lefe
Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale
Carbon Management
climate-related development finance
adaptation finance
mitigation finance
renewable energy consumption
system gmm
and africa
title Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale
title_full Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale
title_fullStr Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale
title_full_unstemmed Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale
title_short Greening the environment: do climate-related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter? An African tale
title_sort greening the environment do climate related development finances and renewable energy consumption matter an african tale
topic climate-related development finance
adaptation finance
mitigation finance
renewable energy consumption
system gmm
and africa
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17583004.2023.2251934
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