Modelling Energy Consumption, Carbon Dioxide Emissions and Economic Growth Nexus in Ethiopia: Evidence from Cointegration and Causality Analysis

Authors

  • Shemelis Kebede Hundie Department of Economics, Jigjiga University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24925/turjaf.v6i6.699-709.1720

Keywords:

Growth, Energy, Financial development, Urbanization, CO2 emissions, Ethiopia

Abstract

Policy makers need to know the relationship among energy use, economic growth and environmental quality in order to formulate rigorous policy for economic growth and environmental sustainability. This study analyzes the nexus among energy consumption, affluence, financial development, trade openness, urbanization, population and CO2 emissions in Ethiopia using data from 1970–2014. The ARDL cointegration results show that cointegration exists among the variables. Energy consumption, population, trade openness and economic growth have positive impact on CO2 in the long-run while economic growth squared reduces CO2 emissions which confirms that the EKC hypothesis holds in Ethiopia. In the short-run urbanization and energy consumption intensify environmental degradation. Toda-Yamamoto granger causality results indicate the bi-directional causality between energy consumption and CO2 emissions, CO2 emissions and urbanization. Financial development, population and urbanization cause economic growth while economic growth causes CO2 emissions. Causality runs from energy consumption to financial development, urbanization and population which in turn cause economic growth. From the result, CO2 emissions extenuation policy in Ethiopia should focus on environmentally friendly growth, enhancing consumption of cleaner energy, incorporating the impact of population, urbanization, trade and financial development.

Author Biography

Shemelis Kebede Hundie, Department of Economics, Jigjiga University

Department of Economics

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Published

26.06.2018

How to Cite

Hundie, S. K. (2018). Modelling Energy Consumption, Carbon Dioxide Emissions and Economic Growth Nexus in Ethiopia: Evidence from Cointegration and Causality Analysis. Turkish Journal of Agriculture - Food Science and Technology, 6(6), 699–709. https://doi.org/10.24925/turjaf.v6i6.699-709.1720

Issue

Section

Agriculture and Environment