Pollutant Emissions and Economic Growth in Nigeria: A Comparative Analysis of Carbon Emissions from Gaseous, Liquid and Solid Fuel Consumption

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Authors

  • Olufunmi Emmanuel FASHINA Lead City University, Ibadan

Keywords:

Carbon emissions, gaseous pollution, liquid pollution, solid pollution, income growth.

Abstract

This research study analyses the growth effects of carbon emissions from alternative fuel consumption by investigating how carbon emissions from gaseous, liquid, and solid fuel usage affect GDP growth in Nigeria from 1981 to 2020. Using the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) estimator, the result showed that there exists a long run relationship between the disaggregated carbon emissions and economic growth in Nigeria. The result reveals that carbon emissions from liquid fuel consumption have a negative impact on both short-term and longterm output growth. It implies that the price volatility, foreign exchange dependence, andĀ 
environmental and health expenses associated with using liquid fuels have a detrimental effect on economic growth in the short run. The study also showed that carbon emissions from the burning of gaseous and solid fuels have direct and significant links with economic growth both in the short and long run. It means that the importance of adopting sustainable and low carbon development pathways to ensure sustainable economic growth in Nigeria is highlighted by the fact that carbon-emitting fuels can contribute to short-term economic growth. On the policy front, a carbon tax or cap-and-trade scheme should be implemented to reduce carbonĀ 
emissions. This will push industry and consumers to use cleaner energy sources and technologies and generate income for low-carbon infrastructure and research.

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Published

2023-06-07