1. The role of renewable energy and agriculture in reducing CO2 emissions: Evidence for North Africa countries.
- Author
-
Mehdi, Ben Jebli and Slim, Ben Youssef
- Subjects
- *
RENEWABLE energy sources , *CARBON dioxide & the environment , *COINTEGRATION , *GLOBAL warming , *ENERGY consumption , *GROSS domestic product , *AGRICULTURAL productivity - Abstract
This paper uses panel cointegration techniques and Granger causality tests to investigate the dynamic causal links between per capita renewable energy consumption, agricultural value added (AVA), carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emissions, and real gross domestic product (GDP) for a panel of five North Africa countries spanning the period 1980–2011. In the short-run, Granger causality tests show the existence of bidirectional causality between CO 2 emissions and agriculture; a unidirectional causality running from agriculture to GDP, from GDP to renewable energy consumption, and from renewable energy consumption to agriculture. In the long-run, there is bidirectional causality between agriculture and CO 2 emissions; a unidirectional causality running from renewable energy to agriculture and to emissions, and from output to agriculture and to emissions. Long-run parameter estimates show that an increase in GDP or in renewable energy consumption (including combustible and waste) increases CO 2 emissions, whereas an increase in agricultural value added reduces CO 2 emissions. As policy recommendation, North African authorities should encourage renewable energy consumption, and especially clean renewable energy such as solar or wind, as this improves agricultural production and help to combat global warming. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF