Publication Information
Published by: Admin
Published: 1 year ago
View: 91
Pages: 29
ISBN:
Abstract
The pace of urbanisation, the intensity of energy consumption, and the quality of environmental regulation level pose a severe threat to environmental sustainability in Africa. Hence, we examine the role of regulatory quality on environmental pollution through urbanisation and energy consumption channel in 33 African nations between 1996 and 2020. Our study considers cross-sectional dependence in Africa; as a result, we employ the Augmented Mean Group (AMG) method and Common Correlated Effect Mean Group (CCEMG) for a robustness check to analyse the panel series. The study finds that (i) urbanisation increases environmental pollution, (ii) energy consumption accelerates environmental degradation, (iii) regulatory quality can partially mediate pollution in Africa via urbanisation and energy consumption channels, and (iv) The interaction of regulatory quality with urbanisation and energy consumption, respectively reduce environmental pollution establishing a moderation effect. The study suggests that African countries tighten environmental regulatory policies to lessen carbon emissions and drive environmental sustainability towards achieving carbon neutrality by 2050.
Chukwunonso Ekesiobi Mr
Bruno N. Ibekilo
Precious M. Emmanuel
Related Publications
VOLUME 7 ISSUE 2 2024
Female unemployment and the procedure that a woman has to go through to start a business: microfinance policy thresholds
VOLUME 7 ISSUE 2 2024
Sustainable urbanization and vulnerability to climate change in Africa: Accounting for digitalization and institutional quality
VOLUME 7 ISSUE 2 2024
Foreign direct investment and Renewable energy development in sub-Saharan Africa: Does governance quality matter?