Sustainable Development and SDG-7 in Sub-Saharan Africa: Balancing Energy Access, Economic Growth, and Carbon Emissions
Dmitriy Li,
Jeong Hwan Bae and
Meenakshi Rishi ()
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Dmitriy Li: Chonnam National University
Jeong Hwan Bae: Chonnam National University
Meenakshi Rishi: Seattle University
The European Journal of Development Research, 2023, vol. 35, issue 1, No 5, 112-137
Abstract:
Abstract The Covid-19 pandemic has shocked the global energy system. It has resulted in tremendous uncertainty and diminished the recent advances to increase access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy—an objective preserved in the UN Sustainable Development Goal 7 (SDG-7). According to the IEA, attaining universal electricity access in Africa in line with SDG-7 entails annual investments of approximately $20 billion over the next decade. Given the sizeable magnitudes involved, it is inevitable that energy projects will need to rely on richer nations for energy aid. This paper explores the linkages between energy-related external aid, carbon emissions, per capita GDP, and electricity access for a sample of 30 low-income SSA countries over 1995 to 2016. Our econometric analysis reveals that while all types of energy aid facilitate economic growth in the long run, there is no direct impact of energy-related aid on electricity access. However, an increase in per capita GDP is positively associated with electricity access in both rural and urban areas. We also find that energy-related aid helps mitigate carbon emissions as well as contribute to GDP. Taken together, our results suggest that enhanced energy-related aid to low-income SSA countries can directly facilitate climate compatible growth and indirectly impel improvements in electricity access thereby helping with poverty reduction. We also advocate regional cooperation among SSA countries as a collective effort to confront shared energy challenges.
Keywords: Energy-related aid; Electricity access; Economic growth; CO2 emissions; Sub-Saharan African countries; C13; O44; P45; O55; Q50 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1057/s41287-021-00502-0
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