Citation
Sulaiman, Chindo
(2017)
Impact of wood fuel consumption on forest degradation, health outcomes and economic growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Doctoral thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
This thesis is motivated based on the increasing production of wood fuel driven by its
growing consumption in the Sub-Saharan African region. While other parts of the
world are already on the verge of reducing the use of wood fuel and switching to much
cleaner and healthier fuel such as electricity, considering the potential environmental,
health and economic effects it has, the story is different in Sub-Saharan Africa. The
demand for the wood fuel in Sub-Saharan Africa is on the increase and has been even
projected to increase further in the coming decades. This calls for concern and research
into the area, as some challenges accompany the increase. These likely challenges,
which are related to forest degradation, health and economic growth, are the focus of
our study. Therefore, this study specifically investigates the impact of wood fuel
consumption on forest degradation as objective one. Whereas, the impact of wood fuel
consumption on health outcomes (under five and adult mortality rates) and economic
growth are investigated as objective two and three, respectively. The organisation of
this thesis is based on essay format of thesis layout and not the conventional format.
A panel method of system generalized method of moment (GMM) was used to
estimate the impact of wood fuel consumption on forest degradation and the impact of
wood fuel consumption on health outcomes in 45 and 46 sub-Saharan African
countries, respectively, for the 2005-2013 period. While the impact of wood fuel
consumption on economic growth was estimated using panel autoregressive
distributed lag (ARDL) method, which included pooled mean group, mean group and
dynamic fixed effect estimators in 19 sub-Saharan African countries for the 1979-2013
period. The data on all the variables for all the countries were sourced from the
databases of World development indicators (WDI) of World Bank, World Governance
Indicators (WGI), and food and agricultural organisation (FAO). The estimated results for the impact of wood fuel consumption on forest degradation
reveal that wood fuel consumption significantly increases forest degradation in the
region. When interacted with control of corruption or government effectiveness, wood
fuel consumption has been found to have a negative impact on forest degradation. It
suggests that a sound control of corrupt practices and effective governance can help
to reduce degradation in the region. On the impact of wood fuel consumption on health
outcomes, the results show that wood fuel consumption has significant positive impact
on adult and under-five mortality rates in the region. This finding confirms the
assertion that the rising deaths recorded in the region from indoor air pollution related
illnesses can be linked to wood fuel smoke. Lastly, the results of the impact of wood
fuel consumption on economic growth disclose that wood fuel consumption causes a
decline in economic growth through a decrease in productivity of labour and
increasing medical expenses due to indoor air pollution related infections. The
estimated models were validated via diagnostic and robustness tests, which suggest
that the estimates were reliable.
The general findings indicate that an increase in wood fuel consumption facilitates
forest degradation, adult and under-five mortality rates, as well as slow down
economic growth. The policy recommendation from this study is that governments of
Sub-Saharan African countries should strengthen the fight against corruption and
ensure effective governance, as well as strive to make the modern fuel available and
affordable. Thus, it will assist in reducing the too much dependence on wood sources
for energy use. Consequently, the region can safeguard its forests, prevent indoor air
related smoke diseases, and avert the adverse effect of wood fuel consumption on
growth.
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