Digital transformation and CO₂ emissions in Africa: evidence from dynamic panel and quantile regression analyses
摘要
Digitalization has become a vital driver of agricultural productivity and financial inclusion, both essential for advancing sustainable development. Yet, its environmental implications, particularly its impact on CO₂ emissions (SDG 13) in African countries, remain underexplored. This study investigates the interrelationship between digitalization (SDG 9), agriculture, natural resource rents, financial development, urbanization (SDG 11), renewable energy consumption (SDG 7), and CO₂ emissions across 29 African Union member states from 2000 to 2020. Using data from the World Bank, we apply the Panel Difference GMM method to address endogeneity and ensure robust causal inference. The findings reveal that digitalization is significantly associated with higher carbon emissions, reflecting the energy demands of digital infrastructure, production, and emerging technologies. Similarly, financial development stimulates economic growth but is associated with higher energy consumption and emissions. Resource rents are also associated with higher emissions, as many African economies rely heavily on extractive industries such as oil and gas. Conversely, agriculture, renewable energy use, and urbanization are associated with lower CO₂ emissions, suggesting their potential as sustainability enablers. To enhance methodological rigor, Panel Quantile Regression is employed, highlighting how variable significance shifts across the emission distribution. Overall, the study provides a multisectoral framework for promoting sustainable development, economic resilience, and environmental sustainability in Africa.