Driving forces and decoupling indicators for carbon emissions from the industrial sector in Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia.

Environmental Science and Pollution Research International
Jean Engo

Abstract

North Africa currently accounts for about 40% of Africa's total CO2 emissions, and the industrial sector is one of the energy-intensive sectors in the region. To this end, special attention should be paid to this region if the African continent's GHG mitigation targets are to be achieved. An extended decomposition approach was combined with the Tapio method to explore the decoupling of CO2 emissions from industrial growth in North African countries over the period of 1990-2016. The effects of five factors were assessed in the decoupling and the study took into account all fossil fuels used in the industrial sector of this region. Unlike Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia, and Algeria, this study did not consider Libya because of the unavailability of data. Meanwhile, the results showed that: (i) low decoupling was achieved in Tunisia, compared with Morocco and Egypt, where significant decoupling occurred significantly over the study period. (ii) Due to the slowdown in industrial growth, the decoupling analysis did not show satisfactory results in the case of Algeria. (iii) Scale effects contributed to promoting decoupling only in Algeria, while the energy intensity effect played a negative role in decoupling only in Tunisia. (iv) The ener...Continue Reading

References

Jan 22, 2018·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International· DanishShah Suad
Oct 24, 2018·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International·Jean Engo
Apr 18, 2019·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International·Jean Engo
May 12, 2019·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International·Zubair AkramMuhammad Wasif Zafar

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Citations

Apr 19, 2021·Environmental Science and Pollution Research International·Chang LiLinxiu Zhang

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