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Agriculture and Climate Change: Assessing Carbon Emissions from Diverse Agricultural Activities in Nigeria
Abstract
This paper examines the effects of diverse agricultural activities -crop production, fishing, livestock production and forestry- on carbon emissions in Nigeria. The study employs time-series data for the period 1990 to 2021 and applies Auto Regressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) estimation technique. The results reveal that agricultural activities significantly impact carbon emissions in Nigeria. The findings further reveal that livestock production and fishing activities increase emissions. However, the results show that crop production and forestry activities reduce emissions in Nigeria during the reference period. In the long run, a 1% rise in livestock production increases emissions by 0.09% and a 1% rise in fishing activities increases emissions by 0.57%. In contrast, a 1% expansion in crop production decreases emissions by 0.31% while a 1% expansion in forestry decreases emissions by 0.2%. Also, the estimates show that energy consumption has positive effect on emissions. Further, the results reveal that trade openness and FDI have positive effects on emissions while financial development reduces emissions in the long run. Thus, agricultural policies and strategies that explicitly combine mitigation of emissions with measures to improve food security and environmental outcomes in the agricultural sector should be promoted.