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Renewable Energy Consumption and Economic Growth in Nigeria Nexus
Abstract
With rising rates of globalization, increasing climate change and economic growth, energy usage and energy security, governments are paying more attention to the impact of renewable energy consumption on the economies. The paper examines the relationship between renewable energy consumption and economic growth in Nigeria using a time series data from 1996 to 2021. The results of the unit root show mixed stationarity from our variables which result in the usage of ARDL technique of analysis. The long run results show that renewable energy was negative and significant thus, validates the conservative hypothesis. C02 was also negatively significant to RGDP while labor force was positively significant. The ECM shows 77% adjustment level backs to equilibrium. Granger causality test validated the feedback hypothesis of no causality among the renewable energy and the Nigeria economy.