South Asia is one of the fastest growing regions in the world during the last two decades. This growth momentum has been fuelled by carbon-intensive fossil fuels as reflected through the expansion in fossil fuel utilization in the total energy mix of 60.5 per cent on average for the period 1996-2000 to 70.3 per cent by 2011-2015. Against this backdrop, the study intended to identify the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth in South Asia to recognize the feasibility of promoting low-carbon economic progress in the future. The study employed annual data for the period from 1971-2014 for five selected South Asian countries. The unit root test results indicate that all the variables are stationary at their first difference and the four statistics of the Pedroni cointegration test indicate the existence of a long-run relationship between the variables. The FMOLS estimator implies the significance of the energy consumption in economic growth in the region where one per cent increase in energy consumption leads to a 0.78 per cent increase in economic growth. The study finds a strong bi-directional relationship between the core variables which illustrates the necessity to shift towards sustainable energy sources to achieve an undisrupted economic expansion with a minimum carbon footprint. Thus, the study lays the foundations to identify the aforementioned relationships and encourage the derive of sustainable energy solutions to fuel the growth in the region.
Read full abstract