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Journal Article

Does Foreign Aid Reduce Energy and Carbon Intensities of Developing Economies?

Authors

  • Kretschmer
  • B.
  • Hübler
  • M.
  • Nunnenkamp
  • P.

Publication Date

DOI

doi.org/10.1002/jid.1788

JEL Classification

F35 Q41 Q55

Key Words

CO2 Emissionen

CO2 Emissions

developing countries

energy intensity

Entwicklungsländer

foreign aid

Advanced OECD countries are widely held responsible for containing global carbon emissions by providing financial and technical support to developing economies where emissions are increasing most rapidly. It is open to question, however, whether more generous official development assistance would help fight climate change effectively. Empirical evidence on the effects of foreign aid on energy and carbon emission intensities in recipient countries hardly exists. We contribute to closing this gap by considering energy use and carbon emissions as dependent climate-related variables, and the volume and structure of aid as possible determinants. In particular, we assess the impact of aid that donors classify to be specifically related to energy issues. We perform dynamic panel GMM and LSDVC (corrected least squares dummy variables) estimations. We find that aid tends to be effective in reducing the energy intensity of GDP in recipient countries. All the same, the carbon intensity of energy use is hardly affected. Scaling up aid efforts would thus be insufficient to fight climate change beyond improving energy efficiency.

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Subject Dossiers

  • Two women inspect a solar panel

    Climate and Energy

Research Center

  • Global Transformation

  • International Development