Attaining sustainable development in Nigeria: the role of solid waste, urbanization and pollution in reducing under-five mortality.

IF 2.4 Q3 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Discover Sustainability Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-28 DOI:10.1007/s43621-024-00570-2
Anayochukwu Denis Onicha, Joshua Chukwuma Onwe, Nwanku Ofobuike Ngwuta, Sandy Oguma, Atif Jahanger
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Abstract

The United Nations, through its subsidiary agency United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), has put in such resources to curb infant mortality in pursuit of the Sustainable development goals (SDG). Nevertheless, the issue of under-five mortality is still persistent in so many developing countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa. Therefore, this study investigated the long-term and short-term impacts of solid waste, urbanization, and pollution on under-five mortality, employing the Autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) and the dynamic Autoregressive distributed lag (DARDL) models for the empirical investigations and robustness checks, respectively. The study found that there is significant cointegration between the interest variables. While key findings from the DARDL results revealed that pollution, urbanization, and solid waste have long-term significant positive impacts on under-five mortality in Nigeria, the short-run outcome shows that urbanization and solid waste had a significant positive impact on under-five mortality, while pollution was statistically insignificant. Moreover, lead exposure showed a significant long-term positive and short-term negative impact on under-five mortality in Nigeria. Furthermore, the DARDL simulations show higher long-run shocks and variations as compared to the short run. Thus, CO2 emissions, urbanization, and solid waste encourage under-five deaths in Nigeria. The study recommends, among other things, the enactment of environmental laws that will curb CO2 emissions in the country while also strengthening the existing ones, discourage indiscriminate solid waste disposal, and encourage investment in clean technologies and modern healthcare facilities in urban areas of Nigeria.

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尼日利亚实现可持续发展:固体废物、城市化和污染在降低五岁以下儿童死亡率中的作用。
联合国通过其附属机构联合国儿童基金会(UNICEF)投入了大量资源来降低婴儿死亡率,以实现可持续发展目标(SDG)。然而,在许多发展中国家,尤其是撒哈拉以南非洲地区,五岁以下儿童的死亡率问题仍然持续存在。因此,本研究分别采用自回归分布滞后模型(ARDL)和动态自回归分布滞后模型(DARDL)进行实证研究和稳健性检验,探讨了固体废物、城市化和污染对五岁以下儿童死亡率的长期和短期影响。研究发现,相关变量之间存在明显的协整关系。自回归分布滞后模型的主要结果显示,污染、城市化和固体废物对尼日利亚五岁以下儿童死亡率有长期显著的正向影响,而短期结果显示,城市化和固体废物对五岁以下儿童死亡率有显著的正向影响,而污染在统计上不显著。此外,铅暴露对尼日利亚五岁以下儿童死亡率的长期积极影响和短期消极影响都很大。此外,与短期相比,DARDL 模拟显示出更高的长期冲击和变化。因此,二氧化碳排放、城市化和固体废物会增加尼日利亚五岁以下儿童的死亡率。该研究建议,除其他外,颁布环境法,以遏制该国的二氧化碳排放,同时加强现有的环境法,阻止任意处置固体废物,并鼓励对尼日利亚城市地区的清洁技术和现代医疗设施进行投资。
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来源期刊
Discover Sustainability
Discover Sustainability sustainability research-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.70%
发文量
38
审稿时长
26 days
期刊介绍: Discover Sustainability is part of the Discover journal series committed to providing a streamlined submission process, rapid review and publication, and a high level of author service at every stage. It is a multi-disciplinary, open access, community-focussed journal publishing results from across all fields relevant to sustainability research. We need more integrated approaches to social, environmental and technological systems to address some of the challenges to the sustainability of life on Earth. Discover Sustainability aims to support multi-disciplinary research and policy developments addressing all 17 of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The journal is intended to help researchers, policy-makers and the general public understand how we can ensure the well-being of current and future generations within the limits of the natural world by sustaining planetary and human health. It will achieve this by publishing open access research from across all fields relevant to sustainability. Submissions to Discover Sustainability should seek to challenge existing orthodoxies and practices and contribute to real-world change by taking a multi-disciplinary approach. They should also provide demonstrable solutions to the challenges of sustainability, as well as concrete suggestions for practical implementation, such as how the research can be operationalised and delivered within a wide socio-technical system.
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