The effect of environmental taxation on carbon emissions in the East African Community
The effect of environmental taxation on carbon emissions in the East African Community
Date
2025
Authors
Tugume, Diphus
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Makerere University
Abstract
Over the years, carbon dioxide emissions have become a global threat. It causes climate change,
environmental degradation, pollution, and global warming. Rising temperatures, adverse health
impacts, the loss of biodiversity, and extreme weather events, ranging from heavy rainfall to
prolonged droughts, are among the visible consequences of unchecked carbon emissions.
Rising carbon emissions not only affect ecosystems and human livelihoods but also undermine
progress toward SDG 13 and SDG 3 in EAC. Several countries have implemented a range of
policies, including introducing carbon taxes and promoting renewable energy, to curb
emissions and accelerate the transition to a net-zero carbon emission world by 2050. However,
the EAC countries have made limited progress in leveraging environmental taxation for carbon
emission reduction. Moreover, existing environmental taxes act as a source of revenue for
governments rather than tools to abate the adverse effects of climate change. While prior studies
have investigated the relationship between environmental taxation and carbon emissions, this
paper stresses that context-specific evidence was required to provide Policymakers with
recommendations that work in EAC because “not one size fits all.” Additionally, there was a
need to disaggregate total environmental taxes into specific categories: energy, transport, and
pollution taxes, guiding policymakers to see which category should be given attention. The
analysis was based on Uganda, Kenya, and Rwanda, and remains silent about other member
countries due to the absence of data. The study covered a period running from 2001 to 2020.
Static (FE and RE) and dynamic (FMOLS) panel data models were employed. The key findings
indicated that pooled environmental taxes, energy, and pollution taxes reduce carbon emissions,
while transport taxes had an insignificant effect. GDP per capita, technology, and population
were found to increase carbon emissions. A unidirectional causality from environmental taxes
to carbon emissions was found. Based on the findings, the East African region needs to
increase the share of environmental taxes to increase their effectiveness. Instead of increasing
transport taxes, countries need to redesign transport taxes. Strengthening environmental
taxation in the EAC is not only vital to achieve EAC Vision 2050 of maintaining carbon
emissions and temperatures below 5.1 metric tons and between 20°C and 30°C, respectively,
but it is also critical for keeping EAC countries competitive in the European markets by
meeting the standards of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism.
Subject Keywords: Environmental taxation; Carbon emissions; East African Community
Description
A dissertation submitted to the Directorate of Research and Graduate Training in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of a Degree of Master of Arts in Economics of Makerere University.
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Citation
Tugume, D. (2025). The effect of environmental taxation on carbon emissions in the East African Community. Unpublished masters dissertation, Makerere University, Kampala