Author:
Ogunbode T. O.,Jazat J. P.,Akande J. A.
Abstract
AbstractEnvironmental quality (EQ) is germane to achieving sustainable living on earth. To evaluate a related stimulus of EQ on area basis, a comparative analyses of economic factors that influence pollution in Iwo and Ibadan metropolis was carried out. Data for the study was generated through the administration of 700 structured questionnaires in total at both locations, out of which 165 and 473 were retrieved from Iwo and Ibadan respectively. The distribution of respondents in form of male gender, married status, tertiary education and household size of not more than 5 were 51.5%, 78.2%, 24.9% and 46.1% respectively for Iwo, while it was 38.5%, 81.0%, 28.6% and 48.8% in the same order for Ibadan. Economic factors analyzed were (1) Income (2) living standard indexed by the form of accommodation occupied (3) waste/noise management regimen (4) energy utilization (5) orthodox versus green economy adoption and (6) waste sorting capacity. Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin sampling adequacy and Bartlett’s test of sphericity admitted the data as factorable at p < 0.005. Results showed that three of the economic variables significantly explained the pollution status in Iwo and Ibadan. The variables in Iwo explained 59.3% of the factors and these are waste/noise management strategies (22.5%), living standard (18.7%) and green economy adoption (18.3%). 60.2% of economic impacts on pollution in Ibadan were explained by living standard (24.4%), green economy adoption (18.8%) and waste/noise management strategies (17.0%). Only two of the variables namely living standard, and green economy adoption were common to the two study locations, although, their importance and ordering varied. While waste and noise management were most significant in Iwo, the same variable had the least effect in Ibadan. Green economy adoption was least in Iwo but most significant in Ibadan. Thus, the economic factors influencing pollution in Iwo and Ibadan metropolis, though similar, may not be given a generalized weighting. In other words, analyses of pollution-related matters from the economic viewpoint should be location specific.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference59 articles.
1. European Environmental Agency. The European environment—State and Outlook 2010: Synthesis (European Environment Agency, 2010).
2. Okumagba, E. O. Examining global court practices in reducing climate change impacts through litigation: Lessons for Nigeria. In Implementing the Sustainable Development Goals in Nigeria: Barriers, Prospects and Strategies (eds Ekhator, E. O. et al.) 98–118 (Routledge, 2021).
3. Bekun, F. V. et al. Exploring the tourism-CO 2 emissions-real income nexus in E7 countries: Accounting for the role of institutional quality. J. Policy Res. Tour. Leis. Events 14, 1–19 (2022).
4. United Nations (2021) Sustainable Development Goals. Sdgs.un.org/goals. Accessible 28 Mar 2022.
5. Ogunbode, T. O., Oyelude, O. & Oyebamiji, V. O. Evaluation of the impacts of micro-business operations on the quality of urban environment: A case study of Iwo Southwestern Nigeria. Front. Sustain. Cities 2022(4), 1027450 (2022).
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献