Renewable Energy Generation and Agricultural Sector Growth in Kenya: Implications for a Sustainable Energy Transition
Authors
Masibayi Peter Situma
PhD Candidate (Economics), Department of Economics, Maseno University (Kenya)
Obange Nelson
Holds a PhD in Economics, Professor of Economics, Department of Economics, Maseno University (Kenya)
Odhiambo Scholastica Achieng
Holds a PhD in Economics, Senior Lecturer of Economics, Department of Economics, Maseno University (Kenya)
Publication Information
Journal Title: International Journal of Research and Scientific Innovation (IJRSI)
Author(s):Situma,Masibayi Peter ;Nelson,Obange ;Achieng,Odhiambo Scholastica
Published On: 03/14/2026
Volume: 12
Issue: 11
First Page: 2141
Last Page: 2157
ISSN: 2321-2705
This study examines the influence of renewable energy generation on agricultural output in Kenya for the period 1980-2023 using annual data from the World Development Indicators and the U.S. Energy Information Administration. While exploiting the ARDL–ECM framework, the analysis estimates long-run elasticities, short run dynamics as well as the speed of adjustment while controlling for labour, non-renewable energy generation and gross capital formation. The long-run results indicate that renewable energy generation has a strong positive and statistically significant effect on agricultural sector output, thus highlighting the growth-enhancing role of renewable energy in energy-intensive agricultural systems. Non-renewable energy generation also contributes positively, though the impacts are not as intense. This indicates an ongoing structural shift in Kenya’s energy– agricultural growth linkage. Short-run findings reveal that renewable energy generation fluctuations support agricultural performance, while non-renewable energy displays mixed but generally favourable effects. Gross capital formation consistently boosts output, whereas labour shows negative short-run elasticities, thereby pointing to persistent inefficiencies and technology–labour mismatches in the sector. The coefficient of the ECM shows rapid convergence, with more than 65% of disequilibrium corrected annually, thus demonstrating strong adjustment toward long-run equilibrium and resilience of agricultural output to energy-related shocks. These findings provide new empirical evidence on the renewable energy–productivity linkage in a developing economy, showing that scaling renewable energy generation can enhance agricultural growth, stabilize output responses to energy shocks and strengthen long-run agricultural performance, while offering relevant insights for the design of energy transition interventions that promote sustainable and climate-resilient agricultural development.
Keywords:
Renewable energy generation, Non-renewable energy, Agriculture, ARDL, ECM, Kenya, Agricultural sector growth
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