Research Publications Authored by SLIIT Staff

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This collection includes all SLIIT staff publications presented at external conferences and published in external journals. The materials are organized by faculty to facilitate easy retrieval.

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    PublicationOpen Access
    Impact of climate change on agricultural production efficiency in leading agriculture-producing economies: A DEA Malmquist Productivity Index
    (Elsevier B.V., 2026-01-06) Ahmad, J; Wang, Y; Zhang, L; Shah, W.U.H; Yasmeen, R; Pathiranage, H.S.K
    Climate change significantly impacts global agricultural productivity, making it essential to examine its precise influence on production efficiency. This study evaluates the impact of climate change on agricultural production efficiency among the global leading agriculture-producing economies from 1990 to 2021. Using a DEA–Malmquist Productivity Index, the study estimates total factor productivity change (TFPC) and decomposes it into efficiency change (EC) and technological change (TC), both without and with explicit climate variables (temperature, precipitation). Average TFPC without climate factors is 1.0428, indicating 4.28 % productivity growth over the period, primarily driven by technological change. When climate variables are incorporated, the average TFPC is 1.0409; the mean difference of −0.0019 (≈ −0.18 %) shows a small but non-negligible climate impact on productivity growth. Regional variations are heterogeneous: South America and Africa exhibit diverse climate impacts, while Oceania shows the least climate effect. Mann-Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis tests confirm significant differences in TFPC (and components) between climate and non-climate specifications and across regions. The findings underscore technology's key role in sustaining productivity under climate stress and highlight the need for region-specific adaptation policies to complement technological diffusion.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    Enhancing the Understanding of climate dynamics: analysis of global warming’s influence on Climatic changes across continents
    (Springer, 2025-07-14) Dharmapriya, N; Edirisinghe, S; Gunawardena, V; Methmini, D; Rathnayake, N; Jayathilaka, R
    Global warming, primarily due to increased atmospheric carbon dioxide, poses a significant threat to climate stability, yet research on its combined effects across different geographical areas is limited. In order to fill that gap, this study examines how carbon emissions (CE) are impacted by greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), agricultural nitrogen oxide (ANO), urban population (UP), and fossil fuel consumption (FFC) in 185 different nations between 2000 and 2019. With the exception of urban population, which was expressed as a percentage, all variables were standardised to metric tonnes per capita using panel regression analysis. The results draw attention to geographic disparities. Africa has the lowest carbon and greenhouse gas emissions due to its extensive forest cover and minimal industrial production. Although Oceania’s greenhouse gas emissions have decreased, the region continues to emit high amounts of agricultural nitrous oxide. Rapid industrialisation is the primary cause of Asia’s growing consumption of fossil fuels. Agricultural nitrous oxide and carbon emissions have a negative correlation in Asia, Oceania, and the globe, but a positive correlation in Africa, America, and Europe. Carbon emissions and the use of fossil fuels are strongly positively correlated in every region but Asia. These results highlight the complex, location-specific factors affecting carbon emissions. For policymakers to effectively cut emissions, they must develop customised, geographically specific initiatives. In order to accomplish Sustainable Development Goal 13: Climate Action by 2030, emission controls should be strengthened, and sustainable practices should be encouraged, particularly in the use of fossil fuels and farming.