Author:
Gyamfi Bright Akwasi,Kwakwa Paul Adjei,Adebayo Tomiwa Sunday
Abstract
Purpose
The International Energy Agency states that the global energy intensity must reduce by 2.9% yearly before attaining Sustainable Development Goal 7.3 by 2030. However, the European Union (EU) seeking to attain a climate-neutral EU by 2050 shall require a substantial rate of reducing energy intensity. Consequently, this study aims to investigate how (clean) renewable energy, income, trade openness, technological innovation and nonrenewable energy consumption impact energy intensity for the EU countries.
Design/methodology/approach
The quantile regression, augmented mean group and causality techniques were used for analyses. Panel data for 26 EU nations over the 1990 and 2019 period was used.
Findings
The empirical evidence indicates that the variables have long-run equilibrium relationships. However, the analysis revealed that clean energy and income reduce energy intensity whiles trade, technological innovation and nonrenewable energy consumption increase energy intensity. An interactive term analysis shows that renewable energy and trade interact to reduce further, the negative effect of income on energy intensity. Causality results revealed a feedback connection between energy intensity and clean energy, income, trade liberalization as well as the interaction between income and trade liberalization. A one-way causality was obtained between energy intensity and technological innovation, nonrenewable energy consumption and the interaction between clean energy and income.
Practical implications
The results imply that EU countries stand to gain if more resources are committed to encouraging the production and consumption of cleaner/renewable energy. Advancement in policies that support renewable energy and facilitate green growth will help reduce energy intensity for the region. Trade policies that promote lower energy consumption should be strengthened.
Originality/value
The effect of renewable energy on energy intensity is assessed. The moderating impact of renewable energy and trade openness on the income–energy intensity relationship for the EU countries is examined. Moreover, this study uses the quantile estimation technique to assess the nonlinear effect of the explanatory variables on energy intensity.
Subject
Strategy and Management,General Energy
Reference88 articles.
1. The policy implications of the relationship between energy consumption, energy intensity and economic growth in Ghana;OPEC Energy Review,2017
2. The role of economic complexity in the environmental Kuznets curve of MINT economies: evidence from method of moments quantile regression;Environmental Science and Pollution Research,2021
3. Electricity consumption-economic growth nexus: the Ghanaian case;International Journal of Energy Economics and Policy,2011
4. Determinants of energy intensity in South Africa: testing for structural effects in parameters;Energy,2015
5. Asymmetric impacts of the determinants of energy intensity in Nigeria;Energy Economics,2015
Cited by
28 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