4.7 Article

Revisiting renewable energy and economic growth-Does trade openness a matter?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 30, Issue 11, Pages 31704-31717

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-24358-x

Keywords

Renewable energy; Economic growth; Trade openness; Non-linear effects; EU countries

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Renewable energy consumption has a significant impact on economic growth, but it requires surpassing certain thresholds in trade openness, financial development, and per capita income to achieve positive effects.
A significant obstacle to the scaling of renewable energy is the concern that increased consumption of renewable energy could have a negative impact on economic growth, due to the higher cost of renewable energy compared to fossil energy. To examine how exactly renewable energy consumption impacts economic growth, this study uses a non-linear panel threshold model with trade openness, financial development, and per capita income as threshold variables, to analyze the long-term non-linear relationship between renewable energy consumption and economic growth in 28 European Union countries from 2007 to 2017. The results show that (i) renewable energy consumption has significant threshold effect on economic growth. First, the effect of renewable energy consumption on economic growth is positive and significant if and only if it surpasses a certain threshold of trade openness. Second, a moderate financial development interval makes the consumption of renewable energy have a positive effect on economic growth, and if it is too low or too high, it will have a negative effect. Third, as for income level, the promoting effect of renewable energy consumption on economic growth is showing a stepwise growth feature, which means, when the income level surpasses its threshold value, the positive effect is strengthened. (ii) The results of the fixed-effects model show that, overall, renewable energy consumption promotes economic growth. (iii) The changes in the number of countries in different threshold intervals indicate that the positive impact of renewable energy consumption on economic growth in the EU is increasing.

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