Zhimeng Zhu , Ahmed Imran Hunjra , Samar S. Alharbi , Shikuan Zhao
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The global energy transition is crucial for sustainable development, but is vulnerable to geopolitical risks, leading to market turbulence, rising uncertainty and impeding policy implementation. Previous studies have mostly focused on energy security and geopolitical instability, but their systemic impact on energy transition remains unexplored. This study analyzes this relationship through fixed-effects regression and moderated-effects modeling using monthly panel data for 41 countries over the period 2003–2021. It finds that geopolitical risks significantly hinder the energy transition by exacerbating price volatility, disrupting supply chains, and changing policy priorities. However, countries with strong renewable energy capacity, sound fiscal mechanisms, and flexible labor markets are better able to mitigate these effects, while resource-dependent and militarized economies face greater delays. This study integrates geopolitical risks into the energy transition framework, provides empirical evidence and emphasizes that Governments should increase energy resilience, expand domestic renewable energy production and implement sound fiscal policies to cope with geopolitical uncertainty.
期刊介绍:
Energy Economics is a field journal that focuses on energy economics and energy finance. It covers various themes including the exploitation, conversion, and use of energy, markets for energy commodities and derivatives, regulation and taxation, forecasting, environment and climate, international trade, development, and monetary policy. The journal welcomes contributions that utilize diverse methods such as experiments, surveys, econometrics, decomposition, simulation models, equilibrium models, optimization models, and analytical models. It publishes a combination of papers employing different methods to explore a wide range of topics. The journal's replication policy encourages the submission of replication studies, wherein researchers reproduce and extend the key results of original studies while explaining any differences. Energy Economics is indexed and abstracted in several databases including Environmental Abstracts, Fuel and Energy Abstracts, Social Sciences Citation Index, GEOBASE, Social & Behavioral Sciences, Journal of Economic Literature, INSPEC, and more.