1. Introduction
Environmental damage, biodiversity loss, global warming, rapid population growth, increased fuel costs, military and geopolitical conflicts, and their eventual impact on all other economic sectors are the leading causes of extracting energy from renewable sources. Renewable energy consumption, or REC for short, has increased from 2011 to 2021 in the following scale: 8.3% in Europe, 29.4% in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), 37.3% in Middle Eastern countries, 20.5% in Africa, 8.8% in North America, 20.5% in Asia–Pacific, and 10.8% in South and Central America. Conversely, the increase in the world’s energy consumption from non-renewable sources was only 1.25 percent. It showed negative growth in the European Union (EU), Europe, and Euro-Asian countries (−1.7%, −0.9%, and −0.6%, respectively), as well as relatively minor increases in locations like Africa (2.9%) and the Middle East (3.6%). Moreover, the increase in primary energy in 2021 was driven by emerging economies, with China being the leader in growth [
1]. These facts motivate the studies that seek relationships between renewable energy consumption and its stimulants and de-stimulants across countries. Finding the factors that increase or decrease the ratio of REC in total energy consumption could help governments stimulate investments in renewable energy sources and create an appropriate climate policy. This knowledge is also essential for investors who can identify the investment potential and needs of countries and/or regions.
The current study examines economic-, energy-, and environmental-based determinants of renewable energy consumption from a global perspective. The main objective of the current study is to identify the most influential REC determinants, which are crucial for technologists, economists, and policymakers. Accurately identifying REC determinants is essential in developing a suitable policy mechanism to address the significant energy demand. Furthermore, it explores ways to reduce our long-term reliance on fossil fuels to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Moreover, the appropriate policy gives momentum to control carbon emissions and achieve climate change targets under the SDGs. The creation of low greenhouse gas emissions is closely tied to the objectives of the Paris Agreement, and this can be accomplished by altering the structure of energy production and consumption.
The motivation behind considering subgroups of countries classified according to the level of social and economic development is the technological frontier, which affects technology absorption and efficient use across countries. The drivers for catching up are human and physical capital acquisition, socio-institutional factors, knowledge development, infrastructural bottlenecks, product diversification from low- to high-value-added activities, and participation in global and regional value chains [
2]. Countries across the globe are also diversified in their exploitation of renewable energy sources. For example, the share of REC in the energy mix is diversified across countries and regions, being, in 2021, highest in Asia–Pacific (43.1%), Europe (25.4%), and North America (21.2%), and lowest in the CIS (0.3%), Middle East (0.4%), and Africa (1.2%) [
1].
Therefore, the research problem discussed in this study refers to the differences between the key factors affecting energy consumption from renewable sources identified for different groups of countries. The analysis includes the energy consumption structure as determined by its sources. Initially, all countries worldwide were considered for this study, but data limitations corrected this scope. Eventually, 109 countries observed from 1995 to 2019 were considered. The countries were divided into subgroups according to the Human Development Index values reported in the last year of the sample. The Human Development Index is one of the crucial indicators demonstrating how countries could combine economic performance and social development. The HDI helped to identify 46 countries with “very high” HDIs (group I), 16 countries with “high” HDIs (group II), and 47 countries with “medium and low” HDIs (group III) [
3]. The current study merged the medium and low HDI countries into one group. The HDI level groups do not correspond directly to the geographical regions but are related to these regions, with some exceptions.
A comprehensive methodology that integrates economic, environmental, and multiple REC factors forms the foundation of the current research. The panel BMA method serves as the first-tier methodological framework. When there are many possible variables, BMA’s primary benefit is that it ranks each component based on probability. Moreover, it guarantees comparable findings and recommends the model parameters most likely out of various competing ones [
4]. The second tier is related to the panel econometric model construction. The panel fixed-effect models were estimated to extract the essential energy consumption factors from renewable sources. The relationships demonstrate differences and similarities between the countries’ subgroups. Such an approach is uncommon in the literature, mainly because of the panel BMA application. Combining the Bayesian approach relying on posterior probability with a classic one (panel FE models) has an advantage that justifies the results from two perspectives, recognized in contemporary statistics and econometrics.
The novelty of the current research lies in the applied methodology and in directly comparing the renewable energy consumption factors by focusing on HDI groups in REC across the globe and identifying the most likely factors affecting renewable energy consumption across mostly homogenous country groups worldwide. However, the subject’s popularity in the literature inevitably confirmed that the Paris Pact increased global awareness of climate change and its consequences. It aligns with the results obtained by [
5]. They suggested that environmental concern is essential in explaining renewables participation in different countries.
The outcomes of this study indicate that CO
2 emissions, measured per inhabitant, are crucial in implementing and increasing energy use from renewable sources. This factor was confirmed in countries included in groups I and II. This is in line with studies that confirmed the awareness of the impact of greenhouse gases on climate change, such as [
5]. The results also revealed a similarity of factors determining REC in country groups I and II. Group III, which is less developed, remains different and requires special attention.
The remainder of this paper is organized as follows:
Section 2 reports the relevant literature review.
Section 3 provides data characteristics and methodology.
Section 4 presents and discusses the empirical results, and
Section 5 concludes.
2. Literature Review
In the literature, researchers explored the influencing factors of REC, such as income, energy prices, environmental degradation, energy security, energy consumption, political environment, renewable energy potential, international flows, financial development, and regulatory systems. The research reported in [
6,
7] provided a robust framework for subsequent studies that examined the factors influencing REC. Most studies initially just regarded income and prices as primary factors of REC [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16].
Several approaches tackle energy issues, and there is a plethora of literature on the causality between aggregate and disaggregated energy consumption from various sources (including renewable energy) and economic growth [
6,
17,
18,
19]. On the other hand, several studies in the economic literature have focused on key economic factors in increasing REC [
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28]. However, only a few studies have objectively investigated the factors determining renewable energy generation [
5,
8,
29,
30,
31,
32,
33]. Recently, researchers have introduced environmental variables to explore the relationship between REC and economic development [
10,
11,
13,
14,
16,
17].
Ref. [
9] included potential RE sources and the regulatory framework for fossil fuels in the list of possible determinants of REC in the existing literature using panel data from 46 industrialized and developing nations between 1980 and 2011. The study analyzed the primary short- and long-term drivers of the percentage of non-hydro renewable energy sources using panel cointegration estimation approaches. The study’s findings demonstrate that many driving factors have varying effects on the amount and proportion of non-hydro renewable energy, most of which have long-term effects. Increases in oil prices and financial development significantly impact the quantity and percentage of electricity generated by RE sources other than hydropower. Trade openness has an ambiguous effect. On the other hand, energy generation from non-hydro renewable sources is not significantly impacted by resource rent, gross fixed capital formation, ratification of the Kyoto Protocol, or foreign direct investments.
Considering the countries and regions, the literature focuses on both developing and developed ones. The multi-country approach is also very popular.
Referring to developing countries, Ref. [
10] investigated the relationship between GDP, CO
2 emissions, and REC using panel data for 24 Asian nations between 1990 and 2012. This study discovers a long-run equilibrium between the variables. RE use is positively impacted by CO
2 emissions in China, the Philippines, Pakistan, Yemen, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia. The GDP of India, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, Thailand, Turkey, Malaysia, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Mongolia significantly impacts renewable energy. Two bidirectional causal linkages exist between CO
2 emissions and REC and between GDP and RCE.
Ref. [
20] analyzed the factors that influence the use of REC in the five biggest African nations—Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Africa—using the data from 1996 to 2016. The researchers included macroeconomic, socioeconomic, and institutional variables in their investigation. The study applied the BMA (Bayesian model averaging) technique. The empirical findings depict that an increase in any of these determinants (population growth, urban population, energy demand/use, electricity power demand/consumption) causes an increase in REC. Ref. [
25] also consider African countries in the context of REC.
Ref. [
34] examined the factors influencing REC in a panel of six significant emerging economies: Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Turkey. This paper determines the long-term relationships between REC and pollutant emissions and income. These relationships are significant in Brazil, China, India, and Indonesia, while income plays a significant role in the Philippines and Turkey. Short-term bidirectional causal links have been identified between renewable energy and income and between renewable energy and pollution emissions. These findings imply that the initiatives made by developing nations to lower their carbon footprint by boosting energy efficiency and significantly raising the proportion of renewable energy sources in their total energy mix are justified.
Ref. [
35] found that innovation contributed to a rise in REC, while CO
2 emissions, real GDP per capita, and economic freedom caused a decrease in REC in the ASEAN+3 economies between 1998 and 2018. Ref. [
36] investigated the factors influencing the adoption of renewable energy in Africa using data from 1990 to 2019. The study confirmed the feedback hypothesis, which examined the tripartite economic, environmental, and sociopolitical effects of adopting renewable energy in Africa. The study found a positive correlation between the adoption of renewable energy and economic factors. The findings also demonstrated how adopting RE in Sub-Saharan African economies adversely affected environmental issues, including carbon emissions and ecological footprints. Some researchers have recently focused on reducing CO
2 emissions while growing the renewable energy industry without slowing economic growth [
37,
38,
39].
It is widely acknowledged that renewable energy sources may replace crude oil in energy production and consumption. It is also anticipated that there will be a negative correlation between the demand for renewable energy and oil prices, as higher oil prices would incentivize people and companies to switch to renewable energy sources, lower their consumption, and buy more energy-efficient products [
40]. Refs. [
6,
34,
40] investigated the impact of oil prices on REC and found some evidence of significant effects on oil prices. The relationship between economic growth and REC is currently receiving much attention in the literature, e.g., [
6,
18,
41,
42,
43].
Ref. [
44] examined the impact of both renewable and non-renewable energy resources on greenhouse gas emissions. The panel data from 25 emerging Asian nations from 2000 to 2016 were taken. The study found a short- and long-term positive correlation between economic growth and renewable energy and suggested a feedback hypothesis. Conversely, the study observed that a 1% increase in renewable energy causes a 0.193% decline in carbon emissions. The results show that non-renewable energy resources significantly contribute to greenhouse gas emissions, while renewable resources have a favorable effect on reducing greenhouse gas emissions. This report also emphasizes how emerging Asian economies may protect the environment by utilizing renewable energy sources and stronger regional environmental regulations.
Ref. [
45] analyzed the relationship between energy use and economic growth for the BRICS nations between 1990 and 2012 using a multivariate panel approach. The findings suggest that economic growth is the critical factor driving rising energy consumption in the BRICS nations.
To address environmental sustainability, Ref. [
46] investigated the impacts of trade and natural resources on REC for Sub-Saharan African countries spanning 1990–2015. According to the findings, trade openness substantially negatively influences the amount of REC in the region. On the other hand, increased FDI and income levels were found to have a substantial positive impact on REC.
Trade openness’s impact on REC has received less attention than the relationship between trade openness and energy demand [
47,
48,
49,
50,
51]. Trade expansion fosters economic growth, enabling the development and application of more energy-efficient technologies, leading to the expectation that trade openness will enhance renewable energy. A high level of trade openness can increase national income, giving affected countries more significant financial resources to create renewable energy that meets the demand for improved environmental quality. Trade openness is critical to economic development because it expands the domestic market for export-focused industries, improves bilateral trade relations, and provides access to energy-efficient technologies. Furthermore, economic activity has developed, and energy consumption in various channels (e.g., meeting the international requirements for surplus production and importing more machinery and equipment) has increased energy demand in South America [
51]. Ref. [
52] investigated the relationship between energy consumption and trade openness in four developing and oil-importing nations: Bangladesh, India, China, and Pakistan. The study observed a unidirectional causal relationship between trade openness and energy consumption. Summing up, REC in developing countries mainly depends on greenhouse gas emissions, income, oil price changes, population growth, and FDI inflow.
Different perspectives were considered when referring to developed countries. Ref. [
6] investigates the determinants of REC for G7 countries and finds that, in the long run, real GDP per capita and CO
2 per capita emissions are a major driving force that fluctuates per capita REC. The usage of renewable energy is negatively impacted by increases in oil prices, but less so. Ref. [
53] examine how social and macroeconomic factors affected REC in the G7 between 1990 and 2014. The study empirically supports the positive and significant effects of energy imports, the Human Development Index, and research investment (% of GDP) on REC.
Ref. [
54] illustrated empirical work, using growth and environmental functions, on how renewable energy can effectively spur economic growth and reduce carbon emissions in the context of 15 major developed countries that consume renewable energy. The findings demonstrate how effective renewable energy is at boosting economic growth and lowering carbon emissions. Ref. [
55] used the panel fixed-effects model to analyze 28 EU countries from 1990 to 2015. Their findings demonstrated the impact of financial development on REC. They confirmed that energy prices, the banking sector, bonds, and capital markets increased the share of REC, whereas FDI was statistically insignificant.
Ref. [
56] explored the case of OECD economies for data on the factors influencing REC from 1990 to 2017. The findings indicate that several factors, including income, human capital, energy productivity, energy pricing, and eco-innovation, can explain REC. Ref. [
57] also examined the relationships between capital, labor, international trade, and non-renewable and renewable energy. The study concludes that trade between the EU-15 countries increases renewable energy use.
Ref. [
58] use panel estimation techniques robust to cross-sectional dependence to examine the effects of real income, trade openness, and renewable and non-renewable energy on CO
2 emissions in the Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) model for the European Union from 1980 to 2012. The study demonstrated that trade and renewable energy reduce carbon emissions while non-renewable energy increases CO
2 emissions, supporting the EKC hypothesis using the dynamic ordinary least squares estimator.
Ref. [
59] examined the most likely factors influencing REC in European countries. The study discusses various institutional, social, and economic factors that impacted REC and renewable energy policies in selected European nations before and after the Paris Agreement. To determine the most likely factors affecting REC in 2015 and 2018, the Bayesian model averaging (BMA) is utilized. The comparison results show that the GDP level and the nuclear and hydro energy consumption were the key drivers in both studied years. It also became evident that, in contrast to 2018, when trade openness and FDI contributed to an increase in REC, REC in 2015 heavily depended on the structure of energy consumption. Compared to developing countries, the factors of REC in developed ones are often similar, e.g., oil prices, CO
2 emissions, and real GDP. However, financial innovations like green finance instruments (bonds and other capital market instruments) are also highly important.
Another stream of the literature refers to the multi-country perspective. They are typically divided according to high, medium, and low income. For example, the study of [
60] considered a global panel of countries divided into high, middle, and low income, but it only refers to 64 countries. Also, Ref. [
61] examined the long-term, bidirectional relationship between GDP growth and REC in high-income, upper-middle-income, and lower-middle-income nations. The findings are inconsistent, but higher-income countries are those where the bidirectional long-term association between the variables is more significant and stable. Ref. [
62] investigated the relationship between energy demand and foreign direct investment (FDI). The study found that FDI increased renewable energy sources while decreasing non-renewable energy consumption in 74 countries between 1985 and 2012. The study breaks down FDI inflows into mining, manufacturing, financial services, and total services. The findings generally suggest that energy consumption is reduced regarding non-renewable energy sources and increased regarding renewable energy. Ref. [
63] examines the relationship between output, FDI inflows, and energy consumption in 75 countries between 1990 and 2010. The current findings show that, in the three categories of countries (developed, all, and developing), there is evidence of a bidirectional relationship between FDI and output per capita, REC and GDP per capita, and non-renewable energy and GDP per capita. Ref. [
64] analyzed low-income countries, middle-income, and upper-middle-income panels and revealed the long-run asymmetric correlations between financial development, trade openness, capital flows, and REC. The asymmetric relationship is also confirmed in the near run, except for lower-income nations. The results showed that long-term causation was present, especially when REC was included in the equation as a dependent variable. Ref. [
65] examined the relationships between RCE, CO
2 emissions, FDI, and economic growth in 190 countries from 1980 to 2018. The study used static and dynamic models, showing that carbon emissions, REC, FDI, and economic growth significantly impact one another. On the other hand, REC has been found to improve environmental quality and reduce FDI inflow.
The set of variables used typically to analyze renewable energy consumption is similar across different studies and constitutes a basis for further development and comparison.
5. Conclusions
In this paper, we analyzed the determinants of energy consumption from renewable sources using panel BMA and fixed-effects econometric models. The results were compared in three groups of countries delimited by the HDI level, which implies the development characteristics. The total number of countries of interest comprises 109, while the observation period was limited to 1995–2019. The results obtained from the panel BMA were confirmed when the FE models were estimated. The panel BMA approach found substantial differences between factors observed in groups of countries.
The outcomes of this study confirmed that CO2 emissions, measured per inhabitant, are crucial in implementing and increasing energy use from renewable sources. Furthermore, governments and inhabitants are generally aware of the threats of increasing emissions. This factor was positive in countries included in groups I and II. The results also revealed a similarity of factors determining REC in country groups I and II concerning other energy sources, particularly gas and coal consumption. Group III, which is less developed, relies on FDI inflow and requires special attention.
These findings are reliable and allow for energy policy recommendations. Firstly, all countries must implement an efficient, energetic policy to decrease greenhouse gas emissions, particularly CO2. The policy goals and the time of their realization must be determined and satisfied promptly. Secondly, the participation in costs of climate policy (emission taxes, coal taxes, etc.) must be distributed among all countries; however, due to differences in development, some discounts and deferments are allowed at both the macroscale and microscale (consumers, enterprises, particularly small and medium enterprises). Thirdly, the inflow of FDI, particularly in the middle- and low-developed countries, should be primarily directed to the renewable energy sectors.
Although including as much data as possible, we found some limitations in the study. One of them is related to the limitations of the data, particularly in poorer and non-democratic countries. It refers to both the variables and countries. We did not include the sectors of the economies; instead, we took the entire economies. Analysis across the sectors would enhance the findings and deepen the conclusions.