Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments

The allocation of budgets for renewable energy (RE) technology is significantly influenced by geopolitical risks (GPRs), reflecting the intricate interplay among global political dynamics, social media narratives, and the strategic investment decisions essential for advancing sustainable energy solu...

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Published in:Risk Analysis
Main Author: Zheng X.; Li C.; Ali S.; Adebayo T.S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons Inc 2024
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85191324930&doi=10.1111%2frisa.14310&partnerID=40&md5=370949fddf9f1e8d4d9962ebe10b078b
id 2-s2.0-85191324930
spelling 2-s2.0-85191324930
Zheng X.; Li C.; Ali S.; Adebayo T.S.
Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
2024
Risk Analysis
44
10
10.1111/risa.14310
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85191324930&doi=10.1111%2frisa.14310&partnerID=40&md5=370949fddf9f1e8d4d9962ebe10b078b
The allocation of budgets for renewable energy (RE) technology is significantly influenced by geopolitical risks (GPRs), reflecting the intricate interplay among global political dynamics, social media narratives, and the strategic investment decisions essential for advancing sustainable energy solutions. Against the backdrop of increasing worldwide initiatives to transition to RE sources, it is crucial to understand how GPR affects funding allocations, informing policy decisions, and fostering international collaboration to pursue sustainable energy solutions. Existing work probes the nonlinear effect of GPR on RE technology budgets (RTB) within the top 10 economies characterized by substantial research and development investments in RE (China, USA, Germany, Japan, France, South Korea, India, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Italy). Past research largely focused on panel data techniques to delve the interconnection between GPR and RE technology, overlooking the distinctive characteristics of individual economies. Contrarily, existing investigation implements the “Quantile-on-Quantile” tool to explore this association on an economy-particular basis, enhancing the precision of our analysis and offering both a comprehensive global perspective and nuanced perceptions for entire countries. The findings manifest a significant reduction in funding for RE technology associated with GPR across various quantile levels in the chosen economies. The disparities in results spotlight the necessity for policymakers to perform thorough assessments and carry out competent strategies to address the variations in GPR and RTB. © 2024 Society for Risk Analysis.
John Wiley and Sons Inc
02724332
English
Article

author Zheng X.; Li C.; Ali S.; Adebayo T.S.
spellingShingle Zheng X.; Li C.; Ali S.; Adebayo T.S.
Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
author_facet Zheng X.; Li C.; Ali S.; Adebayo T.S.
author_sort Zheng X.; Li C.; Ali S.; Adebayo T.S.
title Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
title_short Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
title_full Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
title_fullStr Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
title_full_unstemmed Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
title_sort Global chessboard: Analyzing how geopolitical risk shapes renewable energy technology investments
publishDate 2024
container_title Risk Analysis
container_volume 44
container_issue 10
doi_str_mv 10.1111/risa.14310
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85191324930&doi=10.1111%2frisa.14310&partnerID=40&md5=370949fddf9f1e8d4d9962ebe10b078b
description The allocation of budgets for renewable energy (RE) technology is significantly influenced by geopolitical risks (GPRs), reflecting the intricate interplay among global political dynamics, social media narratives, and the strategic investment decisions essential for advancing sustainable energy solutions. Against the backdrop of increasing worldwide initiatives to transition to RE sources, it is crucial to understand how GPR affects funding allocations, informing policy decisions, and fostering international collaboration to pursue sustainable energy solutions. Existing work probes the nonlinear effect of GPR on RE technology budgets (RTB) within the top 10 economies characterized by substantial research and development investments in RE (China, USA, Germany, Japan, France, South Korea, India, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Italy). Past research largely focused on panel data techniques to delve the interconnection between GPR and RE technology, overlooking the distinctive characteristics of individual economies. Contrarily, existing investigation implements the “Quantile-on-Quantile” tool to explore this association on an economy-particular basis, enhancing the precision of our analysis and offering both a comprehensive global perspective and nuanced perceptions for entire countries. The findings manifest a significant reduction in funding for RE technology associated with GPR across various quantile levels in the chosen economies. The disparities in results spotlight the necessity for policymakers to perform thorough assessments and carry out competent strategies to address the variations in GPR and RTB. © 2024 Society for Risk Analysis.
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc
issn 02724332
language English
format Article
accesstype
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