Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia

Mitigating global warming has been a challenge, and policymakers are responding to this issue by strengthening the commitment to enhance the renewable energy target from 20 to 31 percent in 2025 for Malaysia. However, adopting renewable energy in stages based solely on microeconomic factors, such as...

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Main Authors: Mohamed Yusoff N.Y., Ridzuan A.R., Soseco T., Wahjoedi, Narmaditya B.S., Ann L.C.
Other Authors: 55812094300
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Published: MDPI 2024
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-343072024-10-14T11:18:57Z Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia Mohamed Yusoff N.Y. Ridzuan A.R. Soseco T. Wahjoedi Narmaditya B.S. Ann L.C. 55812094300 57201919567 57194284145 57194274854 57194286237 58139294500 ARDL lower carbon macroeconomic Malaysia renewable energy Malaysia alternative energy economic development global warming implementation process macroeconomics time series urbanization Mitigating global warming has been a challenge, and policymakers are responding to this issue by strengthening the commitment to enhance the renewable energy target from 20 to 31 percent in 2025 for Malaysia. However, adopting renewable energy in stages based solely on microeconomic factors, such as the price of energy, is insufficient. Thus, it is essential to investigate the macroeconomic variables that influence the share of renewable energy in Malaysia. In detail, this study introduces selected macroeconomic indicators, including gross domestic investment, domestic investment, foreign direct investment, trade openness, urbanization, financial development, and carbon emissions level, and their impact on renewable energy in Malaysia. The study utilized ARDL (Auto-Regressive-Distributed Lag) estimation based on annual time series data spanning 50 years of observations, beginning in 1971 and ending in 2020. Long-run elasticities show that greater economic development and urbanization increase the proportion of renewable energy. In contrast, increased foreign investment, trade liberalization, and carbon emissions could reduce the use of these clean energies. This paper concludes with a policy recommendation that could assist the country in achieving its goal of implementing a low-carbon, renewable energy-focused state policy. � 2023 by the authors. Final 2024-10-14T03:18:57Z 2024-10-14T03:18:57Z 2023 Article 10.3390/su15053891 2-s2.0-85149989563 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149989563&doi=10.3390%2fsu15053891&partnerID=40&md5=6995d3240e5114d5bc18f3816c6fc057 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/34307 15 5 3891 All Open Access Gold Open Access MDPI Scopus
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
topic ARDL
lower carbon
macroeconomic
Malaysia
renewable energy
Malaysia
alternative energy
economic development
global warming
implementation process
macroeconomics
time series
urbanization
spellingShingle ARDL
lower carbon
macroeconomic
Malaysia
renewable energy
Malaysia
alternative energy
economic development
global warming
implementation process
macroeconomics
time series
urbanization
Mohamed Yusoff N.Y.
Ridzuan A.R.
Soseco T.
Wahjoedi
Narmaditya B.S.
Ann L.C.
Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia
description Mitigating global warming has been a challenge, and policymakers are responding to this issue by strengthening the commitment to enhance the renewable energy target from 20 to 31 percent in 2025 for Malaysia. However, adopting renewable energy in stages based solely on microeconomic factors, such as the price of energy, is insufficient. Thus, it is essential to investigate the macroeconomic variables that influence the share of renewable energy in Malaysia. In detail, this study introduces selected macroeconomic indicators, including gross domestic investment, domestic investment, foreign direct investment, trade openness, urbanization, financial development, and carbon emissions level, and their impact on renewable energy in Malaysia. The study utilized ARDL (Auto-Regressive-Distributed Lag) estimation based on annual time series data spanning 50 years of observations, beginning in 1971 and ending in 2020. Long-run elasticities show that greater economic development and urbanization increase the proportion of renewable energy. In contrast, increased foreign investment, trade liberalization, and carbon emissions could reduce the use of these clean energies. This paper concludes with a policy recommendation that could assist the country in achieving its goal of implementing a low-carbon, renewable energy-focused state policy. � 2023 by the authors.
author2 55812094300
author_facet 55812094300
Mohamed Yusoff N.Y.
Ridzuan A.R.
Soseco T.
Wahjoedi
Narmaditya B.S.
Ann L.C.
format Article
author Mohamed Yusoff N.Y.
Ridzuan A.R.
Soseco T.
Wahjoedi
Narmaditya B.S.
Ann L.C.
author_sort Mohamed Yusoff N.Y.
title Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia
title_short Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia
title_full Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia
title_fullStr Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Comprehensive Outlook on Macroeconomic Determinants for Renewable Energy in Malaysia
title_sort comprehensive outlook on macroeconomic determinants for renewable energy in malaysia
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2024
_version_ 1814061115835940864
score 13.223943