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Minerals import demands and clean energy transitions: A disaggregated analysis
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Minerals import demands and clean energy transitions: A disaggregated analysis

Md. Monirul Islam, Kazi Sohag, Shawkat Hammoudeh, Oleg Mariev and Nahla Samargandi
Energy economics, v 113
Sep 2022

Abstract

Clean energy transitions CS-ARDL approach Mineral imports OECD countries Renewable electricity Wind and solar capacities
Global energy transitions entangled with a paradigm shift from fossil fuel to renewable energy consumption elevates the demand for clean energy technologies, such as solar photovoltaics (PV), wind turbines, electric vehicles (EV) and power storage systems etc., which require significant volumes of minerals as raw materials. We measure the import-demand function of minerals by incorporating the role of renewable energy production capacity for selected OECD countries. We apply the cross-sectional autoregressive distributed lag (CS-ARDL) approach to analyse the panel time-series data due to common correlation, country heterogeneity, non-stationarity and potential endogeneity over the period 1990–2020. Our findings confirm that the overall renewable energy production, including installed solar and wind capacities, fosters the import demands for both the aggregate and disaggregate minerals (copper and nickel) in the long run. We also observe that the copper price elasticity of demand holds the Marshallian demand hypothesis, while the nickel price violates it in the long run. Besides, we find a heterogeneous effect of the income factor on the mineral import demand. Therefore, our findings recommend optimizing mineral resources to reinforce the global agenda of energy transitions toward a decarbonized or a net-zero emissions trajectory by the 21st century. •We test the response of minerals import demand to the clean energy transitions.•We find an eloquent reply of minerals import demand to solar and wind energy capacities.•The copper price holds, and nickel price contradicts the Marshallian demand hypothesis.•We unveil income's heterogeneous effect on minerals demand in 29 OECD countries.•We suggest optimizing imported minerals to reach the set goal of clean energy transitions.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This publication has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#12 Responsible Consumption & Production
#11 Sustainable Cities and Communities
#9 Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure
#7 Affordable and Clean Energy
#13 Climate Action

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Web of Science research areas
Economics
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