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Renewable Electricity Penetration and Retail Price Dynamics: Global Evidence on Transitional Costs of the Energy Transition

Mohamed Djafar HenniDepartment of Economics, College of besiness, Islamic University of Madinah, Saudi ArabiaSamariddin MakhmudovDepartment of Finance and Tourism, Termez University of Economics and Service, Termez UzbekistanHind AlofaysanDepartment of Economics, College of Business Administration, Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, P.O. Box 84428, Riyadh 11671, Saudi ArabiaKamel Si MohammedCollege of Business, Islamic University of Madinah, Saudi Arabia
Unconventional Resourcesjournal2026en
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Abstract

. The global expansion of renewable energy represents a structural transformation with profound macroeconomic and financial implications. This study investigates the impact of renewable electricity penetration on retail electricity prices using a multi-country panel. The study employs a comprehensive multi-layered empirical framework to address endogeneity, dynamic adjustment, and cross-country structural heterogeneity. The results reveal that renewable penetration is associated with statistically significant short- to medium-term increases in residential electricity prices. However, this effect is nonlinear and conditional on fossil fuel dependence. Once fossil reliance falls below a critical threshold, the marginal price impact weakens substantially. Distributional evidence shows that renewable price effects are amplified in high-price electricity markets. These findings suggest that renewable expansion generates transitional system costs rather than permanent inefficiencies, highlighting the importance of structural conditions in shaping energy transition outcomes and broader economic stability.

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