Abstract

A harmful impact of climate change and global warming has concerned various sectors of the international community. Numerous energy policies aiming at climate change mitigation have been implemented on a national and global scale. Renewable energy technologies (RETs) play a critical role in enhancing sustainable solutions that significantly limit greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Such innovative technologies can facilitate energy transition through providing, e.g., energy security, sustainable development, and effective usage of indigenous resources. However, the commercialization of RETs is extremely challenging. The barriers can be of a different nature, although this study focused on socioeconomic and regulatory issues. There is ample evidence that energy policies play a central role in supporting adoption of renewables. It is also claimed that RETs require the whole ecosystem to support their successful diffusion. In this study, we explored multifarious barriers for widespread RET diffusion in two European Union countries, Finland and Poland, indicating the most common barriers existing in the literature as well as analyzing major bottlenecks from the viewpoint of renewable energy companies’ executives. We also present statistics of the most commonly used RETs in these countries in order to express the diffusion issues more appropriately. The research shows that inflexible, ineffective, and excessive regulatory frameworks; limited financing options; as well as an insufficient level of societal awareness have been seen as the main bottlenecks for RET diffusion in both countries. The outcomes of this study provide useful insights for the researchers in the energy transition field as well as practical managerial and regulatory implications aimed at overcoming these challenges.

Highlights

  • The world’s current geopolitical landscape is struggling with numerous problems

  • We focus on the renewables with the highest share in order to examine the specific barriers to their implementation

  • This study focused on the regulatory and socioeconomic issues of Renewable energy technologies (RETs) implementation in two European Union member states: Finland and Poland

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Summary

Introduction

The world’s current geopolitical landscape is struggling with numerous problems. We are witnessing unprecedented issues, primarily the COVID-19 global pandemic, which has dramatically shifted the reality we exist in. The challenges that have affected the international community the most over several decades are still present, such as overpopulation, ‘consumerism’, rising levels of socioeconomic inequality, military conflicts, and—especially important in this study—air pollution. The adverse impact of climate change is causing multifarious constraints. Global warming is deteriorating the natural resources of the planet, which causes massive human and animal migration as well as the extinction of different species, flooding, depletion of the ozone layer, melting and greying of the polar zone, etc. It is already common knowledge that action from different sectors of society needs to be taken immediately if we wish to protect our planet from the forecasted catastrophic consequences [1]

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