Preprint / Versión 1

Green Finance, Digital Economic Infrastructure and India’s Renewable Energy Transition: Evidence from Multivariate Quantile-On-Quantile and KRLS approaches

article.authors6a46c1d8499ac

  • Sunil Kumar Bhilai Institute of Technology, Durg https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8395-3899
    • Writing – Review & Editing
    • Visualization
    • Methodology
    • Formal Analysis
    • Data Curation
    • Software
  • Urvashi Shrivastava Bhilai Institute of Technology, Durg https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5540-6049
    • Conceptualization
    • Supervision
    • Writing – Review & Editing
    • Validation
  • Sushma Singh Bhilai Institute of Technology, Durg
    • Writing – Review & Editing
    • Writing – Original Draft Preparation
    • Conceptualization
    • Resources

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/SciELOPreprints.15917

Keywords:

Green finance, Digital economy, Renewable energy transition, Quantile-on-quantile regression, Digital payments, Sustainable energy

Resumen

India’s transition toward renewable energy is critical for achieving its net-zero emissions target by 2070 and ensuring sustainable economic growth. This study investigates the dynamic, nonlinear and complementary effects of green finance and digital economic infrastructure on India’s renewable energy transition over the period 2005-2026. Composite indices are constructed using Principal Component Analysis to capture distributional heterogeneity and nonlinear interdependencies. The study employs a multivariate quantile-on-quantile regression approach, complemented by Kernel Regularized Least Squares and Granger causality analysis for robustness. The findings reveal pronounced nonlinear and stage-dependent relationships. Green finance exhibits weak and negative effects at lower quantiles but becomes significantly positive at higher quantiles, indicating that financial depth and sustained investment are essential for accelerating renewable energy adoption. Digital economic infrastructure demonstrates adverse effect initially, due to increased energy demand associated with digital expansion and contributes positively at medium-to-high quantiles by enhancing efficiency, smart grid integration and energy management. The multivariate results highlight strong complementarity between green finance and digital infrastructure with the improvements in renewable energy transition which occurs when both systems are well developed. Kernel-based estimates indicate that 1% increase in green finance and digital infrastructure, improves renewable energy transition by 0.132% and 0.521% respectively. Granger causality results confirm unidirectional causality from green finance to renewable energy transition and bidirectional causality between digital infrastructure and renewable energy transition. The study underscores the importance of integrated financial and digital policy frameworks to accelerate India’s clean energy transition and provides actionable insights for policymakers, regulators and financial institutions.

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Biografía del autor/a

Sunil Kumar, Bhilai Institute of Technology, Durg

Dr. Sunil Kumar, Assistant Professor in the area of Finance and Research at BIT Durg. He is MBA (2011) from the IBS Hyderabad and Ph.D. in Behavioural Finance from CSVTU University. He has degree, Bachelor of Engineering in Electrical Branch from university of Pune. He has over 6.5 years of Industrial Experience in corporate like Crompton Greaves limited (Sr. Executive QA), First Global Securities (Research Analyst) and ICICI Lombard (Product Manager) and have 9 years of teaching experience. He has attended various Faculty development programs in case teaching and technical writing organised by various institutes under the guidance of AICTE/UGC and published many research papers in national and international journals. He is visiting faculty and Guest speaker to many of the Institutes. Mr. Kushwaha is well versed with the technical tools used in analysis such as SPSS, AMOS,R-Studio and LaTex”.

Urvashi Shrivastava, Bhilai Institute of Technology, Durg

Enthusiastic performer with 17 years of teaching experience driven to inspire students to pursue academic and personal excellence. Committed faculty member with a passion of ensuring academic integrity.

Sushma Singh, Bhilai Institute of Technology, Durg

CMA Sushma Singh is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Management at Bhilai Institute of Technology (BIT), Durg, where she has been serving as a regular faculty member since January 2017. She is currently pursuing her Ph.D. in Management from Chhattisgarh Swami Vivekanand Technical University (CSVTU) and holds multiple academic and professional qualifications, including UGC NET, CS (Executive Level), MBA, CMA, and M.Com. With expertise in Financial, Cost and Management Accounting, Advanced Financial Management, Corporate Taxation, and Practical Implementation of Accounting, she has significantly contributed to both academics and research. In recognition of her professional growth, she became an Associate Member of the Institute of Cost Accountants of India (ICMAI) in 2025 and served as an NPTEL Mentor during the 2024–25 session, supporting online education initiatives. Her research contributions include copyright registrations such as Sustainable Development of Tourism (SDoT): Model for Tourism Business Development at Chhattisgarh and IbRa Socio-Psychological Investment Mode. Dedicated to quality teaching, research, and professional excellence, she continues to inspire students and contribute meaningfully to the field of management education.

Enviado

22/04/2026

Postado

30/06/2026

Cómo citar

Green Finance, Digital Economic Infrastructure and India’s Renewable Energy Transition: Evidence from Multivariate Quantile-On-Quantile and KRLS approaches. (2026). In SciELO Preprints. https://doi.org/10.1590/SciELOPreprints.15917

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