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Digitalisation and Entrepreneurial Ecosystems as Drivers of Energy Start-Ups: Evidence from Cross-Country Panel Data

Author

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  • Maksym W. Sitnicki

    (The John Chambers College of Business and Economics, West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV 26505, USA
    School of Business, VIZJA University, 01-043 Warsaw, Poland
    Management of Innovation and Investment Activities Department, Faculty of Economics, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, 01033 Kyiv, Ukraine)

  • Bożena Iwanowska

    (School of Social Sciences, VIZJA University, 01-043 Warsaw, Poland)

  • Yan Kapranov

    (School of Humanities and Arts, VIZJA University, 01-043 Warsaw, Poland
    Department of Foreign Languages, Dmytro Motornyi Tavria State Agrotechnological University, 72-000 Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine)

  • Jurij Klapkiv

    (Department of Insurance, Institute of Finance, Faculty of Economics and Sociology, University of Lodz, 90-136 Lodz, Poland)

  • Oleksandr Dluhopolskyi

    (Institute of Public Administration and Business, WSEI University, 20-209 Lublin, Poland
    Faculty of Economics and Management, West Ukrainian National University, 46-027 Ternopil, Ukraine)

  • Valentyna Panasyuk

    (Faculty of Economics and Management, West Ukrainian National University, 46-027 Ternopil, Ukraine)

  • Dmytro Halynskyi

    (Department of Financial Technologies and Entrepreneurship, Sumy State University, 40007 Sumy, Ukraine)

Abstract

The accelerating energy transition and digital transformation have increased the importance of understanding the drivers of energy-related entrepreneurship and investment across countries. This study aims to investigate how digitalisation and entrepreneurial ecosystem development influence the number and funding of energy-related start-ups, with particular attention to stage-specific effects, lagged dynamics, and non-linear relationships in a cross-country panel setting. The analysis is based on panel data from the European Commission (DESI), the International Energy Agency, and StartupBlink, covering 25 countries (2017–2022) and a global sample (2019–2023), and is estimated using Poisson pseudo-maximum likelihood models with fixed effects, lagged variables, and non-linear specifications in R. The findings show that digitalisation has a limited, selective relationship with energy-related entrepreneurship, whereas entrepreneurial ecosystem development plays a more consistent role. Digital connectivity is associated mainly with improved early-stage funding conditions, whereas broader digitalisation indicators do not systematically explain start-up formation. Stronger entrepreneurial ecosystems are linked to both higher green start-up activity and a shift in investment from early-stage ventures to more mature digital energy firms. The non-linear results further suggest diminishing returns to ecosystem development in later-stage green funding, indicating potential saturation effects in highly developed ecosystems. These findings suggest that policies aimed at accelerating sustainable energy entrepreneurship should go beyond general digitalisation strategies and focus more directly on strengthening inclusive entrepreneurial ecosystems, improving access to finance across the start-up lifecycle, and preventing excessive investment concentration in already mature ventures.

Suggested Citation

  • Maksym W. Sitnicki & Bożena Iwanowska & Yan Kapranov & Jurij Klapkiv & Oleksandr Dluhopolskyi & Valentyna Panasyuk & Dmytro Halynskyi, 2026. "Digitalisation and Entrepreneurial Ecosystems as Drivers of Energy Start-Ups: Evidence from Cross-Country Panel Data," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(11), pages 1-27, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:11:p:5475-:d:1955188
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