Dr. Abraham Ayobamiji Awosusi

Advancing Sustainable Development Through Energy, Finance, and Environmental Economics: An Interview with Dr. Abraham Ayobamiji Awosusi

In this issue, we are pleased to feature Dr. Abraham Ayobamiji Awosusi, a researcher at the Prof. Dr. İrfan Suat Günsel Operational Research Institute of Near East University, whose work explores the complex relationship between economic growth, energy transition, financial systems, and environmental sustainability. With an academic background in banking, finance, international economics, and applied econometrics, Dr. Awosusi has developed a research profile that bridges theoretical insight with policy-relevant evidence. His studies examine how nations can pursue development and energy security while protecting the ecological foundations of long-term prosperity. Recognized among the world’s top 2% of scientists in 2023 and 2025, he represents a growing generation of researchers contributing to sustainable development through data-driven, interdisciplinary, and globally relevant scholarship.

If you were to describe your research in one sentence to someone outside your field, what would you say — and why does it matter?

At the core of my research is a sustained effort to understand how can nations pursue growth, energy security, and modern development without undermining the environmental sustainability on which life and long term prosperity depend. This matters because it has far reaching implications for public policy, human well being, and the quality of the world bequeathed to future generations.

What has been the most unexpected finding or insight in your research journey so far?

One of the most unexpected lessons in my research journey has been the realization that sustainability is rarely shaped by any single factor on its own. Early on, one might assume that renewable energy, financial development, globalization, or technological innovation would almost always improve environmental outcomes. But across my work, I found that their effects are far more conditional and context-specific than that. The same force can support environmental improvement in one country and deepen ecological pressure in another, depending on the energy structure, institutional quality, policy environment, and the broader stage of economic development.

This insight has stayed with me, and it has changed the way I think about development itself. It has taught me that progress is not simply a matter of growth, or even of adopting cleaner technologies, but of how different forces are aligned within a society. In many ways, this has been the most unexpected finding of all: that sustainability is not automatic, and it is not guaranteed by good intentions alone. It is something that must be carefully built through coherent choices in energy, finance, innovation, and public policy.

Do you see your work as primarily advancing theory, solving practical problems, or bridging both? How do you position your research?

My work is best positioned as bridging theory and practical problem solving, because while it is grounded in theoretical questions about how energy systems, finance, technology, institutions, and policy conditions shape environmental outcomes, its broader purpose is to generate empirically grounded evidence that informs credible policies and development strategies for addressing real world challenges such as decarbonization, energy security, and ecological sustainability.

So I would position my research as empirically grounded, policy-relevant scholarship that is informed by theory but ultimately tested by its usefulness in addressing real economic and environmental challenges.



How do you approach research questions that do not yet have clear methods or established frameworks?

What follows from that, in practical terms, is a process of methodological discipline and adaptation. I usually begin by clarifying the conceptual mechanism the study seeks to explain, and then carefully examine the nature of the data and the structure of the phenomenon in order to determine whether an existing framework is adequate or whether it must be refined, integrated with other approaches, or thoughtfully modified. I do not treat methodological uncertainty as a weakness. I treat it as part of the intellectual responsibility of research. Some questions require established tools; others require a more inventive but still rigorous combination of approaches. Across my research journey, especially in environmental, energy, and applied econometric studies, I have found that the most meaningful work often emerges precisely when one is willing to let the problem define the strategy of inquiry.

Looking at your field today, what do you think is still misunderstood or underexplored?

What I find still underexplored in my field is how uncertainty, whether in policy, politics, or the wider geopolitical environment, can quietly but powerfully derail energy transition and weaken ecological sustainability by discouraging long-term renewable investment, slowing technological adjustment, disrupting policy continuity, and pushing economies back toward short-term, carbon-intensive choices, which is why my work increasingly treats uncertainty not as a background condition but as a central force shaping whether environmental ambition is translated into durable ecological progress.

How do collaborations—whether interdisciplinary or international—shape the direction of your work?

Collaboration has made me a better researcher because it has taught me not to think in isolation. It has exposed me to other ways of asking questions, other methods of answering them, and other national realities that challenge easy assumptions. That has been especially valuable in my field, where issues like energy transition and sustainability are shaped by many forces at once. So I would say collaboration has helped give my work more depth, balance, and real-world relevance.

About the Researcher

Dr. Abraham Ayobamiji Awosusi is a researcher at the Prof Dr. Irfan Suat Gunsel Operational Research Institute, Near East University. He obtained a bachelor’s degree in Banking and Finance from Crawford University, Nigeria, in 2013 and an M.A. in International Economics and Finance from the European University of Lefke in 2019. His doctoral research in Economics at Near East University, completed in 2024, focused on the drivers of environmental sustainability in leading energy transition nations. He has been recognized among the world’s top 2% of scientists in 2023 and 2025, reflecting the growing impact of his academic contributions. His research covers energy economics, environmental sustainability, international finance, applied econometrics, financial markets, and advanced time series and panel data analysis. He is proficient in EViews, R, RStudio, MATLAB, STATA, and Python.