Al-Iriani [
15] published the first paper on the energy–growth nexus in the GCC countries context. He investigated the relationship between energy consumption and gross domestic product (GDP) for the six GCC states. He used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data covering the period 1971–2002. The results showed that GDP causes energy consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Mehrara [
19] examined the relationship between per capita energy consumption and per capita GDP in a panel of 11 oil-exporting countries. He included five GCC countries. These were Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain and Oman. He analyzed the relationship using the Pedroni panel cointegration for the period 1971–2002. The results supported the conservation hypothesis that GDP causes energy consumption. Squalli [
16] investigated the relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth for OPEC countries. He included four GCC countries in the analysis, namely Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. He used the ADRL technique and the Toda–Yamamoto technique to investigate the causality relationship for each country individually over the period 1980–2003. The results of the short-term analysis showed that there was a bi-directional relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth for Saudi Arabia and Qatar, supporting the feedback hypothesis. For Kuwait, the causality ran from economic growth to electricity consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. For the UAE, electricity consumption caused economic growth, which supported the growth hypothesis. Mahadevan and Asafu-Adjaye [
20] analyzed the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for 10 net energy-importing and 10 energy-exporting countries. Among the net energy-exporting countries, they selected Kuwait and Saudi Arabia for the analysis. In addition to energy consumption and economic growth, they added prices as a control variable. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration and the panel-based vector error correction model (VECM) techniques to determine the causality relationship over the period 1971–2002. For the net energy-exporting countries, the analysis showed a bi-directional relationship between energy consumption and economic growth supporting the feedback hypothesis. Mehrara, M. [
21] examined the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for three oil-exporting countries including Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. He used the data covering the period 1971–2002 and applied the Johansen test as well as the VECM and Toda–Yamamoto techniques to determine the causality relationship. The results for Saudi Arabia showed that the energy consumption caused economic growth, supporting the growth hypothesis while it was the opposite for Kuwait. For Kuwait, economic growth caused energy consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Narayan and Smyth [
22] analyzed the causality relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth taking exports as a control variable. The analysis was performed on six Middle Eastern countries including Kuwait, Oman and Saudi Arabia over the period 1974–2002. They performed the analysis using the Westerlund panel cointegration technique and found that for the short term, there was a unidirectional causality from electricity consumption to economic growth, supporting the growth hypothesis. Ozturk et al. [
23] analyzed the causal relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for 51 countries over the period 1971–2005. They divided the countries into three categories: low-income group, lower middle-income group and upper middle-income group. They included Oman in the upper middle-income group. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique for the three groups. For the upper middle-income group, including Oman, the results supported the feedback hypothesis, in which there was a bidirectional relationship between energy consumption and economic growth. Al-Mulali [
24] examined the relationship between oil consumption, CO
2 emission and economic growth in Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) countries including all six GCC countries. He analyzed the data for the period 1980–2009 using the Pedroni, Kao and Fisher panel cointegration technique. The results showed that there was a bi-directional relationship between oil consumption and economic growth for these countries, supporting the feedback hypothesis. Sadorsky [
25] used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to examine the relationship between energy demand, energy price, income and trade openness among eight Middle Eastern countries including Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE over the period 1980–2007. The results showed there was a bi-directional relationship between energy demand and income, supporting the feedback hypothesis. Ozturk and Acaravci [
26] investigated the relationship between electricity consumption and GDP for 11 Middle Eastern countries including Oman, Saudi Araba and the UAE. They analyzed the data using the ARDL technique over the period 1971–2006. The UAE was removed from the analysis because the data violated the underlying assumptions of the ADRL approach. The results showed that for Oman there was a unidirectional causality running from GDP to electricity consumption in the short term, supporting the conservation hypothesis. On the other hand, the results showed no relationship between GDP and electricity consumption for Saudi Arabia in the short term supporting the neutrality hypothesis. Hossein et al. [
27] examined the relationship between energy consumption, energy prices and economic growth for 12 OPEC countries including Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. They analyzed the data covering the period 1980-2008 using the Johansen–Juselius technique. The results showed that GDP caused energy consumption for Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE in the short run, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Narayan and Popp [
28] analyzed the data for 93 countries to examine the relationship between energy consumption and GDP over the period 1980–2006. They estimated the causality relationship for seven panels: Western Europe, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East including all six GCC countries, Africa and the six most industrialized countries (G6). They used the Kao panel and the Fisher panel techniques to analyze the data for the seven panels. For the Middle East, the results showed that there was no relationship between energy consumption and GDP, supporting the neutrality hypothesis. Al-Mulali and Lee [
29] investigated the relationship between energy consumption, financial development, GDP, urbanization and total trade for the GCC countries. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2009. The results showed that there was a bi-directional relationship between energy consumption and economic growth, supporting the feedback hypothesis. Al-Mulali and Tang [
30] investigated the relationship between CO
2 emission, foreign direct investment, energy consumption and growth over the period 1980–2009. They employed the Pedroni panel cointegration technique and found that there was a bi-directional relationship between energy consumption and economic growth supporting the feedback hypothesis. Ozcan [
31] investigated the relationship between carbon emission, energy consumption and economic growth in 12 Middle East countries including Bahrain, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. He used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique over the period 1990–2008 and found that there was a causality relationship running from economic growth to energy consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Damette and Seghir [
32] investigated the relationship between energy consumption and GDP for 12 oil-exporting countries including Saudi Arabia and UAE. They analyzed the data over the period 1990-2010 using both the Westerlund panel cointegration and the Westerlund and Edgerton panel cointegration techniques. The results showed that in the short run, there was a causal relationship from energy consumption to GDP, supporting the growth hypothesis. Omri [
18] used the generalized method of moments (GMM) approach to analyze the relationship between CO
2 emission, energy consumption and economic growth taking capital and labor as control variables. They analyzed the data over the period 1990–2011 for 14 MENA countries including the six GCC countries. The analysis of both the individual countries and the panel of countries supported the feedback hypothesis in which there is bi-directional causality between energy consumption and economic growth. Salahuddin and Gow [
34] examined the relationship between economic growth, energy consumption and CO
2 emission in the GCC countries over the period 1980–2012 using the Pedroni panel cointegration technique. The results showed that there was a uni-directional relationship running from economic growth to energy consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Al-Mulali and Ozturk [
35] explored the relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth in the GCC countries, taking capital, labor force, exports and imports as control variables. They used the ARDL and the Toda–Yamamoto–Dolado–Lutkepohl techniques over the period 1980–2012 to find the causality relationship. The results showed differences between the GCC countries. For Bahrain and the UAE, there was a bi-directional relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth, supporting the feedback hypothesis. On the other hand, for Oman and Qatar, there was a uni-directional relationship running from electricity consumption to economic growth, supporting the growth hypothesis. Finally, for Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, there was no causality relationship between energy consumption and economic growth, supporting the neutrality hypothesis. Jalil [
36] investigated the relationship between GDP and energy consumption taking capital stock, employment and trade openness as control variables. He analyzed the data of 29 net energy-importing countries and 19 net energy-exporting countries including the UAE using the Westerlund panel cointegration and the Westerlund and Edgerton panel cointegration techniques over the period 1970–2012. For the net energy-exporting countries, the results showed that there was a bi-directional relationship between energy consumption and economic growth, supporting the feedback hypothesis. Mohammadi and Parvaresh [
37] examined the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for a panel of 14 oil-exporting countries including Saudi Arabia, Oman and Bahrain over the period 1980–2007. They used CO
2, exports and urbanization as control variables. The results showed that there was a bi-directional relationship between energy consumption and economic growth, supporting the feedback hypothesis. Salahuddin et al. [
40] investigated the relationship between GDP, electricity consumption, CO
2 and financial development for the GCC countries. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2012. The results showed that there was a unidirectional causality running from economic growth to electricity consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Karanfil and Li [
41] examined the relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth, taking the net import of electricity and urbanization as control variables for 160 countries including the six GCC countries. They grouped these countries based on the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) membership, income level and region. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2010. For the Middle East and North Africa panel, the results showed that there was a uni-directional causality running from GDP to electricity consumption supporting the conservation hypothesis. Al-Mulali and Ozturk [
43] examined the relationship between industrial GDP, energy consumption, ecological footprint, urbanization, trade openness and political stability and conflict in 14 MENA countries including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman and the UAE. They analyzed the data over the period 1996–2012 using the Pedroni panel cointegration technique. The results supported the feedback hypothesis in which there is a bi-directional relationship between industrial GDP and energy consumption. Al Iriani and Trabelsi [
44] investigated the relationship between GDP, electricity consumption, energy use per unit of GDP, ratio of public spending to GDP and the international oil prices for the six GCC countries. They analyzed the data over the period 1980–2011 using the Johansen multivariate cointegration and the Toda–Yamamoto–Dolado–Lutkepohl techniques. The results were mixed for different countries. For Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the feedback hypothesis was supported. For Bahrain and Kuwait, the conservation hypothesis was supported. For Oman, the growth hypothesis was supported. Finally, for the UAE, the neutrality hypothesis was supported. Kayıkçı and Bildirici [
45] estimated the relationship between GDP, electricity consumption and oil rent for 12 MENA countries including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait and Oman. They utilized the ARDL technique to analyze the data in the period 1972–2011. Two hypotheses were supported. For Oman and Saudi Arabia, the conservation hypothesis was supported. On the other hand, for Bahrain and Kuwait, the feedback hypothesis was supported. Ozturk and Al-Mulali [
47] investigated the relationship between GDP, natural gas consumption, trade openness, total labor force and gross fixed capital formation in GCC countries. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2012. The results supported the feedback hypothesis. Magazzino, C. [
48] examined the relationship between GDP, electricity consumption, CO
2 for the six GCC countries over the period 1960–2013. He used the Johansen–Juselius, the Gregory and Hansen and the ADRL as well as the Toda–Yamamoto–Dolado–Lutkepohl techniques to examine the causal relationship. He found different results for these countries. For Saudi Arabia, the feedback hypothesis was supported. On the other hand, the growth hypothesis was supported for Oman, Kuwait and Qatar. For the UAE, the neutrality hypothesis was supported. Finally, for Bahrain, the conservation hypothesis was supported. Ahmed and Azam [
49] investigated the relationship between energy consumption and economic growth for 119 countries including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman and the UAE. They analyzed the data using the Granger causality in frequency domain context. The results supported the neutrality hypothesis for Saudi Arabia, Oman and the UAE. On the other hand, the conservation hypothesis was supported for Bahrain. Magazzino [
50] explored the relationship between GDP, energy consumption and CO
2 in 10 MENA countries including the six GCC countries. He used the panel generalized method of moments (GMM) to analyze the data over the period 1971-2006. The results supported the growth hypothesis in which there was a uni-directional causality running from energy consumption to economic growth. Osman et al. [
12] investigated the relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth in the six GCC countries. They used the Westerlund Panel Cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1975–2012. These results supported the feedback hypothesis in which there is a bi-directional relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth. Solarin and Ozturk [
52] examined the relationship between natural gas consumption and economic growth for 12 OPEC countries including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the UAE. They used the panel test proposed by Dumitrescu and Hurlin to analyze the data over the period 1980–2012. The results supported the feedback hypothesis for the OPEC members as a panel. Additional analysis on individual countries showed that the growth hypothesis was supported for Saudi Arabia and Kuwait while the conservation hypothesis was supported for the UAE. Finally, the neutrality hypothesis was supported for Qatar. Ozturk [
53] explored the relationship between energy consumption and GDP for 11 MENA countries including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman and the UAE. He used the Toda–Yamamoto technique to analyze the data in the period 1971–2011. The results supported the conservation hypothesis in Saudi Arabia, the feedback hypothesis in Oman and the UAE and the neutrality hypothesis for Bahrain. Hasanov et al. [
54] examined the energy–growth nexus in 10 oil-exporting Eurasian countries including the six GCC countries. They employed two models. The first model used the primary energy consumption while the second model used the residential electricity consumption. The results supported the growth hypothesis in the primary energy consumption model while the neutrality hypothesis was supported in the residential electricity consumption. Antonakakis et al. [
55] examined the relationship between energy consumption, CO
2 emissions and economic growth for 106 countries including the six GCC countries over the period 1971–2011. They used six models employing six types of energy consumption. The six types were total energy, electricity consumption, oil consumption, renewable energy consumption, natural gas consumption and coal energy consumption. The feedback hypothesis was supported for the total energy and oil consumption models. The conservation hypothesis was supported for the electricity consumption and the renewable energy consumption. The growth hypothesis was supported for the natural gas consumption. Finally, the neutrality hypothesis was supported for the coal energy consumption. Charfeddine and Mrabet [
57] investigated the relationship between GDP, energy consumption, ecological footprint, urbanization, political institutional index, fertility rate and life expectancy at birth. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data for 15 MENA countries including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman and Kuwait over the period 1975–2007. The results supported the feedback hypothesis. Bekhet et al. [
59] examined the relationship between GDP, energy consumption, CO
2 and financial development for the six GCC countries. They used the ARDL technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2011. Different results emerged for different countries. For Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the growth hypothesis was supported. On the other hand, the feedback hypothesis was supported for Oman and the UAE. Finally, the neutrality hypothesis was supported for Bahrain and Kuwait. Al-Mulali and Sab [
63] examined the impact of electricity consumption on economic growth taking CO
2 emission as a control variable for 12 Middle East counties including the six GCC countries. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1990–2008. The results supported the feedback hypothesis in which there was a bi-directional relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth. Sekrafi and Sghaier [
65] investigated the relationship between GDP, energy consumption, CO
2, control corruption, investment ratio to GDP and tertiary enrollment rate for 13 MENA countries including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain and the UAE. They used the panel generalized method of moments (GMM) to analyze the data over the period 1984–2012. The results supported the feedback hypothesis. Wang and Fang [
66] examined the relationship between GDP, energy consumption, CO
2 and urbanization for 170 countries including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman Kuwait and the UAE. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2011. They categorized the countries into five panels: global, high income, upper middle income, lower middle income and lower income. The GCC countries were categorized in the high-income panel. For this panel, the results supported the feedback hypothesis. Al-Mulali et al. [
67] investigated the relationship between electricity consumption and economic growth for the GCC countries taking domestic investment, labor force, exports and imports as control variables. They used the Pedroni panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2014. In the short run, there was a uni-directional causality running from GDP to electricity consumption, supporting the conservation hypothesis. Gorus and Aydin [
68] investigated the relationship between GDP, energy consumption and CO
2 for eight MENA countries including Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman. They used the time domain analysis and the frequency domain analysis to analyze the data over the period 1975–2014. Different results emerged. For Saudi Arabia, the feedback hypothesis was supported. On the other hand, the neutrality hypothesis was supported for Oman. Finally, the conservation hypothesis was supported for the UAE. Charfeddine and Kahia [
69] examined the relationship between GDP, renewable energy consumption, labor force, capital, CO
2 and financial development for 24 MENA countries including all the GCC countries. They used the Westerlund panel cointegration technique to analyze the data over the period 1980–2015. The results supported the growth hypothesis.
Table 8 shows the energy–growth articles related to a group of GCC countries.