Over the years, energy poverty has been seen as a major struggle in Zimbabwe and globally. This paper tries to find the relationship between energy poverty and environmental change. Ecological footprint represents a degradation in this paper. The findings showed an insignificant relationship between renewable energy and ecological footprint in Zimbabwe. This study employs the ARDL technique. This study employs time series data from 1990-2021. This study uses the ARDL framework to get robust results. The ARDL bound test and ECM are employed to find the short-run and long-run coefficients of the model. The significant findings of the results show that RE, NRE, GDP, and natural resources (NR) are not significant in the long run but in the short run, GDP, NRE, and NR negatively impact the ecological footprint (EFP), while RE promotes or improves the ecological footprint. The results show a negative correlation between energy poverty and ecological footprint. Zimbabwe should work towards promoting RE energy as an alternative energy source and should revise its policies to attract more investment.