Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Determinants of Renewable Energy Deployment in Developing Countries A macro-econometric analysis of the power sector (in an early stage) Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 5 April 2011 Outline 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Research Question and Motivation Review of the Literature Model Data Proposed Methodology Concluding Remarks Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 2 Motivation • Climate change mitigation requires a decarbonisation of the energy sector • Renewable energy technologies (RETs) are an important means to achieve a low-carbon energy sector • Research and development of RETs has mainly been conducted in industrialized countries • BUT, developing countries (DCs) also need to deploy RETs to follow a low-carbon development pathway • The literature on technology diffusion suggests several barriers for cross-country technology diffusion Need to know more about relevant determinants of RET deployment in DCs! Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 3 Relevant Literature • Empirical papers on cross-country technology diffusion • Comin and Hobijn (2004) • 25 technologies in 23 industrialized countries over 200 years • Most important determinants: human capital endowment, type of government, degree of openness to trade, adoption of predecessor technologies • Brunnschweiler (2010) • 5 RE technologies in up to 119 non-OECD countries over 30 years (1980-2009) • Shows that financial sector development has a significant impact on RE deployment • Significant results only for hydropower & geothermal power Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 4 Model Specification yit 0 it x'it uit yit = xit = i = t = dependent variable vector of control variables country time Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 5 Dependent Variable: Power Production from RETs • Source: US Energy Information Administration • Subset of the available 226 countries from 1980 – 2008 • Data for total renewable power production disaggregated into 5 generic technologies: • • • • • Hydropower Combustable biomass and waste Geothermal power production Wind power production Solar, Tide and Wave Power Discussion points: per capita, per GDP, or per total TWh Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 6 Power share from Solar and Wind in DCs .04 .03 Cape Verde Costa Rica Costa Rica .02 Latvia Lithuania Morocco .01 0 1985 1990 Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 1995 2000 2005 2010 7 Power share from Geothermal and Biomass in DCs .4 .3 Argentina Bolivia .2 Brazil Colombia Chile Costa Rica .1 0 1985 1990 Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 1995 2000 2005 2010 8 Which DCs Should We Focus on? • Possibilities: • All DCs, i.e. middle and low income countries acc. to World Bank • Country cluster based on PIK (2004), e.g. „energy and carbon hungry small emitters“, … • Non-OECD countries Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 9 Control Variables General macroeconomic variables Variable Proxy Rationale Level of economic development Log real GDP p.c. Higher capacity to invest, higher value assigned to environment (higher WTP) Country openess Trade/FDI flows Remedy for lack of local capacity to innovate/manufacture/operate, inflow of information about RETs International Assistance ODA Better access to capital, finance, technology, skills, … Financial sector development Access to finance High financing cost due to high upfront cost of RETs Human capital Enrollment rates, school completion Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer rates, … Capacity to innovate/ manufacture/ operate/ regulate/ … 10 Control Variables Variables related to social and environmental aspects Variable Proxy Rationale Skill labour inflow Migration data Inflow of skills, information, … Energy security energy _ imports energy _ consumption RETs can reduce dependence on fossil fuel imports Local Pollution other GHG emissions Negative effect on health from fossil fuel combustion, but not RET Public awareness of environmental problems Interviewbased qualitative indicator Renewables perceived as solution to environmental problems Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 11 Control Variables Institutional variables Variable Proxy Rationale Institutional sustainability Voice and accountability, political stability and absence of violence, government effectiveness, regulatory quality, rule of law, control of corruption Investor confidence, low risk mark-ups, … IPR enforcement ? Willingness to invest may depend on protection of patented technologies Environmental regulation Proxy for political willingness to support RETs Participation in international environmental agreements, … Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 12 Control Variables Technology related variables Variable Proxy Rationale Cost of local alternative energy supply Electricity prices, fossil fuel prices Relative advantage/disadvantage of RET, competition with alternative power supply options RE resource potential GIS data, other Quality of the resource affects the cost of electricity from RETs RE subsidies Binary data for variety of subsidy types Relative cost advantage from private investor perspective Electricity grid infrastructure ? Complementary technology with variable RETs Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 13 Proposed Methodology • Basic panel estimations: • Pooled OLS • Fixed Effects • Random Effects • More sophisticated approaches: • Arellano-Bond GM • IV • … Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 14 Concluding Remarks • Still a lot to do … Birte Pohl, Steffen Schlömer 15