4.7 Article

Uncovering urban residents' electricity conservation and carbon reduction potentials in megacities of China-A systematic path of behavioural interventions

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 173, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2021.105703

Keywords

Residential electricity consumption; Electricity price; Elasticity; Household survey; Tired pricing for household electricity (TPHE)

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality [9214021]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41701635]

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The study found that economic factors are the main drivers of residential energy conservation behaviors, with significant variations in electricity elasticity among different demographic and income groups. Price interventions can effectively reduce electricity demand, decrease carbon emissions, and improve energy conservation.
The ratio and quantity of residential electricity consumption in China are increasing steadily with the country's economic development; conservation of electricity consumption has special significance for reduction of carbon emissions. Based on data from 635 questionnaire surveys in four typical Chinese megacities (Beijing, Hangzhou, Guangzhou, and Guiyang), this study analysed the determinants of residential electricity consumption and electricity saving behaviours using the multivariate regression method, estimated the price elasticities of heterogeneous resident groups by combining the results of an elasticity formula and a multinomial logit model, and assessed residential electricity conservation potential. The results were as follows: economic indicators proved to be the factors most strongly influencing residential energy conservation behaviours; electricity elasticity varied significantly among heterogeneous demographic and income groups towards economic intervention instruments, within a scale of 0.16-0.63; and price interventions can effectively reduce residential electricity demand and reduce carbon emissions from electricity use by 3.2%-9.3%, thereby improving energy conservation. An appropriate policy mix should be adopted to reduce household carbon emissions effectively, including addressing regional disparities and expanding ladder price differences across different income groups to fulfil every resident's well-being, along with increased publicity and education efforts to improve people's energy-saving awareness in the long term.

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