4.4 Article

Cross-country spillovers of renewable energy promotion-The case of Germany

Journal

RESOURCE AND ENERGY ECONOMICS
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.reseneeco.2022.101293

Keywords

Renewable promotion; Electricity prices; Merit-order effect; Cross-border impacts; Carbon emissions

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [FKZ 03SFK5A]

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Electricity generation based on renewable energy sources can replace expensive generators relying on fossil fuels, leading to lower electricity prices and carbon emissions. The merit-order effect in interconnected electricity systems causes changes in trade flows and decreases conventional generation and prices in neighboring countries. German renewable energy generation offset a significant amount of CO2 emissions, with the costs primarily borne by German market participants.
Electricity generation based on renewable energy (RE) sources such as wind and solar replace the most expensive generators that often rely on fossil fuels. In response to RE promotion, wholesale electricity prices and carbon emissions are therefore expected to decrease. In interconnected electricity systems, this so-called merit-order effect stimulates a change in electricity trade flows. Therefore, conventional generation and prices in neighboring countries are also likely to decrease. The impact of these trade reactions on carbon offsets is ambiguous and depends on installed generation and interconnector capacities. Moreover, the cross-border merit-order effect causes opposing effects on consumers and producers: generators' profits decline, while consumers benefit from lower electricity costs and an increase in the consumer surplus. Using a rich data set of hourly technology-specific generation and wholesale market price data for ten central European countries, we estimate the domestic and cross-border impacts of German RE for the years 2015-2020. We find that German RE generation offset 79-113 MtCO(2) per year. The major emission effect took place in Germany (64-99 MtCO(2)). The average cost of emission offset of 212-321(sic)/t were almost entirely borne by German market participants. Neighboring countries do not bear costs, but a significant shift from producer to consumer rents is observed. (C) 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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