4.6 Article

The path to a 2025 nuclear-free Taiwan: An analysis of dynamic competition among emissions, energy, and economy

Journal

ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT
Volume 32, Issue 4, Pages 668-689

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0958305X20949981

Keywords

Nuclear free; Taiwan; energy-environment-economy (3Es); Lotka-Volterra model; competitive interaction

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (Taiwan) [MOST 105-2410-H-009-051]

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The study utilizes a competition model to analyze Taiwan's emissions-energy-economy issue, finding that the economy is fossil fuel-led, nuclear energy consumption reduces CO(2) emissions, renewable energy is not yet at scale, and there is a complementary effect between fossil fuels and nuclear energy. Taiwan must consider energy diversity and security in its energy transition, and the government could focus on improving energy efficiency, developing a smart grid, and reconsidering nuclear energy in the energy mix before scaling up renewable energy.
Taiwan intends to be nuclear free by 2025. This study employs the Lotka-Volterra competition model for sustainable development to analyze the emissions-energy-economy (3Es) issue to make appropriate policy suggestions for a nuclear-free transition. It also offers a new approach to naming the 3E relationship. The literature review shows that the environmental Kuznets curve accompanies the feedback and conservation hypotheses. In the 3E dynamics relationship analysis, the model shows a good mean absolute percentage error (<15%) for the model estimation. The key findings are as follows: 1) the fossil fuel-led economy exists; 2) CO(2)emissions are reduced with nuclear energy consumption; 3) renewable energy is far from scale; 4) a complementary effect exists between fossil fuel and nuclear energy consumption; and 5) gas retrofitting and phasing out of nuclear seem imminent. In the energy transition, Taiwan drastically cuts nuclear energy without considering energy diversity due to which troubles might ensue. The priority issue for Taiwan's energy mix is energy security. To deal with these concerns, this study suggests the government could improve energy efficiency, build a smart grid, develop carbon capture and storage, and reconsider putting nuclear energy back into the energy mix before renewable energy is scaled.

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