4.5 Article

Residential Electricity Consumption and Economic Growth in Algeria

Journal

ENERGIES
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en11071656

Keywords

economic growth; residential electricity consumption; ARDL model; Algeria

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Spain) [ECO2014-56399-R]
  2. Chair of Energy and Environmental Economics at the University of Seville (Catedra de Economia de la Energia y del Medio Ambiente, Universidad de Sevilla) (Spain)
  3. Andalusian Regional Government of Andalusia (Spain) [SEJ 132]
  4. Department of Economic Analysis and Economic Policy at the University of Seville (Departamento de Analisis Economico y Economia Politica, Universidad de Sevilla)

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Within the framework of the COP21 (Conference of the Parties) agreement, Algeria submitted its Intended Nationally Determined Contribution pledging to reduce carbon emissions by at least 7% by 2030. However, it will be a difficult task to reach this target as total final energy consumption has increased 32% from 2010 to 2014, with the major energy increases being related to electricity use in the residential sector. In this context, the relationship between residential electricity consumption and income is analyzed for Algeria in the period 1970-2013, by estimating a residential electricity consumption per capita demand function which depends on GDP per capita, its squared and cubed terms, the electricity prices, and the goods and services imports. An extended Autoregressive Distributed Lag model (ARDL) was adopted to consider the different growth patterns registered in the evolution of GDP. The estimate results show that the relationships between electricity use and GDP (in per capita terms) present an inverted N-shape, with the second turning point having been reached. Therefore, promoting growth in Algeria could be convenient to reduce the electricity consumption, as a higher income level may allow the use of more efficient appliances. Additionally, renewable energies may be adequate to increase the electricity production in order to cover the increasing residential demand.

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