4.7 Article

Residential energy efficiency policies: Costs, emissions and rebound effects

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 143, Issue -, Pages 191-201

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2017.10.103

Keywords

Energy efficiency; Energy efficiency policies; Emission control; Energy policy design

Funding

  1. European Community's Seventh Framework Programme, Project ENTRACTE [308481]
  2. CREE - Oslo Centre for Research on Environmentally Friendly Energy

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Ambitious energy efficiency goals constitute an important part of the EU's road to a low-carbon society. While the introduction and restructuring of climate policy instruments is taking place rapidly, knowledge of how the instruments interact is lagging behind. This analysis looks at the 2030 policy goals for residential energy efficiency and how they interact with targets for restricting CO2 emissions. The case studied is Norway, which has committed to new climate policy targets for 2030 in line with the EU. A multi-sector computable general equilibrium model of the Norwegian economy is used to explore the cost, emission and energy rebound effects of alternative interpretations of the policy underlying the proposed 2030 energy efficiency goal. The model incorporates bottom-up information on energy efficiency investments and takes account of both energy and process emissions. The economic costs of the energy efficiency policies are found to be high: equivalent to a welfare loss of 1%. The costs rise when energy efficiency policies interact with carbon pricing. Economy-wide rebound amounts to nearly 40%, mainly because energy-intensive, trade-exposed industries expand. As emissions from these industries stem from both combustion and industrial processes, total CO2 emissions increase by 2.4%. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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