DIMENSIONS OF POLICY FOR THE REDUCTION OF CARBON DIOXIDE EMISSIONS AND THE MITIGATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE.
This page is currently trying to set an agenda for a more comprehensive analysis of ways in which we could or should be thinking about energy issues. Thoughts welcome. It begins with a matrix outline, which can then be populated to provide a systematic classification.
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POWER
SECTOR
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TRANSPORT
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HEAT.
BUILDINGS AND INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES
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INNOVATION
The
dark matter of economics. We know it’s there and we know it to be core to
development, but understanding it is a different matter.
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Innovation
is the key driver of change in the power sector. We can choose within a range
of transformative options for low carbon power generation - nuclear, wind,
tidal, solar, geothermal etc.
But technical
factors then also demand smart grids, energy storage and new models for
electricity consumption.
“Net
zero” implies bio-energy with CCS (BECCS).
But
what are the right innovation policies,
and where are these to be targeted?
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Electric
vehicles are already with us. A role
for hydrogen vehicles too?
Ammonia
also canvassed as an alternative for the chemical storage of energy from
primary electricity.
No
clear solution in sight for road freight, aviation and shipping.
Other
less obvious innovations, eg driverless cars, may present unforeseen
opportunities and challenges
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Innovations
now in train include air and ground source heat pumps, techniques of building
design, integration with solar applications, and new materials.
Other
possible new developments include various forms of heat storage.
Policies
considered for the future include heat networks, relatively novel in the UK.
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MARKETS
& PRICING.
The
economist’s bunch of keys.* A sine qua non, or “without this, nothing else
will work”.
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Carbon
taxes or (reducing) tradeable allowances?
Immediate
gain from pricing the CO2 externality.
Capacity
markets and other markets – who really calls the shots with these?
Better
network pricing fundamental to a low carbon power sector.
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With
transport as the premium use of hydrocarbons, prices sometimes considered a lesser
instrument.
But
consistency matters, eg between transport modes, and the evidence is that
long term price elasticity can matter.
Pricing
for congestion also reduces emissions.
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This
sector is the home of the “rebound effect”, the Jeavons paradox, most
effectively addressed by pricing CO2. Price elasticity is
significant.
Domestic
heating is also a very sensitive sector politically, raising issues of fuel
poverty inter alia.
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REGULATION
AND LAW.
To
be defined in the broadest possible terms, to include social and behavioural
norms, and governance at all levels.
Defining
who takes responsibility for what?
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Continued
focus on consumer appliances, eg labelling, and on metering/control.
Mandating
energy companies to low carbon?
Governance
defines the structures for interconnections, markets, network pricing,
innovation and decentralisation.
Defining
who takes responsibility for what?
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Specific
areas of regulation (broadly defined) with clear value in terms of lower
emissions include measures to limit congestion, vehicle standards, and speed
limits.
City
planning and many policies outside energy sector have indirect impact on
demand for transport.
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Building
regulations.
Retrofitting
and heat networks also raise major questions for regulatory frameworks, as do
some of the new heat technologies, and trend towards decentralised systems.
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