The private and public economics of renewable electricity ge
The private and public economics of renewable electricity generation
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Generating electricity from renewable sources is more expensive than conventional approaches, but reduces pollution externalities. Analyzing the tradeoff is much more challenging than often presumed, because the value of electricity is extremely dependent on the time and location at which it is produced, which is not very controllable with some renewables, such as wind and solar. Likewise, the pollution benefits from renewable generation depend on what type of generation it displaces, which also depends on time and location. Without incorporating these factors, cost-benefit analyses of alternatives are likely to be misleading. However, other common arguments for subsidizing renewable power - green jobs, energy security and driving down fossil energy prices - are unlikely to substantially alter the analysis. The role of intellectual property spillovers is a strong argument for subsidizing energy science research, but less persuasive as an enhancement to the value of installing current renewable energy technologies"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Severin Borenstein
An empirical analysis of the p
An empirical analysis of the potential for market power in California's electricity industry
Competition and price dispersion in the U.S. airline industry
Customer risk from real-time r
Customer risk from real-time retail electricity pricing
Diagnosing market power in Cal
Diagnosing market power in California's restructured wholesale electricity market
Do airline bankruptcies reduce
Do airline bankruptcies reduce air service?
Do airlines in Chapter 11 harm their rivals?