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Decarbonizing Electricity Generation with Intermittent Sources of Energy
Author(s) -
Stéfan Ambec,
Claude Crampes
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of the association of environmental and resource economists
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.367
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 2333-5963
pISSN - 2333-5955
DOI - 10.1086/705536
Subject(s) - renewable energy , electricity generation , electricity , wind power , environmental economics , fossil fuel , natural resource economics , feed in tariff , energy mix , investment (military) , business , production (economics) , carbon tax , renewable portfolio standard , economics , energy policy , microeconomics , greenhouse gas , waste management , power (physics) , engineering , ecology , physics , quantum mechanics , politics , political science , law , electrical engineering , biology
We examine policy instruments that aim to decarbonize electricity production by replacing fossil fuel energy with intermittent renewable sources, namely, wind and solar power. We consider a model of investment, production, and storage with two sources of energy: one is clean but intermittent (wind or solar), whereas the other one is reliable but polluting (thermal power). We first determine the first-best energy mix depending on the social cost of polluting emissions. We then show that, to implement the socially efficient energy mix without a carbon tax, feed-in tariffs and renewable portfolio standards must be complemented with a price cap and volume-limited capacity payments.

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