Repository logo
 

Evaluating the case for supporting renewable electricity

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Newbery, D 

Abstract

Renewable electricity, particularly solar PV and wind, creates external benefits of learning-by-doing that drive down costs and reduce emissions. The Global Apollo Programme called for collective action to develop renewable energy. This paper sets out a method for assessing whether a trajectory of investment that involves initial subsidies is justified by the subsequent learning-by-doing spillovers and if so, computes the maximum justifiable additional subsidy to provide, taking account of the special features of renewable electricity – geographically dispersed and variable quality resource base and local saturation. Given current costs and learning rates, accelerating the current rate of investment appears globally socially beneficial for solar PV in most but not all cases, less so for on-shore wind. The optimal trajectory appears to involve a gradually decreasing rate of growth of installed capacity.

Description

Keywords

33 Built Environment and Design, 4802 Environmental and Resources Law, 44 Human Society, 48 Law and Legal Studies, 4407 Policy and Administration, 3304 Urban and Regional Planning, 13 Climate Action, 7 Affordable and Clean Energy

Journal Title

Energy Policy

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0301-4215

Volume Title

120

Publisher

Elsevier