Distributional Effects of Energy Transition: Impacts of Renewable Electricity Support in Germany

K. Neuhoff, Stefan Bach, Jochen Diekmann, Martin Beznoska, Tarik El-Laboudy
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引用次数: 94

Abstract

The discussion of the support for renewable energy must consider the distributional impact of cost allocation. The public is sensitive to social imbalances caused by rising power prices that might jeopardize the acceptance of energy transformation. By the end of 2012 about 19 percent of German power is produced with renewables other than hydropower. As a result, German consumers will pay for global learning investment through their electricity bill. We explore the distributional implications for households using household micro data. In 2013 households will allocate 2.5% of consumption expenditure to electricity. The increase to previous years was much debated in fall of 2012, but is not without precedent. In the mid-1980s the share was 2.3%. The effect is more significant for poor households, which allocate 4.5% of expenditure for power. We propose three options how to address this distributional impact: adjusted transfers, reduced electricity taxes, and, most effectively, support to improve energy efficiency.
能源转型的分配效应:德国可再生电力支持的影响
对可再生能源支持的讨论必须考虑成本分配的分配影响。公众对电价上涨导致的社会失衡非常敏感,这可能会危及人们对能源转型的接受度。到2012年底,德国约19%的电力来自可再生能源,而不是水力发电。因此,德国消费者将通过电费支付全球学习投资。我们使用家庭微观数据来探讨家庭的分布含义。2013年,家庭用电支出将占消费支出的2.5%。在2012年秋季,对前几年的增幅进行了激烈辩论,但并非没有先例。在20世纪80年代中期,这一比例为2.3%。这种影响对贫困家庭更为显著,他们的电费支出占总支出的4.5%。我们提出了三种解决这种分配影响的方案:调整转移支付、降低电力税,以及最有效的支持提高能源效率。
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