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A Model of Subsidies and Feed-In Tariffs for the Deployment of Photovoltaic Energy in the Residential Sector in Tunisia

Mahmoud Tnani and Hafedh Ben Abdennebi

International Journal of Management Sciences, 2015, vol. 6, issue 5, 235-259

Abstract: Through an analytical model, we investigate the effectiveness and efficiency of current government incentives in accelerating deployment of photovoltaic systems since 2010 in the Tunisian residential sector. Investor behavior takes into account the diffusion phenomenon, the learning phenomenon, and the net present value. We show that the currently adopted incentives do not provide a framework conducive to investment for both households and the PV industrial sector. Specifically, it was found that the effectiveness and efficiency of the incentive policy cannot be achieved while maintaining feed-in tariffs (FITs) equals to retail tariffs. Moreover, the sensitivity analysis results obtained from the model show that the net social benefits can be maximized when the capacities are installed during the early years, accompanied by incentive mechanisms through prices and subsidies. Our analysis also reveals that for Tunisia, which is a net importer of PV, the optimal net social benefit depends essentially on the social costs of subsidies and FITs, which are directly impacted by government policies. In contrast, the externalities, the benefits of consumers, the savings in natural gas, and the carbon credits are only slightly affected by government policies, since the objective in terms of installed capacity is reached at a time horizon.

Keywords: Diffusion; Dynamic Programming; Feed-in Tariff; Learning by doing; Photovoltaic Energy Policy; Social benefits. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015
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