Renewable Energy Targets in the Context of the EU ETS: Whom do They Benefit Exactly?
Florian Landis and Peter Heindl
Authors registered in the RePEc Author Service: Peter Heindl
The Energy Journal, 2019, vol. Volume 40, issue Number 6
Abstract:
We study how European climate and energy policy targets affect different member states and households of different income quintiles within the member states. We find that renewable energy targets in power generation, by reducing eu ets permit prices, may make net permit exporters worse off and net permit importers better off. This effect appears to dominate the efficiency cost of increasing the share of energy provided by renewable energy sources in the countries that adopt such targets. While an increase in prices for energy commodities, which is entailed by the policies in question, affects households in low income quintiles the most, recycling revenues from climate policy allows governments to compensate them for the losses. If renewable targets reduce the revenues from ets permit auctions, member states with large allocations of auctionable permits will lose some of the ability to do so.
JEL-codes: F0 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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Related works:
Journal Article: Renewable Energy Targets in the Context of the EU ETS: Whom do They Benefit Exactly? (2019) 
Working Paper: Renewable energy targets in the context of the EU ETS: Whom do they benefit exactly? (2016) 
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