Electricity Use as a Real-Time Indicator of the Economic Burden of the COVID-19-Related Lockdown: Evidence from Switzerland
Benedikt Janzen and
Doina Radulescu
CESifo Economic Studies, vol. 66, issue 4, 303-321
Abstract:
We employ hourly electricity load data for Switzerland as a real-time indicator of the economic effects of the lockdown following the spread of SARS-CoV-2. Our findings reveal that following the drastic lockdown, overall electricity use decreased by 4.6%, with a reduction of even 14.3% in the Canton of Ticino where the number of confirmed cases per capita was one of the highest in Switzerland and also stricter measures such as closures of construction sites and industrial companies were implemented on top of federal regulations. Looking at working days only, we estimate a Swiss-wide decrease in electricity consumption of 7.4%. Assuming industry, services, transport, and agriculture account for 67% of electricity demand, the 4.6% decrease in electricity use implies an almost 7% output reduction in these sectors. In addition, the reduced electricity imports and the change in the generation mix of neighbouring countries, also translates into reduced CO2 emissions related to these imports. (JEL codes: C53, Q4, C3)
Keywords: COVID-19; Corona; economic indicator; electricity load; energy; CO2 emissions (search for similar items in EconPapers)
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Working Paper: Electricity Use as a Real Time Indicator of the Economic Burden of the Covid-19-Related Lockdown: Evidence from Switzerland (2020) 
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