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Original Articles

The impact of renewable energy diffusion on European consumption-based emissions

† This article is a revised version of the paper that won the Wassily Leontief Memorial Prize 2015, for the best paper by authors younger than 40 submitted to the 23rd International Input–Output Conference, in Mexico City.

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Pages 133-150
Received 24 Oct 2015
Accepted 26 Oct 2015
Published online: 11 Jan 2016

Kirsten S. Wiebea*

a GWSmbH, Osnabrück, Germany; UNU-MERIT, Maastricht, The Netherlands

CONTACT Kirsten S. Wiebe

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09535314.2015.1113936

ABSTRACT

The amount of carbon embedded in the final consumption of goods and services in a country or region depends on the amount of goods and services consumed and the emission intensity of the production processes along global production chains. A reduction of consumption-based emissions can be achieved from both sides, a reduction in total consumption and a reduction in the emission intensity of the production processes. The power sector is one of the most carbon intensive industries along global production chains and the global deployment of renewable power generation technologies (RPGTs) is one possibility to significantly reduce emissions in this industry. This paper combines three different strands of literature, multi-regional input–output analysis, dynamic energy–economy–environment models and technological change in renewable energy (RE), to model the impact of the global diffusion of renewable energies on European consumption-based emissions. The global diffusion of RE technologies (photovoltaic and wind) depends on the development of technology costs, which are modeled using learning curves. With increasing deployment of renewables within the EU as well as increasing RD&D efforts, the EU can achieve an accelerated costs decrease for these technologies, thus fostering deployment of RPGTs at a global scale through the effect of decreasing costs. This behavior indirectly influences the electricity mix abroad, making it less carbon intensive, so that consumption-based emissions of the EU decrease.

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