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Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*, Jhih-Shyang Shih*, Emily Aronow*, David Austin**, and Tom Bath*** We thank the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, for their support. * Resources for the Future **now at the U.S. Congressional Budget Office *** independent engineering consultant
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Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in

Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains

by

Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*, Jhih-Shyang Shih*,

Emily Aronow*, David Austin**, and Tom Bath***

We thank the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, for their support.

* Resources for the Future

**now at the U.S. Congressional Budget Office

*** independent engineering consultant

http://www.rff.org/disc_papers/PDF_files/0205.pdf 

Page 2: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Approach

• Theoretical Framework

Cost-index based measure of expected consumer welfare gains from innovation

Use of counterfactual and its own technological change

Adoption rate

External effects

Uncertainty (data, forecasts)

Discount rate

• Our ApplicationElectricity generation technologies:

--Renewable (PV, solar thermal, biomass, wind, geothermal)

--Fossil (Combined cycle gas turbine -- conventional and advanced designs)

Two geographic regions (CNV, MAPP)

Weibull (“fast,” “slow”)Carbon dioxide, thermal effluentTime period: 2000-2020

Page 3: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Derived Demand for Renewable Energy Technologies:

Illustration of Net Surplus Change

Page 4: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Derived demand for renewable energy technologies: illustration of net surplus change with external costs

Page 5: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Derivation of estimating relationships

C*dt = E* (udt, Pdt, Wdt)

E* (udt, PI , WRE)

and C*I = E* (uI, Pdt, Wdt) (1)

E* (uI, PI , WRE)

½ ln (C*dt x C*I )=½ (sdt+sI) ln (Wdt/ WRE) (2)

(Bresnahan, AER 1986)

WRE = WI + (1- ) Wdt (3)

Page 6: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

$Exp exp

Cost Index

Cost Index C*

E*(u,Wdt)

E*(u, )

WRE)

Utility u*dt u*I

C*I C*dt

0

1

Relationship between expenditures, cost index

Page 7: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Using the index to estimate the present value of consumer surplus

Interpretation of the index: “how much better off are we (that is, society in general) as a result of investment in renewables, taking into account the alternative (conventional technology) and differences in the social benefits and costs between renewables and conventional technology?”

Page 8: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Model Framework

Aggregate Consumer Surplus

•Discount rate

Private Generation Costs

PV, ST, GEO, BIO, Wind, CCGT, A-CCGT

(DOE/EIA (2000), DOE/EPRI (1997), authors’ adjustments)

Externality Costs

•Carbon (CCGT) (Krupnick et al. (1996))

•Thermal H2O (CCGT, Biomass, ST) (Authors’ estimates)

Private and SocialGeneration Costs

Cost Indices Private Consumption Expenditures

(DOC (2001), authors’ forecasts)

“Market Conditions”

•Adoption rates

•Electricity prices (DOE/EIA (2000))

• Triangular and normal distributions combined with Monte Carlo draws characterize uncertainty.

Page 9: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Diversity of renewable energy resources in the United States.

Page 10: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Electricity Market Module Supply Regions

Source: EIA

Page 11: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Weibull Adoption Rate Curves

( ) 1 exp( )F t t

0.00.20.4

0.60.81.0

0 5 10 15 20 25

Year

Per

cent

Ado

ptio

n

Fast Adoption Slow Adoption

Page 12: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Examples of External Effects

• Carbon

• Water

• Land use

• Avian and other ecological resources

• Lifecycle (such as manufacturing)

• Distinguishing pecuniary from technological effects

Page 13: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

The present value of benefits from 2000 to 2020 for Wind Class 6 from scenario 1 for CNV

Page 14: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Discounted incremental net benefits from 2000 to 2020 for Wind 6 from scenario 1 for CNV

Key: % Confidence Interval

95%

75%

50%

25%

5%

Page 15: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

SCENARIO 1: Weibull: .1, 3.5 Externalities: Carbon Water Base: EIA CCGT Growth Discounted Present Value, 2000-2020, $ 1999 billions

Conventional CCGT Advanced CCGT Defending Technology

Innovating Technology (5%, Median, 95%) (5%, Median, 95%)

CNV

Photovoltaics (-13.6, -10.8, -8.04) (-13.7, -10.9, -8.08) Solar Thermal (-7.02, -5.38, -3.86) (-7.17, -5.57, -3.96) Geothermal (2.62, 3.47, 4.45) (2.51, 3.31, 4.26)

Wind Class 4 (2.10, 2.90, 3.77) (2.00, 2.73, 3.61)

Wind Class 6 (3.50, 4.60 ,5.80) (3.35, 4.44, 5.59) Biomass (-5.37, -3.99, -2.74) (-5.46, -4.17, -2.88)

MAPP

Photovoltaics (-6.40, -4.62, -2.92) (-6.51, -4.70, -2.97)

Solar Thermal N/A N/A

Geothermal N/A N/A Wind Class 4 (0.79, 1.18, 1.65) (0.74, 1.09, 1.56) Wind Class 6 (1.14, 1.75, 2.41) (1.13, 1.67, 2.31)

Biomass (-1.61, -1.10, -0.64) (-1.75, -1.17, -0.69)

Page 16: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Illustrative Results (45 scenarios)Median Present Value, 2000-2020,

5% discount rateCNV Region

Largest “loss”

Fast adoption of PV w/

A-CCGT and no ext. $11.9 B

Largest “gain”

Fast adoption of WC6 w/

C-CCGT and ext. $4.6 B.

~ $556/household

MAPP Region*

$4.9 B.

$4.4 B.

~ $600/household* No HGT, ST

Page 17: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Largest Surplus Gains Under An Exogenously Specified “Portfolio”

Discounted Present Value 2000-2020, $ 1999 Billions Base: EIA CCGT Growth

CNV (5%, Median,.95%)

MAPP (5%, Median, 95%)

Assumptions:

EQWTRP C-CCGT A-CCGT

(-1.54, -1.11, -0.72)

(-1.63, -1.20, -0.77)

(-1.07, -0.72, -0.42)

(-1.13, -0.79, -0.78)

Weibull: .05, 3.5 External Effects: Carbon, Water

VARWTRP C-CCGT A-CCGT

(0.41, 0.84, 1.28)

(0.22, 0.68, 1.11)

(0.59, 0.92, 1.25)

(0.56, 0.83, 1.17)

Weibull: .1, 3.5 External Effects: Carbon, Water

Page 18: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Other Results• Externalities -- Carbon and thermal externalities enhance relative

surplus associated with renewable technologies -- Thermal externality reduces relative surplus

associated with ST, BIO (even though externality is also linked with CCGT)

• Innovation-- Innovation in CCGT reduces median relative surplus associated with renewables by ~ 5%

Page 19: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Other results, continued

• Uncertainty-- Uncertainty can lead to values +/- 20-40% of median at the 5% and 95% confidence intervals

• Portfolio -- Equal portfolio weights create negative surplus

estimates-- Variable portfolio weights can yield positive surplus estimates but smaller than single technology surplus estimates

Page 20: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Conclusions

• Limits

-- Pairwise or exogenously specified portfolio comparisons rather than optimization

-- Data gaps (external effects) and assumptions (“GenCo”; deregulation; state/local policies)

-- Gross not net of public and private investment or other expenditures to attain cost goals, adoption rates

Page 21: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Conclusions, continued

• Findings

-- Large differences among technologies

-- Regional differences

-- Adoption push

-- Externality internalization

-- Useful estimates result from model

Page 22: Measuring the Contribution to the Economy of Investments in Renewable Energy: Estimates of Future Welfare Gains by Molly Macauley*, Joel Darmstadter*,

Conclusions, continued• Contribution

-- Offers conceptually grounded measurement approach; alternative to data-intensive econometric models; appeal of “cost index” analogy with Consumer Price Index; tool for program managers -- Allows for uncertainty, externalities, policy simulation-- Could extend to include “green preferences” (data? Are they verified?); state and local policies-- Could extend to NRC-defined benefits including commercialization, knowledge, option values