The Economics of Policy Instruments to Stimulate Wind Power in Brazil
Keywords
WIND PROJECTSPOWER GENERATION TECHNOLOGIES
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
CO2
WIND POWER PRODUCTION
GENERATION CAPACITY
CLIMATE
RENEWABLE ENERGY
WIND POWER RESOURCES
FOSSIL FUEL CONSUMPTION
FOREST PRODUCTS
TRANSMISSION CAPACITY
BIOMASS
WIND
CARBON TAXES
CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION
WIND ENERGY
ELECTRICITY GENERATION CAPACITY
POWER PLANTS
ENERGY PRICES
SUGAR CANE
GREENHOUSE GAS
SUPPLY COSTS
RENEWABLE ENERGY POLICY
DEMAND FOR ELECTRICITY
FOREST
FACILITIES
ENERGY MIX
RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES
PRICE
NATURAL GAS
ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION
GREENHOUSE GAS MITIGATION
WIND POWER CAPACITY
CRUDE OIL
LESS
WIND POWER DEVELOPMENT
EMISSIONS PREDICTION
COST OF WIND POWER
ELECTRIC UTILITY
CARBON EMISSIONS
FORESTRY
GREENHOUSE
OIL
OIL REFINERY
WIND POWER INDUSTRY
EMISSIONS FROM ENERGY
FOSSIL FUEL
SUGARCANE
ENERGY POLICY
ELECTRICITY
CAPACITY
POWER SUPPLY
GENERATION
FOSSIL FUELS
CLOUDS
COAL MINING
FUEL CONSUMPTION
NUCLEAR POWER
EMISSIONS FROM ENERGY USE
ELECTRICITY PRICE
FOSSIL
ENERGY USE
PRICE OF ELECTRICITY
DIESEL
GASOLINE
COST OF ELECTRICITY
FUEL DEMAND
NUCLEAR POWER GENERATION
WIND POWER POTENTIAL
METALS
FUEL
CEMENT
ENERGY
RAINFALL
PRICES
ELECTRICITY GENERATION
POWER INDUSTRY
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
TRANSMISSION FACILITIES
FUELS
SUGAR CANE
WOOD INDUSTRY
INVESTMENT
ELECTRICITY SUPPLY
POWER PRODUCTION
INVESTMENTS
GHG
RENEWABLE ENERGY NETWORK
THERMAL POWER
CHEMICALS
COAL
SUPPLY CURVE
NUCLEAR ENERGY
WIND POWER GENERATION
ELECTRICITY SYSTEM
HYDROPOWER
WIND POWER PLANTS
ENERGY POLICIES
ELECTRICITY GENERATION TECHNOLOGIES
CLIMATE CHANGE
SOLAR ENERGY
EMISSIONS
PETROLEUM
ELECTRICITY DEMAND
TRANSPORT SECTOR
POWER SECTOR
ENERGY SUPPLY
CANE
OIL REFINING
COSTS OF ELECTRICITY
LEAD
WIND POWER
CARBON
POWER
WIND PENETRATION
EMISSIONS REDUCTION
UTILITIES
ELECTRICITY PRICES
GAS
APPROACH
POWER CAPACITY
WIND CAPACITY
ELECTRICITY GENERATION MIX
PROCESS GAS
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
THERMAL POWER GENERATION
POWER GENERATION
TARIFF
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22226Abstract
Large-scale deployment of renewable energy technologies, such as wind power and solar energy, has been taking place in industrialized and developing economics mainly because of various fiscal and regulatory policies. An understanding of the economy-wide impacts of those policies is an important part of an overall analysis of them. Using a perfect foresight computable general equilibrium model, this study analyzes the economy-wide costs of achieving a 10 percent share of wind power in Brazil’s electricity supply mix by 2030. Brazil is in the midst of an active program of wind capacity expansion. The welfare loss would be small, 0.1 percent of total baseline welfare in the absence of the 10 percent wind power expansion. The study also finds that, in the case of Brazil, production subsidies financed through increased value-added tax would have superior impacts on welfare and greenhouse gas mitigation, compared with a consumption mandate where electricity utilities are allowed to pass the increased electricity supply costs directly to consumers. These two policies would impact various production sectors differently to achieve the wind power expansion targets: the burden of the mandate falls mostly on electricity-intensive production and consumption, whereas the burden of the subsidy is distributed toward goods and services with higher value added.Date
2015-06Type
Working PaperIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/22226http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22226
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