Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 16 segundos...
Inicio  /  Sustainability  /  Vol: 2 Núm: 8 Par: August (2010)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Renewable Energy Technology?Is It a Manufactured Technology or an Information Technology?

Kwok L. Shum    

Resumen

Socio-technical or strategic approach to renewable energy deployment all suggests that the uptake of renewable energy technology such as solar photovoltaic is as much a social issue as a technical issue. Among social issues, one most direct and immediate component is the cost of the renewable energy technology. Because renewable electricity provides no new functionality?a clean electron does the same work as a dirty electron does?but is relatively expensive compared with fossil fuel based electricity, there is currently an under-supply of renewable electricity. Policy instruments based on economics approaches are therefore developed to encourage the production and consumption of renewable electricity, aiming to remediate the market inefficiencies that stem from the failure in internalizing the environmental or social costs of fossil fuels. In this vein, the most discussed instruments are renewable portfolio standard or quota based system and the general category of feed-in tariff. Feed-in tariff is to support output or generation of the renewable electricity by subsidizing revenues. The existing discussions have all concerned about the relative effectiveness of these two instruments in terms of cost, prices and implementation efficiency. This paper attempts a different basis of evaluation of these two instruments in terms of cost and (network) externality effects. The cost effect is driven by deploying the renewable as a manufactured technology, and the network externality effect is driven by deploying the renewable as an information technology. The deployment instruments are studied in terms of how these two effects are leveraged in the deployment process. Our formulation lends itself to evolutionary policy interpretation. Future research directions associated with this new energy policy framework is then suggested.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Abdullah F. Al-Aboosi, Aldo Jonathan Muñoz Vazquez, Fadhil Y. Al-Aboosi, Mahmoud El-Halwagi and Wei Zhan    
Accurate prediction of renewable energy output is essential for integrating sustainable energy sources into the grid, facilitating a transition towards a more resilient energy infrastructure. Novel applications of machine learning and artificial intellig... ver más

 
Li Li, Gyumin Lee and Doosun Kang    
A model that computes the per-unit process energy consumption, energy intensity, CO2 emission, and CO2 intensity of water treatment plants is developed. This model is used to estimate the total energy consumption of six water treatment plants in Seoul Me... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Dario Bottino-Leone, Dagmar Elisabet Exner, Jennifer Adami, Alexandra Troi and Jessica Balest    
The abandonment and deterioration of historic rural buildings in Europe raise significant issues, including hydrogeological risks, the loss of productive land, and cultural heritage decline. Despite being underestimated, these structures hold significant... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Alice Rene? Di Rocco, Dario Bottino-Leone, Alexandra Troi and Daniel Herrera-Avellanosa    
The challenge of transforming historic buildings and city centers into energy-self-sufficient environments requires innovative solutions. The research project ?BiPV meets History? addressed this challenge by providing comprehensive guidelines for assessi... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Diego Fettermann, Pedro Christoffel, Jaime Castillo and Angelo Sant?Anna    
The incorporation of renewable energy sources necessitates the upgrade of the electrical grid to a smart grid, which involves the implementation of smart meters. Although smart meters provide benefits to users, many smart meter implementation projects ha... ver más
Revista: Urban Science