The Economics of Policy Instruments to Stimulate Wind Power in Brazil

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.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Landis, Florian, Timilsina, Govinda R.
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-06
Subjects:WIND POWER PLANTS, TRANSPORT SECTOR, TRANSMISSION CAPACITY, CANE, COST OF WIND POWER, POWER PLANTS, FOSSIL FUELS, SUPPLY CURVE, PRICE OF ELECTRICITY, WIND POWER GENERATION, CARBON, ELECTRICITY GENERATION TECHNOLOGIES, GENERATION, COST OF ELECTRICITY, WIND, COSTS OF ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY SYSTEM, EMISSIONS, GASOLINE, POWER SUPPLY, WIND POWER RESOURCES, GAS, RENEWABLE ENERGY POLICY, PRICE, GREENHOUSE GAS, WIND POWER DEVELOPMENT, ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION, ELECTRIC UTILITY, BIOMASS, GENERATION CAPACITY, CO2, FOREST PRODUCTS, ENERGY POLICIES, GREENHOUSE GAS MITIGATION, PETROLEUM, POWER INDUSTRY, OIL, TRANSMISSION FACILITIES, POWER GENERATION, ENERGY MIX, POWER SECTOR, CAPACITY, GHG, WIND POWER INDUSTRY, ENERGY SUPPLY, CLOUDS, CARBON TAXES, RAINFALL, WIND PENETRATION, ELECTRICITY SUPPLY, FORESTRY, SUGAR CANE, NUCLEAR POWER GENERATION, SOLAR ENERGY, ENERGY POLICY, FUEL DEMAND, FUEL CONSUMPTION, METALS, PROCESS GAS, FUELS, THERMAL POWER, EMISSIONS REDUCTION, EMISSIONS FROM ENERGY, CARBON EMISSIONS, EMISSIONS FROM ENERGY USE, GREENHOUSE, LEAD, COAL MINING, CHEMICALS, RENEWABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES, CLIMATE CHANGE, DEMAND FOR ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY DEMAND, UTILITIES, POWER, ELECTRICITY, CEMENT, ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS, WIND POWER, CLIMATE, WIND ENERGY, ELECTRICITY GENERATION MIX, SUPPLY COSTS, HYDROPOWER, WIND POWER CAPACITY, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, FOSSIL FUEL, CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION, FOREST, OIL REFINING, ENERGY USE, NUCLEAR ENERGY, ENERGY PRICES, POWER GENERATION TECHNOLOGIES, POWER PRODUCTION, WOOD INDUSTRY, WIND PROJECTS, FOSSIL FUEL CONSUMPTION, EMISSIONS PREDICTION, ELECTRICITY PRICES, OIL REFINERY, ELECTRICITY GENERATION CAPACITY, NATURAL GAS, THERMAL POWER GENERATION, SUGARCANE, INVESTMENT, WIND POWER PRODUCTION, ELECTRICITY PRICE, COAL, NUCLEAR POWER, POWER CAPACITY, TARIFF, CRUDE OIL, FUEL, LESS, FACILITIES, INVESTMENTS, RENEWABLE ENERGY NETWORK, WIND CAPACITY, RENEWABLE ENERGY, PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, WIND POWER POTENTIAL, ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION, DIESEL, FOSSIL, PRICES, APPROACH, ENERGY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24736160/economics-policy-instruments-stimulate-wind-power-brazil
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22226
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