Energy transition calls for high investment

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Standard

Energy transition calls for high investment. / Blazejczak, Jürgen; Diekmann, Jochen; Edler, Dietmar et al.
In: DIW Economic Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 9, 2013, p. 3-14.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearch

Harvard

Blazejczak, J, Diekmann, J, Edler, D, Kemfert, C, Neuhoff, K & Schill, W-P 2013, 'Energy transition calls for high investment', DIW Economic Bulletin, vol. 3, no. 9, pp. 3-14. <http://hdl.handle.net/10419/85362>

APA

Blazejczak, J., Diekmann, J., Edler, D., Kemfert, C., Neuhoff, K., & Schill, W.-P. (2013). Energy transition calls for high investment. DIW Economic Bulletin, 3(9), 3-14. http://hdl.handle.net/10419/85362

Vancouver

Blazejczak J, Diekmann J, Edler D, Kemfert C, Neuhoff K, Schill WP. Energy transition calls for high investment. DIW Economic Bulletin. 2013;3(9):3-14.

Bibtex

@article{dd794f1aca984053b464afb2fb0e2b42,
title = "Energy transition calls for high investment",
abstract = "Achieving the objectives of the German governments 2010 Energy Concept and the accelerated phase-out of nuclear energy will require significant investment in restructuring energy supply. In particular, this includes investment in installations for the use of renewable energy sources in the power and heating sector, as well as in the infrastructure, such as power grids. In addition, substantial investment is needed to improve energy efficiency, for example, by insulating buildings. Model calculations by DIW Berlin show that the transformation of the energy sector is likely to have a sustained positive effect on added value in Germany. Furthermore, this investment will lead to substantial savings of primary fossil energy sources. This is also accompanied by a reduction in energy-related greenhouse gas emissions. The existing framework for investment in renewable power generation and electricity grids is largely appropriate and should, in principle, be maintained in the near future. Accelerating the rate of the energy-efficient building refurbishment, however, will require additional incentives.",
keywords = "Economics, energy transition, investment, renewable energy, energy efficiency",
author = "J{\"u}rgen Blazejczak and Jochen Diekmann and Dietmar Edler and Claudia Kemfert and Karsten Neuhoff and Wolf-Peter Schill",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "3--14",
journal = "DIW Economic Bulletin",
issn = "2192-7219",
publisher = "Deutsches Institut f{\"u}r Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW)",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Energy transition calls for high investment

AU - Blazejczak, Jürgen

AU - Diekmann, Jochen

AU - Edler, Dietmar

AU - Kemfert, Claudia

AU - Neuhoff, Karsten

AU - Schill, Wolf-Peter

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Achieving the objectives of the German governments 2010 Energy Concept and the accelerated phase-out of nuclear energy will require significant investment in restructuring energy supply. In particular, this includes investment in installations for the use of renewable energy sources in the power and heating sector, as well as in the infrastructure, such as power grids. In addition, substantial investment is needed to improve energy efficiency, for example, by insulating buildings. Model calculations by DIW Berlin show that the transformation of the energy sector is likely to have a sustained positive effect on added value in Germany. Furthermore, this investment will lead to substantial savings of primary fossil energy sources. This is also accompanied by a reduction in energy-related greenhouse gas emissions. The existing framework for investment in renewable power generation and electricity grids is largely appropriate and should, in principle, be maintained in the near future. Accelerating the rate of the energy-efficient building refurbishment, however, will require additional incentives.

AB - Achieving the objectives of the German governments 2010 Energy Concept and the accelerated phase-out of nuclear energy will require significant investment in restructuring energy supply. In particular, this includes investment in installations for the use of renewable energy sources in the power and heating sector, as well as in the infrastructure, such as power grids. In addition, substantial investment is needed to improve energy efficiency, for example, by insulating buildings. Model calculations by DIW Berlin show that the transformation of the energy sector is likely to have a sustained positive effect on added value in Germany. Furthermore, this investment will lead to substantial savings of primary fossil energy sources. This is also accompanied by a reduction in energy-related greenhouse gas emissions. The existing framework for investment in renewable power generation and electricity grids is largely appropriate and should, in principle, be maintained in the near future. Accelerating the rate of the energy-efficient building refurbishment, however, will require additional incentives.

KW - Economics

KW - energy transition

KW - investment

KW - renewable energy

KW - energy efficiency

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 3

SP - 3

EP - 14

JO - DIW Economic Bulletin

JF - DIW Economic Bulletin

SN - 2192-7219

IS - 9

ER -

Links