Energy, Transportation, Environment Department Publications

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  • DIW Discussion Papers 1298 / 2013

    The Benefit of Coordinating Congestion Management in Germany

    The management of congestion within the German electricity transmission network has become more important during the last years. This emerging relevance is caused by the increase of renewable generation and the partial phaseout of nuclear power plants. Both developments yield a change in the transmission flow pattern and thus the need for congestion management. Currently, four German transmission system ...

    2013| Friedrich Kunz, Alexander Zerrahn
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1275 / 2013

    Why Do Emitters Trade Carbon Permits? Firm-Level Evidence from the European Emission Trading Scheme

    The creation of the EU's Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS) has turned the right to emit CO2 into a positively priced intermediate good for the affected firms. Firms thus face the decision whether to source compliance with the EU ETS within their boundaries or to acquire it through the permit trade. However, a combination of internal abatement, free permit allocation and exibility to shift the use of ...

    2013| Aleksandar Zaklan
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1273 / 2013

    The Role of Natural Gas in a Low-Carbon Europe: Infrastructure and Regional Supply Security in the Global Gas Model

    In this paper, we use the Global Gas Model to analyze the perspectives and infrastructure needs of the European natural gas market until 2050. Three pathways of natural gas consumption in a future low-carbon energy system in Europe are envisaged: i) a decreasing natural gas consumption, along the results of the PRIMES model for the EMF decarbonization scenarios; ii) a moderate increase of natural gas ...

    2013| Franziska Holz, Philipp M. Richter, Ruud Egging
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1268 / 2013

    Market Driven Power Plant Investment Perspectives in Europe: Climate Policy and Technology Scenarios until 2050 in the Model EMELIE-ESY

    EMELIE-ESY is a partial equilibrium model with focus on electricity markets. Private investors optimize their generation capacity investment and dispatch over the horizon 2010 to 2050. In the framework of the Energy Modeling Forum 28, we investigate how climate policy regimes affect market developments under different technology availabilities and climate policies on the European power markets. The ...

    2013| Andreas Schröder, Thure Traber, Claudia Kemfert
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1263 / 2013

    Chinese Renewable Energy Technology Exports: The Role of Policy, Innovation and Markets

    Chinese companies have become major technology producers, with the largest share of their output exported. This paper examines the development of solar PV and wind energy technology component (WETC) exports from China and the competitive position of the country`s renewable energy industry. We also describe the government's renewable energy policy and its success in renewable electricity generation ...

    2013| Jing Cao, Felix Groba
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1261 / 2012

    Development Scenarios for the North and Baltic Sea Grid: A Welfare Economic Analysis

    The North and Baltic Sea Grid is one of the largest pan-European infrastructure projects raising high hopes regarding the potential of harnessing large amounts of renewable electricity, but also concerns about the implementation in largely nationally dominated regulatory regimes. The paper develops three idealtype development scenarios and quantifies the technical-economic effects: i) the Status quo ...

    2012| Jonas Egerer, Friedrich Kunz, Christian von Hirschhausen
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1258 / 2012

    Have State Renewable Portfolio Standards Really Worked? Synthesizing Past Policy Assessments

    Renewable portfolio standards (RPS) are the most popular U.S. state-level policies for promoting deployment of renewable electricity (RES-E). While several econometric studies have estimated the effect of RPS on in-state RES-E deployment, results are contradictory. We reconcile these studies and move toward a definitive answer to the question of RPS effectiveness. We conduct an analysis using time ...

    2012| Gireesh Shrimali, Steffen Jenner, Felix Groba, Gabriel Chan, Joe Indvik
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1253 / 2012

    Endogenous Investment Decisions in Natural Gas Equilibrium Models with Logarithmic Cost Functions

    The liberalisation of the natural gas markets and the importance of natural gas as a transition fuel to a low-carbon economy have led to the development of several large-scale equilibrium models in the last decade. These models combine long-term market equilibria and investments in infrastructure while accounting for market power by certain suppliers. They are widely used to simulate market outcomes ...

    2012| Daniel Huppmann
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1250 / 2012

    Integrated Electricity Generation Expansion and Transmission Capacity Planning: An Application to the Central European Region

    This article presents an integrated electricity dispatch and load flow model with endogenous electricity generation capacity expansion. The target is to quantify generation capacity requirements for 2030 and where within Central Europe it shall be ideally placed when taking into account the projected grid structure. We explicitly model the interdependence between grid operation and power plant placing ...

    2012| Andreas Schröder, Maximilian Bracke
  • DIW Discussion Papers 1225 / 2012

    The Credibility of Monetary Policy Announcements: Empirical Evidence for OECD Countries since the 1960s

    Monetary policy rules have been considered as fundamental protection against inflation. However, empirical evidence for a correlation between rules and inflation is relatively weak. In this paper, we first discuss likely causes for this weak link and present the argument that monetary commitment is not credible in itself. It can grant price stability best if it is backed by an adequate assignment of ...

    2012| Ansgar Belke, Andreas Freytag, Jonas Keil, Friedrich Schneider
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