Technology Diffusion in Energy-Economy Models: The Case of Danish Vintage Models
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Energy Journal
- Vol. 21 (1) , 43-72
- https://doi.org/10.5547/issn0195-6574-ej-vol21-no1-2
Abstract
Technological progress is an important issue in long-term energy demand projections and in environmental analyses. Different assumptions on technological progress and diffusion of new technologies are among the reasons for diverging results obtained using bottom-up and top-down models for analysing the costs of greenhouse gas mitigation. This paper examines the effect on aggregate energy efficiency of using technological vintage models to describe technology diffusion. The focus is on short- to medium-term issues. Three different models of Danish energy supply and demand are used to illustrate the consequences of the vintage modelling approach. The fluctuating utilisation rates for power capacity in Denmark are found to have a significant impact on average fuel efficiencies. Diffusion of electric appliances is linked to economic activity and saturation levels for each appliance. In the sector of residential heat demand, fuel price increases are found to accelerate diffusion by increasing replacement rates for heating equipment.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- EditorialEnergy Economics, 1998
- Sensitivity of climate change mitigation estimates to assumptions about technical changeEnergy Economics, 1998
- Integrating the bottom-up and top-down approach to energy–economy modelling: the case of DenmarkEnergy Economics, 1998
- Research Frontiers in the Economics of Climate ChangeEnvironmental and Resource Economics, 1998
- Economic growth, international competitiveness and environmental protection: R & D and innovation strategies with the WARM modelEnergy Economics, 1997
- Are environmental taxes a free lunch? Issues in modelling the macroeconomic effects of carbon taxesEnergy Economics, 1997
- Endogenous technical progress induced by CO2 reduction policies: Simulation results for AustriaEnvironmental and Resource Economics, 1995
- Modelling energy technologies in a competitive marketEnergy Economics, 1993
- Measuring the Energy Efficiency and Productivity Impacts of Embodied Technical ChangeThe Energy Journal, 1993
- Productivity Trends and the Cost of Reducing CO2 Emissions*The Energy Journal, 1991