Energy and Economic Effects of Utility Financial Incentive Programs: The BPA Residential Weatherization Program
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Energy Journal
- Vol. 8 (2) , 97-110
- https://doi.org/10.5547/issn0195-6574-ej-vol8-no2-7
Abstract
Many electric utilities offer their residential customers substantial financial incentives (low-interest loans or rebates) to install energy-efficient equipment and building retrofit measures (Stern, Berry, and Hirst 1985). For example, the Tennessee Valley Authority gave zero-interest loans to almost 500,000 households between 1977 and 1985; these loans average almost $1000 each for installation of retrofit measures (TVA 1985). Pacific Gas and Electric Company spent almost $100 million on administrative and debt service costs for its residential retrofit loan program, in which about 500,000 households participated (California PLC 1984).This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Residential conservation incentivesEnergy Policy, 1985
- Estimating energy savings due to conservation programmesEnergy Economics, 1985
- The Total and Appliance-Specific Conditional Demand for Electricity in the Household SectorThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1980