Let The Market Decide? A History of Government Intervention in Energy
52 Minuten
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vor 4 Jahren
In this episode, Dr. Keefer and economist Edgardo Sepulveda cover
a lot of ground:
• Edgardo’s new website that includes the electricity profiles of
24 OECD countries and whether, using which tech and at what price
they have lowered emissions over the last 60 years is at
(https://edecarb.org/)
• Edgardo noted the increasing recognition by many expert
economists that "restructured" energy-only generation markets
probably cannot facilitate the massive, long-term investment
necessary for electrification, especially with the entry of
(subsidized) renewables, is summarized here:
(https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1389298276827021319.html)
• Chris and Edgardo discussed the most recent global electricity
investment data from the IEA, including that for 2020’s global
$800 billion investment (including $300 billion of transmission
and distribution), renewables made up 45% and nuclear only 5%.
Nevertheless, the global total is less than half estimated ($2.3
trillion) amount for net zero by 2050
(https://www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-investment-2021)
• Nevertheless, Edgardo’s preliminary statistical analysis
suggests that renewables entry is associated with electricity
price increases. One example is Germany’s residential renewables
surcharge, which totaled 25.6 billion in 2018
(https://www.iea.org/reports/germany-2020), which households
appear to support, while in Ontario voters revolted, booting out
the political party that introduced the GEA, with the incoming
Government revoked the legislation and started subsidizing
electricity prices, including $3.1 billion/year just for
renewables
https://www.ontario.ca/page/expenditure-estimates-ministry-energy-northern-development-and-mines-2021-22#section-6
• Speaking of investment, Edgardo and Chris noted that Bruce had
just announce the over-subscription of what is billed as the
world’s first “Green” nuclear bond for CAD$500 million. The
“Second Party Opinion” (SPO) was provided by Cicero, which out of
their three shades of green, gave it a “medium green” rather than
a “dark green” set aside for wind and solar and the like, because
of residual risks on proliferation, waste and radiation
accidents:
https://www.brucepower.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Second-Opinion-Bruce-Power-16July2021final.pdf
• Edgardo noted that in his most recent blog looking at the
cost-benefit of refurbishing Pickering Nuclear Generation Station
(PNGS) versus going forward with the IESO replacement scenario
(https://www.ieso.ca/en/Learn/Ontario-Supply-Mix/Natural-Gas-Phase-Out-Study),
the refurbishment scenario is a better financial and cost
abatement cost option (https://edecarb.org/analysis/ontario-ix)
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