Counting beans or moving mountains - the predicament of energy efficiency policy
(2011) 10th eceee summer study - energy efficiency first: the foundation of a low-carbon society- Abstract
- Many studies identify energy efficiency as the most important and least costly option for reducing CO2-emissions while at the same time contributing to other policy objectives. The main challenge seems to be how to design, implement and evaluate policy to ensure that these opportunities are captured and policy perceived as legitimate. There is often a gap between rhetoric or broadly stated objectives in policy development and the narrow focus on verifying additional savings in evaluation. Ancillary benefits and costs are often overlooked and the primary criteria for impact evaluations are whether policies deliver additional and cost-effective savings. In practice, however, such impact evaluations are fraught with fundamental methodological... (More)
- Many studies identify energy efficiency as the most important and least costly option for reducing CO2-emissions while at the same time contributing to other policy objectives. The main challenge seems to be how to design, implement and evaluate policy to ensure that these opportunities are captured and policy perceived as legitimate. There is often a gap between rhetoric or broadly stated objectives in policy development and the narrow focus on verifying additional savings in evaluation. Ancillary benefits and costs are often overlooked and the primary criteria for impact evaluations are whether policies deliver additional and cost-effective savings. In practice, however, such impact evaluations are fraught with fundamental methodological difficulties and uncertainty. Double counting, spill-over, free rider and rebound effects are real and recognised factors that complicate evaluation. This has been experienced in the development of a harmonised calculation model as stipulated by the Energy Services Directive where a fair amount of attention has been given to such factors. In the mean time the more challenging, yet non-binding, 20 percent target of the EU Energy Efficiency Action Plan is stressing a need for new policy implementation. The question then becomes: how can the legitimate demands for policy to deliver additional savings be realistically addressed in practice and balanced against broad and long-term objectives? To answer this question, we provide an overview and assessment of the issues, opportunities, and correction factors for energy efficiency policy design and evaluation. We challenge the preoccupation with verifying countable savings and argue that it can be counterproductive. What counts are policy frameworks that can unleash and accelerate energy efficiency across all sectors in order to reach levels that are commensurate with broader energy and climate policy goals. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/2205794
- author
- Nilsson, Lars J LU ; Stenqvist, Christian LU ; Takeuchi Waldegren, Linn LU and Söderholm, Patrik
- organization
- publishing date
- 2011
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- spillover, free riders, policy instruments, rebound effects, monitoring, verification, additionality, ancillary effects
- conference name
- 10th eceee summer study - energy efficiency first: the foundation of a low-carbon society
- conference location
- France
- conference dates
- 2011-06-06
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- c2032aef-e167-4219-9b9f-4afdf4413717 (old id 2205794)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 13:37:26
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:15:12
@misc{c2032aef-e167-4219-9b9f-4afdf4413717, abstract = {{Many studies identify energy efficiency as the most important and least costly option for reducing CO2-emissions while at the same time contributing to other policy objectives. The main challenge seems to be how to design, implement and evaluate policy to ensure that these opportunities are captured and policy perceived as legitimate. There is often a gap between rhetoric or broadly stated objectives in policy development and the narrow focus on verifying additional savings in evaluation. Ancillary benefits and costs are often overlooked and the primary criteria for impact evaluations are whether policies deliver additional and cost-effective savings. In practice, however, such impact evaluations are fraught with fundamental methodological difficulties and uncertainty. Double counting, spill-over, free rider and rebound effects are real and recognised factors that complicate evaluation. This has been experienced in the development of a harmonised calculation model as stipulated by the Energy Services Directive where a fair amount of attention has been given to such factors. In the mean time the more challenging, yet non-binding, 20 percent target of the EU Energy Efficiency Action Plan is stressing a need for new policy implementation. The question then becomes: how can the legitimate demands for policy to deliver additional savings be realistically addressed in practice and balanced against broad and long-term objectives? To answer this question, we provide an overview and assessment of the issues, opportunities, and correction factors for energy efficiency policy design and evaluation. We challenge the preoccupation with verifying countable savings and argue that it can be counterproductive. What counts are policy frameworks that can unleash and accelerate energy efficiency across all sectors in order to reach levels that are commensurate with broader energy and climate policy goals.}}, author = {{Nilsson, Lars J and Stenqvist, Christian and Takeuchi Waldegren, Linn and Söderholm, Patrik}}, keywords = {{spillover; free riders; policy instruments; rebound effects; monitoring; verification; additionality; ancillary effects}}, language = {{eng}}, title = {{Counting beans or moving mountains - the predicament of energy efficiency policy}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/6165644/2205837.pdf}}, year = {{2011}}, }