Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1016/j.biombioe.2015.03.029
Title (Primary) Handling uncertainty in bioenergy policy design – a case study analysis of UK and German bioelectricity policy instruments
Author Purkus, A.; Röder, M.; Gawel, E.; Thrän, D.; Thornley, P.
Source Titel Biomass & Bioenergy
Year 2015
Department OEKON; BIOENERGIE
Volume 79
Page From 64
Page To 79
Language englisch
Keywords Bioenergy policy; Renewable energy policy; Instruments; Electricity sector; Uncertainty; New institutional economics
UFZ wide themes RU6;
Abstract In designing policies to promote bioenergy, policy makers face challenges concerning uncertainties about the sustainability of bioenergy pathways (including greenhouse gas balances), technology and resource costs, or future energy market framework conditions. New information becomes available with time, but policy adjustments can involve high levels of adaptation costs. To enable an effective steering of technology choices and innovation, policies have to strike a balance between creating a consistent institutional framework, which establishes planning security for investors, and sufficient flexibility to adapt to new information. This paper examines implications of economic theory for handling cost and benefit uncertainty in bioelectricity policy design, focussing on choices between price and quantity instruments, technology differentiation, and policy adjustment. Findings are applied to two case studies, the UK's Renewables Obligation and the German feed-in tariff/feed-in premium scheme. Case study results show the trade-offs that are involved in instrument choice and design – depending on political priorities and a country's specific context, different options can prove more adequate. Combining market-based remuneration with sustainability criteria results in strong incentives for bioenergy producers to search for low-cost solutions; whereas cost-based price instruments with centrally steered technology and feedstock choices offer higher planning security for investors and more direct control for policy makers over what pathways are implemented. Independent of the choice of instrument type and technology differentiation mechanism, findings emphasise the importance of a careful policy design, which determines the exact balance between performance criteria such as cost control, incentive intensity, planning security and adaptive efficiency.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=15188
Purkus, A., Röder, M., Gawel, E., Thrän, D., Thornley, P. (2015):
Handling uncertainty in bioenergy policy design – a case study analysis of UK and German bioelectricity policy instruments
Biomass Bioenerg. 79 , 64 - 79 10.1016/j.biombioe.2015.03.029