Working Paper

Subsidies for Renewable Energies in the Presence of Learning Effects and Market Power

Authors

  • Reichenbach
  • J.
  • Requate
  • T.
Publication Date

We study the impact of learning by doing, learning spill-overs, and imperfect competition in a model with two types of electricity producers, an oligopolistic sector of polluting fossil-fuel utilities and a competitive fringe of non-polluting generators of electricity from renewable energy sources (RES-E). Furthermore we consider an upstream industry of RES-E equipment producers engaged in learning by doing. We show that a first-best policy requires two instruments, a tax in the fossil-fuel sector and an output subsidy for RES-E equipment producers. We then study second-best-optimal feed-in tariffs that are paid to the generators of RES-E. By means of simulations we calculate the welfare loss of a second-best-optimal feed-in-tariff policy and analyze how market structure impacts on second-best-optimal feed-in tariffs.

Info

JEL Classification
Q42, L13, O38

Key Words

  • environmental subsidies
  • Feed-in tariffs
  • learning by doing
  • market structure
  • spill-overs

Related Topics