The Electric Ceiling: Limits and Costs of Full Electrification

Electrification is a centerpiece of global decarbonization efforts. Yet there are reasons to be skeptical of the inevitability, or at least the optimal pace, of the transition. We discuss several under-appreciated costs of full, or even deep, electrification. Consumer preferences can operate in favo...

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Veröffentlicht in:NBER Working Paper Series 2022-10
Hauptverfasser: Bushnell, James B, Rapson, David S
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description Electrification is a centerpiece of global decarbonization efforts. Yet there are reasons to be skeptical of the inevitability, or at least the optimal pace, of the transition. We discuss several under-appreciated costs of full, or even deep, electrification. Consumer preferences can operate in favor of and in opposition to electrification goals; and electrification is likely to encounter physical and economic obstacles when it reaches some as-yet-unknown level. While we readily acknowledge the external benefits of decarbonization, we also explore several under-appreciated external costs. The credibility and eventual success of decarbonization efforts is enhanced by foreseeing and ideally avoiding predictable but non-obvious costs of promising abatement pathways. Thus, even with all of its promise, the degree of electrification may ultimately reach a limit.
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subjects Climate change
Consumers
Costs
Economic theory
Electric vehicles
Electricity
Emissions
Environment and Energy Economics
Fossil fuels
Greenhouse gases
Market shares
Natural gas
Technology
Technology adoption
title The Electric Ceiling: Limits and Costs of Full Electrification
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