Assessing the impact of renewable energy policies on decarbonization in developing countries
Material type: TextSeries: Policy research working paper 10329Publication details: Washington, DC World Bank 2023Description: 72pSubject(s): Online resources: Summary: This study offers the first consistent attempt to identify how energy sector decarbonisation policies have affected the energy mix over the past four decades across more than 100 developing countries. It applies systematic regression analysis to five energy sector decarbonisation outcomes and more than 75 policy instruments aggregated into seven policy packages. Combining instrumental variables with country interactions and country and time fixed effects in regional panels helps address potential endogeneity issues. Only a handful of energy policy packages significantly affect the decarbonisation of developing countries’ energy mix, and the packages more often achieve a negligible or opposite result than intended three years after implementation. Policies that address counterparty risk have the highest immediate effects. Effects of renewable policies on various decarbonisation outcomes improve slightly five and seven years after their implementation.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Books | TERI Delhi | Electronic books | Available | EB3364 |
This study offers the first consistent attempt to identify how energy sector decarbonisation policies have affected the energy mix over the past four decades across more than 100 developing countries. It applies systematic regression analysis to five energy sector decarbonisation outcomes and more than 75 policy instruments aggregated into seven policy packages. Combining instrumental variables with country interactions and country and time fixed effects in regional panels helps address potential endogeneity issues. Only a handful of energy policy packages significantly affect the decarbonisation of developing countries’ energy mix, and the packages more often achieve a negligible or opposite result than intended three years after implementation. Policies that address counterparty risk have the highest immediate effects. Effects of renewable policies on various decarbonisation outcomes improve slightly five and seven years after their implementation.
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