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Germany's Nuclear Phase-out: Sensitivities and Impacts on Electricity Prices and C[O.sub.2] Emissions
Following the nuclear meltdown in Fukushima Daiichi, in summer 2011 the German parliament decided to phase-out nuclear power by 2022. When this decision was taken, a number of model-based analyses investigated the influence this decision would have on electricity prices and C[O.sub.2] emissions. The...
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Published in: | Economics of energy & environmental policy 2014-03, Vol.3 (1), p.89 |
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creator | Knopf, Brigitte Pahle, Michael Kondziella, Hendrik Joas, Fabian Edenhofer, Ottmar Bruckner, Thomas |
description | Following the nuclear meltdown in Fukushima Daiichi, in summer 2011 the German parliament decided to phase-out nuclear power by 2022. When this decision was taken, a number of model-based analyses investigated the influence this decision would have on electricity prices and C[O.sub.2] emissions. They concluded that C[O.sub.2] emissions would be kept at levels that are in line with national reduction targets but that the phase-out would result in an increase in wholesale electricity prices. We show by means of a sensitivity analysis that results crucially hinge on some fundamental model assumptions. These particularly include the development of fossil fuel and C[O.sub.2] prices, which have a much larger influence on the electricity price than the nuclear phase-out itself. Since the decision of the nuclear phase-out, C[O.sub.2] prices have decreased and deployment of renewables increased ever since. This partly counteracts the negative effect of the nuclear phase-out on electricity prices, but on the other hand challenges the mitigation of C[O.sub.2] emissions and security of supply. This underlines the importance of sensitivity analyses and suggests that policy-makers need to consider scenarios that analyze the whole range of possible future developments. Keywords: Nuclear policy, Climate protection, Renewable energy, Electricity market modeling, Energiewende |
doi_str_mv | 10.5547/2160-5890.3.1.bkno |
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When this decision was taken, a number of model-based analyses investigated the influence this decision would have on electricity prices and C[O.sub.2] emissions. They concluded that C[O.sub.2] emissions would be kept at levels that are in line with national reduction targets but that the phase-out would result in an increase in wholesale electricity prices. We show by means of a sensitivity analysis that results crucially hinge on some fundamental model assumptions. These particularly include the development of fossil fuel and C[O.sub.2] prices, which have a much larger influence on the electricity price than the nuclear phase-out itself. Since the decision of the nuclear phase-out, C[O.sub.2] prices have decreased and deployment of renewables increased ever since. This partly counteracts the negative effect of the nuclear phase-out on electricity prices, but on the other hand challenges the mitigation of C[O.sub.2] emissions and security of supply. This underlines the importance of sensitivity analyses and suggests that policy-makers need to consider scenarios that analyze the whole range of possible future developments. 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This underlines the importance of sensitivity analyses and suggests that policy-makers need to consider scenarios that analyze the whole range of possible future developments. 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source | EBSCOhost Econlit with Full Text; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; ABI/INFORM Global |
subjects | Alternative energy sources Electric power Emissions (Pollution) Laws, regulations and rules Nuclear energy Prices and rates |
title | Germany's Nuclear Phase-out: Sensitivities and Impacts on Electricity Prices and C[O.sub.2] Emissions |
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