Policy Conclusions Wolfgang Eichhammer, Fraunhofer ISI BRISKEE. Behavioural response to investment risks in energy efficiency

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Final BRISKEE Conference and eceee annual policy seminar Wednesday, 29 November 2017, Brussels Policy Conclusions Wolfgang Eichhammer, Fraunhofer ISI BRISKEE Behavioural response to investment risks in energy efficiency This project has received funding from the European Union s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 649875. This presentation only reflects the authors' views and EASME is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.

The discount rate dispute This boils down to the question in how far discount rates used to evaluate FU-TURE policies shall reflect PRESENT individual decision making processes with rather imperfect mechanisms to include risk assessment into the discount rates. PRIMES 2013/EC PRIMES integrates (perceived or existing) risks into the discount rates to a large degree, our scenario approach essentially uses usual capital costs, considering that there are instruments to mitigate the risks and the risk perception Fraunhofer ISI

Policy Consequences of Discount Rates EU COM: Communication on Energy Efficiency July 2014

CHEETAH Split incentives Transaction costs Lack of information Lack of capital Technological risk Financial risk Directed policy interventions directly addressing external barriers Implicit Discount Rate BRISKEE Time preferences Risk preferecnes Pro-environmental preferences Reactive policy interventions accounting for heterogeneity in Time preferences, risk preferences,..

Results Micro Analysis energy efficiency technology adoption decisions - implications for policy (1)

Results Micro Analysis energy efficiency technology adoption decisions - implications for policy (2)

Scenarios for appliances in FORECAST- Residential Scenario name Current-policy scenario Intensified-measures scenario New actor-related measures scenario Explanation All Ecodesign and Labelling measures that are adopted are explicitly modeled for refrigerators, washing machines, freezers, dryers, dishwashers, stoves and lighting and are modelled as an average over technologies for televisions, settop boxes, laptops, desktop computers, computer screens, modems/wifi-routers and air conditioning. Includes all measures implemented in the current-policy scenario and assumes that minimum standards are intensified and the label is rescaled. The rescaling of the energy label is assumed to increase its effectiveness affecting both consumers and suppliers so that more efficient appliances become available earlier. New instruments affecting actors are implemented in the model (and existing actor-relevant policies increased) taking into account findings from survey.

Comparison of actor-specific modelling and assumptions in the residential sector (1) Comparison of final energy for the residential sector (sum of buildings and appliances) in the BRISKEE scenarios

Relative GDP and FTE employment development in D2 and D3 scenarios with respect to the currentpolicy scenario

Conclusions Micro-Level BRISKEE has shown on an empirical basis which factors impact in different manner on the IDR, in particular in the components related to (time and risk) preferences. We found smaller differences for the following attributes: Gender, age, education, time preferences. Larger differences occurred between different income groups (especially low income households) and between participants with different environmental identity (elicited in the survey on a four-item scale). Thus the results from the micro-level provide indications, how reactive policies could be designed to take into account the characteristics of different groups, e.g lowincome households.

Conclusions Meso-Level On the meso-level, the observations suggest that taking into account specific factors impacting on the IDR leads to the realization of additional economic energy saving potentials in the New Actor-Related Scenario NAMS. Compared to the Intensified Measures Scenario IMS, this present a further improvement both with respect to energy efficiency and the penetration of renewable options in the building sector. In combination the difference would be largest when expressed in avoided CO2 emissions. In these results it has to be taken into account that only certain parts of the findings from the survey were implemented in the NAMS (low-income agents) and that quite some of the difference in impacts arises after 2030.

Conclusions Macro-Level At the macro-level structural shifts are at first observable which - through compensating impulses that reduce positive impacts on economic growth and employment - first lead to relatively modest increases in the impacts when moving on to the New Actorrelated Measure Scenario. It is important to look at the long-term dynamic impacts that would arise after investments are paid off. Future research: focusing on the question whether the survey findings have implications for example for the compensating impulses, i.e. the investment behavior.

CHEETAH Split incentives Transaction costs Lack of information Lack of capital Technological risk Financial risk Directed policy interventions directly addressing external barriers Implicit Discount Rate BRISKEE Time preferences Risk preferecnes Pro-environmental preferences Reactive policy interventions accounting for heterogeneity in Time preferences, risk preferences,..

For more information please visit our website www.briskee-cheetah.eu/briskee/ Behavioural response to investment risks in energy efficiency Seite 14