DocumentCode :
1433968
Title :
Renewable energy alternatives for developed countries
Author :
Hammons, Thomas James ; Boyer, Jeannette C. ; Conners, Stephen R. ; Davies, Michael ; Ellis, Mark ; Fraser, Marion ; Holt, Edward A. ; Markard, Jochen
Author_Institution :
Glasgow Univ., UK
Volume :
15
Issue :
4
fYear :
2000
fDate :
12/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
481
Lastpage :
493
Abstract :
This paper examines renewable energy alternatives in developed countries: environmental mechanisms; future energy alternatives; green electricity marketing and its potential; pricing; and limitations on the eve of open access. It discusses objectives in electricity restructuring; the role of resources planning in forming long range energy environmental policies; feasibility of electricity trading mechanisms; green marketing in the United States and Australia; green energy offers in Canada; and the results of green pricing programs in Europe and the United States. The role of existing and planned mechanisms to achieve environmental benefits in restructured electricity markets are reviewed. Technological and institutional challenges of achieving real, long-term reductions in carbon dioxide and other emissions from the electric sector are discussed. Factors associated with infrastructure turnover together with technology development and deployment are addressed, where attention is given to policies which promote highly integrated and coordinated reductions in emissions. The paper then focuses on the green pool and trends in power marketing where status of competitive markets, green pricing programs for franchise customers, green power products for contestable customers, credibility of green power marketing, and public policy for renewable energy technologies in competitive markets are discussed. It then reviews green energy in Ontario on the eve of open access, and shows there is a market for green energy if customers have a choice
Keywords :
costing; electricity supply industry; environmental factors; power system economics; renewable energy sources; Australia; Canada; Europe; Ontario; United States; carbon dioxide; competitive markets; contestable customers; developed countries; electric sector; electricity restructuring; electricity trading mechanisms; environmental benefits; environmental mechanisms; franchise customers; future energy alternatives; green electricity marketing; green energy offers; green marketing; green power marketing; institutional challenges; long range energy environmental policies; long-term reductions; open access; power marketing; pricing; public policy; renewable energy alternatives; resources planning; technological challenges; Australia; Carbon dioxide; Electricity supply industry; Europe; Paper technology; Power generation economics; Power markets; Pricing; Public policy; Renewable energy resources;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Energy Conversion, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-8969
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/60.900511
Filename :
900511
Link To Document :
بازگشت