Title of article
Development of a global computable general equilibrium model coupled with detailed energy end-use technology
Author/Authors
Fujimori، نويسنده , , Shinichiro and Masui، نويسنده , , Toshihiko and Matsuoka، نويسنده , , Yuzuru، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
11
From page
296
To page
306
Abstract
A global computable general equilibrium (CGE) model integrating detailed energy end-use technologies is developed in this paper. The paper (1) presents how energy end-use technologies are treated within the model and (2) analyzes the characteristics of the model’s behavior. Energy service demand and end-use technologies are explicitly considered, and the share of technologies is determined by a discrete probabilistic function, namely a Logit function, to meet the energy service demand. Coupling with detailed technology information enables the CGE model to have more realistic representation in the energy consumption. The proposed model in this paper is compared with the aggregated traditional model under the same assumptions in scenarios with and without mitigation roughly consistent with the two degree climate mitigation target. Although the results of aggregated energy supply and greenhouse gas emissions are similar, there are three main differences between the aggregated and the detailed technologies models. First, GDP losses in mitigation scenarios are lower in the detailed technology model (2.8% in 2050) as compared with the aggregated model (3.2%). Second, price elasticity and autonomous energy efficiency improvement are heterogeneous across regions and sectors in the detailed technology model, whereas the traditional aggregated model generally utilizes a single value for each of these variables. Third, the magnitude of emissions reduction and factors (energy intensity and carbon factor reduction) related to climate mitigation also varies among sectors in the detailed technology model. The household sector in the detailed technology model has a relatively higher reduction for both energy intensity and the carbon factor.
Keywords
Energy end-use technologies , Integrated assessment model , Computable General Equilibrium Model , Hybrid model
Journal title
Applied Energy
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Applied Energy
Record number
1608188
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