Title of article
Vested interests, energy efficiency and renewables in Japan
Author/Authors
Espen Moe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
14
From page
260
To page
273
Abstract
This paper sets out to analyze Japanese renewable energy policy. A default expectation is that countries with unsolved energy problems will have more ambitious renewable energy policies (including energy efficiency). The Japanese case only partially conforms. The theoretical proposition made here is that it is essential to analyze a countryʹs vested interest structure before we can make any inferences about its renewable energy policies. The vested interest perspective – derived from a combination of Joseph Schumpeter and Mancur Olson, and focusing on structural economic change – both complements and rivals the default expectation. Structural economic change, like the rise of renewables, typically leads to resistance from the existing vested interest structure, which feels that it stands to lose from the rise of new industries. The position of a new industry vis-à-vis the existing vested interest structure is thus crucial. In the Japanese case, the solar industry has been far more on the inside of this structure than wind. This has made it far harder for the wind industry to rise than for solar. Energy efficiency is however the ultimate insider approach to energy policy, not challenging any vested interest structures, and has been the favored approach for over three decades.
Keywords
Renewable energy policy , Japan , Vested interest structures
Journal title
Energy Policy
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Energy Policy
Record number
973574
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