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Predicting structural changes of the energy sector in an input–output framework

Lorenz Wimmer, Jan Kluge, Hannes Zenz, Christian Kimmich

2022Energy12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The share of renewable energies has to increase significantly in the ongoing energy transition. Such a shift in production technology is expected to have noticeable effects on the energy sector’s input structure that is required for its output. This study examines how changes in a country’s energy mix affect its energy sector’s input coefficients within an input–output framework, using Austria’s renewable expansion act as a case study. Predicting input coefficients can be time-consuming and often relies on trends in past data. Our empirical approach is based on a fractional econometric model using panel data on the energy mix and input structures of energy sectors for 26 European countries, and can be efficiently and readily applied to the 26 countries covered in the model. We illustrate the prediction of input coefficients for Austria’s energy sector in 2030. We find that input shares from the energy sector to itself would remain high, while mining inputs would decrease. Our model also predicts that increasing the share of renewable energy sources comes with a significant decrease in the share of labor inputs, mainly because operating renewable energy technologies requires less labor than operating non-renewable ones. The presented method allows to assess renewable energy policy plans to anticipate the effects of structural changes in national energy sectors.

Topics & Concepts

Renewable energyPanel dataEconometricsEnergy mixEconomicsProduction (economics)Energy sectorEconometric modelInput–output modelEnvironmental economicsVariable renewable energyEnergy (signal processing)Energy policyNatural resource economicsMicroeconomicsMacroeconomicsElectricity generationEngineeringEnergy storageStatisticsMathematicsElectrical engineeringQuantum mechanicsPhysicsPower (physics)Environmental Impact and SustainabilityClimate Change Policy and EconomicsEnergy, Environment, Economic Growth