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Quantifying the Effect of the Principal-Agent Problem on U.S. Residential Energy UseScott Murtishaw, California Public Utilities Commission KeywordsAbstractQuantifying the amount of energy associated with market failures helps to demonstrate the significance of energy efficiency policies beyond price signals. In this report we investigate the magnitude of the principal-agent (PA) problem affecting refrigeration, water heating, space heating, and lighting in the U.S. residential sector. We develop an approach for classifying households into a PA matrix for each end use that allocates end-use equipment into four different PA classifications based on household characteristics. End use energy values differentiated by housing unit type were used to estimate the total energy use associated with the PA problem. We find that the 2003 associated site energy use from these four end uses affected by the PA problem totaled over 3,400 trillion Btu, equal to 35% of the site energy consumed by the US residential sector. In addition, we also estimated an upper bound on annual hypothetical energy savings of 4.8 trillion Btu of site energy if there had been no PA problems affecting refrigerators and water heaters sold in 2003. This savings potential is considerably lower than it would have been in the absence of minimum energy performance standards. Policies and programs that would be effective differ among the four different classes of the PA problem. PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 9_59.pdf Panels of the 2008 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in BuildingsResidential Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends Residential Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation Commercial Buildings: Technologies, Design, Performance Analysis, and Building Industry Trends Commercial Buildings: Program Design, Implementation, and Evaluation Utility Regulation, Strategies, and Policies Market Transformation: Taking Efficiency Mainstream Human and Social Dimensions of Energy Use: Trends and their Implications Energy and Environmental Policy: Planning for Greater Impacts Strategies for Appliances, Lighting, Electronics, and Miscellaneous End–Uses Visions of the Future: Big New Ideas for Energy Efficiency Sustainable Communities: Systems Integration at the Community Scale | CalendarGreen ICT for growth and sustainability? Linking science and policy 03 – 08 Jun 201238th IEEE Photovoltaic Specialist Conference 04 Jun 2012Call for papers MILEN 2012 08 Jun 2012Call for Abstracts - International workshop on energy efficiency for a more sustainable world 12 – 14 Jun 2012IEPEC - International Energy Program Evaluation Conference 15 Jun 2012Call for papers - IIASA Conference 2012. Worlds within reach: from science to policy 20 Jun 2012Energy futures and civil society in the EU - building a low carbon alliance |