![]() | |||
Is there a silver bullet? – A comparative assessment of twenty policy instruments applied worldwide for enhancing energy efficiency in buildingsSonja Koeppel and Diana Ürge-Vorsatz , Department of Environmental Sciences and Policy, Central European University, Hungary Keywordsbuildings, energy efficiency, policy instruments, effectiveness, efficiency, cost-effectiveness AbstractWhile the commercial and domestic building sectors account for 33 % of all energy-related CO2 emissions worldwide, approximately 30 % of this energy consumption can be saved economically. However, numerous barriers such as hidden costs and benefits, distorted energy pricing, imperfect information, market failures and misplaced incentives prevent the realization of these energy saving potentials. For this reason, countries apply a variety of policy instruments such as building codes, energy efficiency obligations, subsidies and information campaigns. Since these instruments differ considerably in terms of their effects and costs, a research project conducted under the framework of the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has reviewed more than 60 ex-post policy evaluation reports for the 20 most commonly used policy instruments from app. 30 countries worldwide. The paper presents the results of this exercise regarding the environmental effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of these instruments, as well as identifies special conditions for their success. While most policy instruments achieved significant energy savings, appliance standards, building codes, tax exemptions and labelling were revealed as most effective policy instruments. Other instruments such as Kyoto Protocol flexible mechanisms or taxation have been less successful in the building sector. Several policy instruments achieved energy savings at negative costs for society; most cost-effective in our sample were appliance standards, demand-side management programs and mandatory labelling. Since no single policy instrument can capture the entire potential for energy-efficiency, buildings require a diverse portfolio of policy instruments for effective energy use reductions and for taking advantage of synergistic effects. PaperDownload this paper as pdf: 2.349_Koeppel.indd.pdf Panels of the eceee 2007 Summer StudyPanel 1: The foundations of a future energy policy. Longer term strategies Panel 2: Strategies and general policies Panel 3: Local and regional activities Panel 4: Monitoring and evaluation Panel 5: Energy efficient buildings Panel 6: Products and appliances Panel 7: Making industries more energy efficient | 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 |