Quantifying the importance of feed-in tariffs to wind power development in China

被引:0
|
作者
Runmin Zhou
Changgui Dong
Jiaying Li
机构
[1] Renmin University of China,School of Public Administration and Policy
[2] Renmin University of China,National Academy of Development and Strategy
[3] City University of Hong Kong,Department of Public and International Affairs
关键词
Wind power industry; Feed-in tariffs; Technological change; Wind curtailment; Policy evaluation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Governments worldwide often provide subsidies to renewable energy for reasons such as climate change mitigation and environmental pollution reduction. However, the importance of such subsides is not well understood and much debated. In this study, 109 monthly observations of the installed wind power capacity at the provincial level were used to assess the most important wind power subsidy policy in China—feed-in tariffs, while controlling for other confounding factors, such as technological change, local energy mix, and wind curtailment. The long panel regression results indicate that with other factors unchanged, an increase of 0.1 yuan/kWh in feed-in tariffs added 7.4–9.6 GW of wind capacity to China’s national wind power market annually, higher than most of the estimates in the literature, but more consistent with the fast wind capacity development in China. Without the FIT subsidy, China’s current wind power market size would likely be approximately 80% smaller. Our findings can be used to predict the impact of future cost reduction of wind technologies, and examine the interconnected relationships between wind capacity development, subsidy burden, and wind curtailment issues.
引用
收藏
页码:37791 / 37804
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Quantifying the importance of feed-in tariffs to wind power development in China
    Zhou, Runmin
    Dong, Changgui
    Li, Jiaying
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2023, 30 (13) : 37791 - 37804
  • [2] Assessing feed-in tariffs on wind power installation and industry development in Taiwan
    Hsu, Chiung-Wen
    Ho, Shu-Ping
    [J]. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2016, 58 : 548 - 557
  • [3] Feed-In Tariff for Onshore Wind Power in China
    Yuan, Jiahai
    Na, Chunning
    Xu, Yan
    Zhao, Changhong
    [J]. EMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE, 2016, 52 (06) : 1427 - 1437
  • [4] Wind power pricing: From feed-in tariffs to the integration in a competitive electricity market
    Simao, Tiago
    Castro, Rui
    Simao, Jorge
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ELECTRICAL POWER & ENERGY SYSTEMS, 2012, 43 (01) : 1155 - 1161
  • [5] Aligning emissions trading and feed-in tariffs in China
    Lin, Wenbin
    Gu, Alun
    Wang, Xin
    Liu, Bin
    [J]. CLIMATE POLICY, 2016, 16 (04) : 434 - 455
  • [6] The role of feed-in tariff in the curtailment of wind power in China
    Xia, Fang
    Lu, Xi
    Song, Feng
    [J]. ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2020, 86
  • [7] On the Effectiveness of Feed-in Tariffs in the Development of Solar Photovoltaics
    Dijkgraaf, Elbert
    van Dorp, Tom P.
    Maasland, Emiel
    [J]. ENERGY JOURNAL, 2018, 39 (01): : 81 - 99
  • [8] Feed-in Tariffs Kosovo
    Rexha, Blerim
    Dragusha, Bedri
    Limani, Ilir
    [J]. RECENT ADVANCES IN ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT, 2010, : 156 - +
  • [9] The impact of a feed-in tariff on wind power development in Germany
    Hitaj, Claudia
    Loeschel, Andreas
    [J]. RESOURCE AND ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2019, 57 : 18 - 35
  • [10] Rushing for subsidies: The impact of feed-in tariffs on solar photovoltaic capacity development in China
    Dong, Changgui
    Zhou, Runmin
    Li, Jiaying
    [J]. APPLIED ENERGY, 2021, 281