Working Paper

Environmental Policy and Renewable Energy in an Imperfectly Competitive Market

Alexander Haupt
CESifo, Munich, 2023

CESifo Working Paper No. 10524

This paper analyses an electricity market in which a monopolist that employs fossil-fuel base-load and peak-load technologies competes against a fringe of renewable energy (RE) generators. The optimal technology and electricity mix can be decentralised by levying technology-dependent capacity taxes/subsidies in addition to technology-/state-dependent emission taxes. Whenever base-load capacity is taxed (subsidised), peak-load capacity is subsidised (taxed). A decline in RE capacity costs and an increase in the share of consumers on real-time prices predominantly raises emission taxes and brings them closer to their Pigouvian level, albeit with some qualifications. Capacity taxes/subsidies disappear when all consumers are on real-time prices and RE is about to fully crowd out conventional base-load capacity.

CESifo Category
Social Protection
Energy and Climate Economics
Keywords: intermittent renewable energy, peak-load technology, base-load technology, emission tax, capacity tax/subsidy
JEL Classification: Q420, Q480, Q580, H230, L130