The relevance of multiple impacts of energy efficiency in policy-making and evaluation

Johannes Thema*, Nora Mzavanadze, Martin Bo Hansen, Jana Rasch, Felix Suerkemper, Souran Chatterjee, Diana Ürge-Vorsatz, Stefan Bouzarovski, Johan Couder, Jens Teubler, Stefan Thomas, Sabine Wilken

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to conference typesPaperpeer-review

Abstract (may include machine translation)

Improvements in energy efficiency have numerous impacts additional to energy and greenhouse gas savings. This paper presents key findings and policy recommendations of the COMBI project (“Calculating and Operationalising the Multiple Benefits of Energy Efficiency in Europe”). This project aimed at quantifying the energy and non-energy impacts that a realisation of the EU energy efficiency potential would have in 2030. It covered the most relevant technical energy efficiency improvement actions in buildings, transport and industry. Quantified impacts include reduced air pollution (and its effects on human health, eco-systems), improved social welfare (health, productivity), saved biotic and abiotic resources, effects on the energy system and energy security, and the economy (employment, GDP, public budgets and energy/ EU-ETS prices). The paper shows that a more ambitious energy efficiency policy in Europe would lead to substantial impacts: overall, in 2030 alone, monetized multiple impacts (MI) would amount to €61 bn per year in 2030, i.e. corresponding to approx. 50 % of energy cost savings (€131 bn). Consequently, the conservative CBA approach of COMBI yields that including MI quantifications to energy efficiency impact assessments would increase the benefit side by at least 50-70 %. As this analysis excludes numerous impacts that could either not be quantified or monetized or where any double-counting potential exists, actual benefits may be much larger. Based on these findings, the paper formulates several recommendations for EU policy making: (1) the inclusion of MI into the assessment of policy instruments and scenarios, (2) the need of reliable MI quantifications for policy design and target setting, (3) the use of MI for encouraging inter-departmental and cross-sectoral cooperation in policy making to pursue common goals, and (4) the importance of MI evaluations for their communication and promotion to decision-makers, stakeholders, investors and the general public.

Original languageEnglish
Pages377-387
Number of pages11
StatePublished - 2019
Event2019 ECEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency: Is Efficient Sufficient? - Presqu'ile de Giens, France
Duration: 3 Jun 20198 Jun 2019

Conference

Conference2019 ECEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency: Is Efficient Sufficient?
Country/TerritoryFrance
CityPresqu'ile de Giens
Period3/06/198/06/19

Keywords

  • Multiple impacts

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