1996
DOI: 10.2172/270751
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Market barriers to energy efficiency: A critical reappraisal of the rationale for public policies to promote energy efficiency

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Cited by 217 publications
(188 citation statements)
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“…In practice, consumers and homeowners have often been observed to pass up opportunities to make energy-efficiency investments. Possible explanations for the so-called "energy paradox" (Jaffe and Stavins, 1994) include liquidity constraints, limited information, uncertainty about future energy prices (Hassett and Metcalf, 1993), high rates of intertemporal preferences, disbelief in engineering estimates of the cost savings themselves (Metcalf and Hassett, 1999), and institutional disincentives (see Golove and Eto, 1996). 2 Financing costs from investments to electricity transmission and distribution infrastructure, volatility and rising scarcity in feedstocks such as coal, propane, natural gas, and petroleum, and the establishment of a price on carbon, are all possible mechanisms which would increase the price of energy [Basheda et al (2006)].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In practice, consumers and homeowners have often been observed to pass up opportunities to make energy-efficiency investments. Possible explanations for the so-called "energy paradox" (Jaffe and Stavins, 1994) include liquidity constraints, limited information, uncertainty about future energy prices (Hassett and Metcalf, 1993), high rates of intertemporal preferences, disbelief in engineering estimates of the cost savings themselves (Metcalf and Hassett, 1999), and institutional disincentives (see Golove and Eto, 1996). 2 Financing costs from investments to electricity transmission and distribution infrastructure, volatility and rising scarcity in feedstocks such as coal, propane, natural gas, and petroleum, and the establishment of a price on carbon, are all possible mechanisms which would increase the price of energy [Basheda et al (2006)].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, in order to estimate total electricity savings from such devices, one needs to estimate the number of such devices that would penetrate the market over a defined time frame. The estimation or the use of assumed values, where data are lacking, which is typically the case, has been a source of controversy in the CCE calculation over many years (Golove and Eto, 1996). A typical supply schedule begins with zero cost that rises to denote an increase in marginal cost of supplying an increasingly scarce commodity.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Earlier reports have enumerated lists of several factors (barriers) affecting the penetration of energy efficient devices by customer class or tariff category, region and/or sector (Reddy, 1991;Koomey and Brown, 1994;Golove and Eto, 1996;Eto, Prahl, and Schlegel, 1997;Sathaye and Bouille et al, 2001). These include lack of information, lack of access to capital, misplaced incentives, flaws in market structure, performance uncertainties, decisions influenced by custom and habits, inseparability of features, heterogeneity of consumers, hidden costs, transaction costs, bounded rationality, product unavailability, externalities, imperfect competition, etc.…”
Section: Factors Potentials and Transaction Costsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…8 Information in the broadest sense: not only publications and analytical tools, but also pilot programs, demonstrations, and program and policy analysis, where needed. 9 Examples of barriers in the buildings sector include: (1) lack of information on actual energy use of major appliances, (2) lack of supply of high energy-efficiency equipment from manufacturers, and (3) lack of available financing for investing in energyefficiency measures (Golove and Eto 1996).…”
Section: Rationale For Federal Government Assistancementioning
confidence: 99%