Explaining the Slow Pace of Energy Technological Innovation: Why Market Conditions Matter
Loading...
Date
Authors
Jin, W.
Zhang, Z.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University
Access Statement
Open Access
Abstract
As a useful complement to numerous innovation policy studies from a normative perspective, this paper provides a positive framework to analyze the basic economic mechanism of energy technological innovation and explain its slow pace of technological progress. We find that the capital-intensiveness of energy technology is an inhibiting factor to catalyze market size effect and slows innovations and diffusions of energy technology in the market. We also show that the substantial homogeneity of energy products leads to both a monopolistic market structure on the supply side and a weak level of positive pecuniary externality on the demand side, both dampening the incentive of innovation. On the basis of our economic analysis, we recommend that a package of policy responses to accelerating energy innovation should include 1) downsizing "?heavy"? assets of energy technologies||2) deregulating monopolistic energy-supplying markets||and 3) differentiating the homogenous energy products.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Source
Centre for Climate and Energy Policy Working Papers
Book Title
Entity type
Publication
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description