Factors Affecting Renters' Electricity Use: More Than Split Incentives

Date

2021

Authors

Best, Rohan
Burke, Paul
Nishitateno, Shuhei

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

International Association for Energy Economics

Abstract

This paper uses data from the 2015 Residential Energy Consumption Survey to explore the extent to which renters' electricity use in the United States exceeds that of otherwise similar non-renters. Renting households are found to use approximately 9% more electricity than non-renters when controlling for location, socioeconomic, and many appliance-quantity controls. There are multiple factors that explain this extra electricity use, including inferior energy efficiency of appliances, behavioral factors, differences in bill payment responsibilities, and additional reliance by renters on electric space and water heaters. The paper finds that none of these factors are dominant. The phenomenon of renters' (conditionally) higher electricity use is thus best understood as one that emerges from multiple sources.

Description

Keywords

Split incentives, Rent, Electricity consumption, Efficiency, Household survey, United States

Citation

Source

The Energy Journal

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31