1 / 22

Brant Liddle Centre for Strategic Economic Studies Victoria University Australia

The importance of energy quality in energy intensive manufacturing: Evidence from panel cointegration and panel FMOLS. Brant Liddle Centre for Strategic Economic Studies Victoria University Australia. Overview.

ken
Download Presentation

Brant Liddle Centre for Strategic Economic Studies Victoria University Australia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The importance of energy quality in energy intensive manufacturing: Evidence from panel cointegration and panel FMOLS Brant Liddle Centre for Strategic Economic Studies Victoria University Australia

  2. Overview • Use panel cointegration & Pedroni FMOLS to analyze C-D production function (VA, L, K, E) • Consider disaggregated data (ISIC-two digit) • Chemicals • Iron & steel • Nonferrous metals • Nonmetallic minerals • Pulp & paper • Consider quality weighted index of energy consumption • Stern (1993 & 2000), Oh & Lee (2004)

  3. Data • IEA Energy Balances • Energy consumption • Energy prices • OECD Structural Analysis Database (STAN) • Value added • Labor employed • Physical capital (gross fixed capital formation)

  4. Panels • Chemicals • 11 countries, 1990-2006 • Iron & steel • 7 countries, 1980-2006 • Nonferrous metals • 6 countries, 1980-2006 • Nonmetallic minerals • 11 countries, 1980-2006 • Pulp & paper • 12 countries, 1978-2007

  5. Manufacturing Energy Intensities

  6. Models

  7. Energy Quality • Some forms of energy produce more work than others • Electricity > Oil > Natural gas > Coal • Prices of the different forms tend to reflect that difference in quality (Berndt 1978)

  8. Energy Quality • Stern (1993): “quality weighted final energy use … is likely to be a superior measure of the energy input to economic activity as it will reflect better the productivity of the uses to which energy is put.” • Stern (1993) found for US • Energy quality weighted consumption Granger-caused GDP

  9. Measuring Energy Quality • Logged differences weighted by expenditure shares • P: prices & E: quantities consumed of fuels i • Electricity, oil, natural gas, coal, & combustible renewables and waste

  10. Ratio of Energy Quality to Conventional Energy Consumption

  11. Methods • Panel unit root tests • ADF-Fisher • Pesaran • For all sectors all variables are panel I(1) • Pedroni panel cointegration test • For all sectors variables are panel cointegrated • Long-run elasticities estimated from Pedroni panel FMOLS

  12. Energy Quality Productivity

  13. Energy Quality Productivity

  14. Conclusions • Improvements in energy quality—shift to electricity important to energy intensive manufacturing • Elasticity of energy quality >> conventionally measured energy • Importance of energy quality relative to capital & labor emphasized • Carbon tax’s impact on manufacturing • Carbon intensity of electricity more important than energy intensity of sector/technology • More flexible production function • Nonlinear transformation of I(1) terms

More Related